Corps Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig

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Corps Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig - Zirkel.gif

The Corps Teutonia-Hercynia zu Braunschweig is a corps ( student union ) in the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convent (WSC). The corps is obligatory and colored . It unites its members, who studied at the Technical University Carolo Wilhelmina in Braunschweig, in friendship for life.

House of the Corps Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig at Gaußstrasse 18 in Braunschweig
Corps coat of arms as stained glass in the corp house

Color

The members of the Corps Teutonia-Hercynia wear the colors "green-white-red" with silver percussion . The " foxes " wear the "green and white" fox ribbon. In addition, a white cap and, on appropriate occasions, a white pekesche is worn by active corps members .

history

The Corps Teutonia-Hercynia emerged on June 14, 1919 from the merger of the Corps Hercynia in Braunschweig and Teutonia in Munich.

When the NSDAP came to power in January 1933, the temporary end of most student connections began. The " National Socialist German Student Union (NSDStB)" brought together several smaller associations to form larger ones and finally, on January 12, 1935, to form the " Community of Student Associations (GStV)". This also included the umbrella organization of Teutonia-Hercynia, the WSC. However, the cooperation between GStV and the student union did not go as one had hoped. So it came to the liquidation of the association on October 20, 1935, whereby the WSC and with it also the Corps Teutonia-Hercynia dissolved.

Since university operations resumed on November 12, 1945, but the TU suffered from a great lack of space, it was agreed that the pub room of the Corphaus could be used as a lecture hall. The lease with the university expired in June 1953. Only the Paukboden was used for university sports until June 1956.

Because of this lively traffic in the house, it was not surprising that young students soon merged again to form the "Academic-Natural Science Association (ANV)". On June 15, 1950, a group resigned from the ANV to found the "Teutonia-Hercynia" student association, after it was clarified with the AHV that this association may be called that and also wear the appropriate colors. Since the foundation festival on July 1, 1950, this association has been called the Corps again.

In the summer semester of 1961, Corps member Klaus DeParade was elected deputy AStA chairman at the Technical University of Braunschweig , and in the following winter semester 1961/62 he was elected AStA chairman. Klaus DeParade later became a member of the board of the Weinheimer Verband Alter Corpsstudenten (WVAC). From January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2011, he was Chairman of the WVAC.

The Corps Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig provides the first local spokesman for the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convent (WSC) from summer 2015 to summer 2016.

History of the Corps Hercynia

The Corps Hercynia was founded on January 17, 1866 as an academic pharmacists' association with the principle of unconditional satisfaction in Braunschweig. The colors were "brown-white-green" with a white cap or a white striker. The motto was "utile cum dulci". On July 30th, 1887, the association, which belonged to the Rudelsburg Delegates' Convent from 1876 to 1882, was transformed into the Hercynia union and adopted the motto "Neminem time, neminem laede!" on. From 1903 to 1906 Hercynia existed as a free fraternity, but then returned to the old form of association.

On March 3, 1909, the corps was declared, accepted into the Braunschweig Seniors 'Convent, which had been re-established with Rhenania , which had existed as a single corps after the suspension of Teutonia since 1902 in Braunschweig, and accepted into the Weinheim Seniors' Convent as a renouncing corps ( WSC). At Pentecost 1910, Hercynia became a fully valid corps of the WSC. On June 14, 1919, it merged with the Corps Teutonia to form the Corps Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig.

History of the Corps Teutonia

Teutonia was donated on November 26, 1871 as a compatriot to the Royal Rhenish-Westphalian Polytechnic School in Aachen . One of the founders was the later Jena glass manufacturer Otto Schott. The colors were "green-white-red" with a green cap. The motto was "Amico pectus, hosti frontem!". At the beginning of April 1872, Teutonia joined the general Landsmannschafts-Seniors-Convent. In the summer semester of 1876, he was declared to the corps and on July 15, 1876, he was accepted into the Aachen Senior Citizens' Convention (SC) and the WSC. In August 1877, Teutonia had to suspend because of the difficult social environment for corporations in Catholic Aachen and the sharp drop in student numbers at the university there.

Teutonia moved to Braunschweig at the beginning of the winter semester 1878/79 and reconstituted at the university there on December 13, 1878. On May 22, 1892, the Rhenania corps, which existed in Aachen until 1880, was reconstituted on May 7, 1892 in Braunschweig founded the Braunschweig Senior Citizens' Convention (SC). On October 17, 1902, Teutonia had to suspend in Braunschweig.

For the winter semester of 1905/06, Teutonia moved its active operations to Munich and reopened at the Technical University of Munich on September 21, 1905. On November 27, 1905, the SC of the WSC was founded with the Corps Guestphalia (today Corps Suevo-Guestphalia ) at the Technical University of Munich. After the end of the First World War , Teutonia no longer had a sufficient number of active members to resume operations. To make matters worse, after the outbreak of the revolution, the corps home had been confiscated by the communist council government. Teutonia therefore decided to return to Braunschweig to merge on June 14, 1919 with the Corps Hercynia Braunschweig to form the Corps Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig.

Corps members

Klaus DeParade, Weinheim 2009
  • Max Alvary (1851–1898), opera singer
  • Heinrich Beckurts (1855–1929), chemist and university professor, pioneer in the fields of analysis, food chemistry, alkaloid chemistry and toxicology
  • Wilhelm Blasius (1845–1912), German ornithologist, Privy Councilor
  • Heinrich Büssing (1843–1929), inventor and industrialist, honorary senator of the TH Braunschweig
  • Max Büssing (1872–1934), industrialist, honorary senator of the TH Braunschweig
  • Klaus DeParade (1938–2012), energy manager, 2010 to 2011 chairman of the board of WVAC
  • Walter Haenel (1862–1928), General Director of Hasper Eisen- und Stahlwerk AG, Member of the Supervisory Board of Klöckner Werke
  • Kurt Hassebrauk (1901–1983), Phytomedicist
  • Robert Haul (1912–2000), professor of physical chemistry at the Universities of Bonn and Hanover
  • Felix Hoesch (1866–1933), landowner, member of the Reichstag
  • Hans-Joachim Kanold (1914–2012), mathematician, professor of number theory at the Technical University of Braunschweig
  • Florus Kertscher (1892–1966), agricultural scientist
  • Reinhold Krohn (1852–1932), engineer, professor of bridge construction, rector of TH Danzig, member of the Prussian manor house
  • Mark von Laer (* 1969), engineer, member of the board of Andritz AG (since 2017)
  • Wolfgang Leidenfrost (1919–2007), professor of thermodynamics and heat transfer at Purdue University
  • Eduard Linse (1848–1902), German architect of historicism
  • Rolf Theo Ocken (* 1939), Major General a. D., responsible for the demolition of the inner-German border (1990–1991)
  • Carl August Rojahn (1889–1938), Professor of Pharmaceutical Chemistry and Food Chemistry at the University of Halle
  • Martin Schirmer (1887–1963), professor of structural engineering and cultural engineering at the University of Bonn.
  • Otto Schott (1851–1935), chemist and glass technician, founder of the Jenaer Glaswerk Schott & Gen.
  • Franz Seldte (1882–1947), NSDAP politician, founder and leader of the Stahlhelm, Bund der Frontsoldaten, Reich Commissioner for Voluntary Labor Service and Reich Labor Minister
  • Otto Friedrich Weinlig (1867–1932), industrialist
  • Hans Weisbrod (* 1902), rubber goods manufacturer

literature

  • Hans Schüler: Weinheimer SC-Chronik , Darmstadt 1927.
  • Michael Doeberl , Otto Scheel , Wilhelm Schlink , Hans Sperl , Eduard Spranger , Hans Bitter and Paul Frank (eds.): Das akademische Deutschland , Vol. 2: The German universities and their academic citizens , Berlin 1931, p. 684.
  • Paulgerhard Gladen : History of the student corporation associations , Volume 1, Würzburg 1981. P. 49–63.
  • Paulgerhard Gladen: The Kösener and Weinheimer Corps: Your representation in individual chronicles . 1st edition. WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2007, ISBN 978-3-933892-24-9 , pp. 290-291, 294 .

See also

Web links

Commons : Corps Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Hans Eberhard : Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 124.