Corps student inactive associations

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Inactive corps student associations were associations of inactive corps students . This also includes holiday associations in non-university hometowns that only met during the semester break.

Inactive Tübser Rhenane "at 2.30 am" ( Rainer Assmann )

Inactive associations

Circle

Corps studenthood was (is) a way of life for many; The inactive associations were particularly attractive because they stood above the narrowness of the convents and the Kösener circles - and protected against hasty marriages. The self-irony that sets the corps apart from all other types of connection becomes clear . Comparable wit and cockiness would be unthinkable today, especially since etiquette and manners are hardly considered important anymore.

"Only those who have mastered the form may disregard it."

Aachen

  • Round table (1893): People met for lunch and evening drinks in the Elisenbrunnen , for morning and evening drinks in the mail car , at the Ehrlicher Schmied and in Germania . They crammed in the Kurhaus. At the 20th foundation festival, the round table had 20 members and eight old men as visitors . The chairman was Klemens Mittelviefhaus Isariae.
  • Barricade (1896): According to the annals of the RWTH , Kösener and Weinheimer Corps students founded the association in 1896. The "barricade strikers" met every Monday in the cathedral cellar . During the "barricade", which was played regularly, a round of beer, schnapps and cigarettes was tossed . Every winner of a conform had to quote a verse by Bonifazius Kiesewetter . At the beginning of each semester, the “barricade strikers” chose their batches : the “barricade father” and the “barricade master”. The batch characters v and vv (for bird) could be bracketed on probation, for example as "three times screwed barricade father". Members punished in their corps were honorary members of the barricade for the duration of their dimission . The badge was the locus necklace with the brand and membership number worn around the neck, which every newly admitted person had to get from the ladies' room. The "honorary members" included newspaper deliverers, representatives and actors. The landlord Walter Münder collected the beer coasters and had the bill settled once a month. At the Aachen Carnival , he organized a house ball for regular guests. The ladies were Appelrath & Cüpper saleswomen . The cross in the circle represents a Spanish rider . The preserved barricade book from 1932 lists all events and 120 members. The color song was sung to Aachen, free sons of the muses, age-gray, loyal watch :

Up, you barricade attackers,
to the barricade festival ,
which
can be celebrated splendidly with lots of beautiful lighthouses.
Let the locus chains rattle,
that is our right;
|: Because according to the old fathers custom
, there is barbaric drinking here.: |

If we
go home tomorrow morning on our eyebrows ,
then one will see in Aachen:
Weather too, they could do it nicely.
Leave the locus chains ...

Berlin

Bonn

  • Elisabethen Stammtisch (1880): Founded on Elisabethtag , the group met under the direction of the “Oberbonzen” in the Schmitz-Ruland restaurant on Stockenstrasse. Six silver plaques with the names of the members were set in the pub table. In 1929 the regulars' table was renewed.
  • Quinta (1955): Christian Helfer and Wolff von Wolfferdorff Rhenaniae Bonn (sp.Hassiae) initiated the establishment on May 5, 1955.

Wroclaw

  • The Oderschiffer: The Silesian Oderschiffer (SOS) met at Pfeifferhof Löwenbräu in Schweidnitzer Straße. The constitution is preserved. “Bad behavior is a matter of honor. Behavior without design results in exclusion ”(§ III). The president was re-elected "every pub evening around 9 am" and had to hold office for at least one hour (§ II).
  • Association of Inactive Corps Students (1900): The beer bar Kissling served Kulmbacher. The first half a liter was followed by smaller “cobblers” who were free from the 10th (for regular guests). In spring there were (for regular guests) one or two glasses of the “bad” ice beer. On Saturday they took the Breslau-Trebnitz-Prausnitzer Kleinbahn to Hünern , the last village in the Trebnitz district . There was dancing, ramming and drinking until no empty beer bottle could be put down. A junk of 7 or 8 inactive people with an equal number of (Jewish) Normans and Alemans resulted in 70 saber games that were fought after the First World War.

Clausthal

  • BTADE : Carl Schnabel founded the "most honest beer table on earth" in the Clausthaler Krone . In the middle of the table was a silver plate. It showed a map of the five continents and a single place - Clausthal. Under the card were the letters BTAD E. Every evening professors from the Clausthal mining academy met with some students. The Stammtisch was world famous; allegedly mail was delivered to "BTADE in Germany".
  • BMT (1922): To the annoyance of the corporations, the miner's table had a mailbox in the main building of the Clausthal mining academy and charged it in tails at their 150th anniversary celebration. The members came daily to the " B Illigen M ittags T ish" drank rather little, walked a lot and played daily double head . A friendship connected them with the “ filling place ” of the fraternities .

Danzig

Coffin nail
Bowkia
  • Bowkia (1904): The old hut in Langfuhr was the hangout of the association of inactive people from outside the Weinheimer SC in Danzig . It got its name from the Lower Prussian Bowke .
  • Sargnagel : Established was the union on 10 May 1906 by Kösener inactive, resulting from the Berlin senior Convent (KSCV) , the senior Convent to Wroclaw (KSCV) , the SC Konigsberg and especially the Munich Senior Convent came and at the Technical University of Gdansk . The regular place was Zur Hütte in Langfuhr. The coffin nail was accredited at the university , was listed as a connection in the university calendar and had the address Technische Hochschule . He took part in the events of the university and the Weinheimer Corps. The badge was a "beautifully forged nail". A small black coffin served as the cash register .

The song of the knights from the coffin nail was to be sung at a tempo inspired by the “coffin nails” to the melody of “Streams here ye crowd of nations”. The “porcupine” is undoubtedly a reference to Waldemar Dyhrenfurth .

Recently I heard a disciple
from the tribe of Aeskulap
warning, with a raised finger, speaking of angry heartbeat
: Avoid
the places where
alcohol beckons you , the enemy, the bad.
Every drop you drink
Is a nail in your coffin.

Such was the reminder of the good
stink pot from the healing art.
But I spoke with cheerful cheer
to the hollow head and water head:
Your wisdom is in high regard,
But still it is clear to me:
Therefore, refuse alcohol
Is nonsense, dirt and crap.

See, there is no doubt
that it doesn't matter and it doesn't matter,
If one day the devil will take me out of
the earthly bar.
Whether my coffin
gleams bare and pure like a bird's rump,
Or a million nails
staring like a porcupine!

Dusseldorf

  • Möstertspöttche (1929): Founded by nine medical students from the Düsseldorf Medical Academy . The meeting took place in Düsselschlösschen .
  • R (h) einschiffer (1968): Founded on November 20, 1968 at 4:35 am, the table had members from all kinds of connections. The colors were black – dark – dark and were worn as a cord to the ribbon. Beer boys and political gossip, quiet booze and quiet fart were forbidden .

gain

Pastor's daughter

Frankfurt am Main

Frankowurstia (before 1929): Under the direction of the Oberwurst, it met every week in the old German pub at the Imperial Cathedral of St. Bartholomew . There was a lot of anger around the table song: "And in spring the juice rises up and the girls, the birds, who are cheering, yelp!"

Freiburg in Breisgau

  • Schurkenbund (1890): Meetings were held in the Domhotel, in the restaurant at Martinstor and, after the First World War, in the Württemberger Hof under the direction of the chief villain . The federal government ensured the revival of the Freiburg Old-Men-Seniors-Convent and was closed before 1928.
  • Black pig
  • Schwarzwurzia : Association of inactive foreign Kösener Corps founded in the late 1970s (black ribbon). Admission of new members on Saturdays at 12 noon on the tower of the Freiburg Minster (when the bell strikes).

to water

  • Rübe (1912): The Augustiner met under the chairmanship of the Oberrübe. In the beer bar at the Stadttheater Gießen the head waiter served Kaiser, an original called "Majesty" . With the First World War, the federal government came together.
  • Lahn boatman

Goettingen

  • The (17) similar ones (1920): The association was founded by Bernd van Lossen Franconiae Tübingen, then the oldest of around 150 inactive corps students at the Georg-August University . Although it was open to members of all corps, the number of participants could not exceed 17. Herbert zur Nieden Rhenaniae Strasbourg was the chairman for six semesters. The association only had unwritten laws , no statutes, colors or circles. As a guest, Josef Underberg donated a table on which the Rudelsburg and the names of the members were carved. He's in the Jütte inn . At times, has been Into instead Prost recalled.
  • Full Eulalia

Graz

Bauernschreck (1913): Named after a dreaded wolf , the association mainly gathered members of the Graz Corps who only rarely changed the university they had once moved to. The Braunschweig lion was the Stammtisch sign because Ernst August (Braunschweig) had married Viktoria Luise von Prussia . The efforts of the Austrian corps to join the KSCV played a major role. After only one year, the union was formed with the outbreak of the First World War.

Greifswald

Kösener table trapped

The restaurant in Fischstrasse. 11 was founded in 1862 by Adolf Kuhardt as Gambrinus-Halle and officially renamed Fall in 1884 . Born on Sedanag , Max Pansow stood behind the counter for half a century. Even when his son was Fallenkruger (until 1954), he remained a regular guest. The Kösener inactive regulars table, founded in 1900, was followed in 1903 by a table for (external) fraternity members. The “neutrals” sat between the two tables. They included August Bier , Rudolf Credner , Friedrich Loeffler , Ferdinand Sauerbruch , Wolfgang Stammler and Paul Uhlenhuth . Ludwig Denecke was a regular guest at Kösen from 1926 to 1929. From 1954 Hans Wehrli was the spiritus rector of the trap. The Greifswald University Archives keep the numerous guest books.

“In 1935 the trap recognized that the political situation did not permit any further life. But they did not want to go into silence. In order to demonstrate that one was not averse to the zeitgeist, it was decided to look for the end in a sporty way. Invitations to a soccer game against the university soccer team in the university stadium were printed and sent on the most expensive paper. City, university and party leaders accepted the invitation. The trapping session began the evening before. It was ended shortly before the start of the soccer game when movers ordered the trapping members, who were no longer able to walk, together with their dogs on a moving van and unloaded them on the field, on which the opposing team was already warming, in front of gathered dignitaries. "

Hamburg

  • Bumblebee-bumblebee
  • Seeräuber (1930): "Käppen" was Otto Bothe.

Heidelberg

Streberbund (1889): The streber wore a wide band with all basic colors. Foundation celebrations began with a twilight drink in the Neckar under the Old Bridge (Heidelberg) . With the active participation of the old man's senior citizens' convention , the streberbund with its old coat of arms and color was reopened in the summer semester of 1920. There was pinching in the Rote Ochsen in Rohrbach (Heidelberg) . Participation in the mensures at the Heidelberg Senior Citizens' Convention was compulsory. One member was the later Lieutenant General Friedrich Weber .

innsbruck

Polar bear behind bars (1931): On the initiative of Gerhard Heynold Hubertiae Munich, traffic guests of the Corps Rhaetia founded the polar bear. Because of the political situation in the corporate state (Austria) and the thousand-mark block , it only existed until 1934. The pub was the Graue Katz wine house . The first chairman and founder was Karl Heimann Palatiae Bonn, deputy Werner Gelhard Masoviae, Guestphaliae Jena, clerk Rolf Fromm Friso-Luneburgiae EM, Rhaetiae.

Jena

Growl song
Neobrummkrakelia (circle) .jpg

Neobrummkrakelia (1890): The legendary inactive association included citizens, craftsmen, master brewers and dignitaries, just no professors. It was founded by Max Eckhard Guestphaliae Würzburg, who passed the medical state examination in 1902 after several attempts and special permits with the participation of all of Jenas. The Brummer had their own student song and the motto Insert! Roll! Hats! The association existed until 1936 and met again in Hanover in 1958. The famous master tailor Paul Zänker has many memories of the "Brummoxsen".

Kiel

  • Center: Founded around the turn of the century and named after the small Gasthof Zentral-Hotel, the center has always had 100 to 120 members. The Imperial Navy and sailing drew many inactive people to Kiel. Because of disputes, the center died before the First World War.
  • Teich: The pond in the Hofbräuhaus met around 1911. As one of the last survivors, Koos Sueviae Freiburg opened the pond again in 1920. Bride Hubertiae Freiburg (sp.Sueviae Strasbourg) was the last chief stork in 1937.
  • Feudel: Four Altmärker Masurians, a Tübser Franke , a Marburg Arminian and a Sängerschafter founded the regulars' table in the Anglerhof on Knooper Weg in the 1970s. The cuckoo clock hung above the plush sofa in the pub : De Tiet de Löpt, de Klock is quick, de Cuckoo roars, come on and drink! Tischstander was the feudel that was used to wipe up spilled beer on the founding evening. The colors of its edge became the color of the regulars' table. The song of colors was all we have fought . The round broke up with the exams of the 10 members.

Cologne

Halver Hahn (1898): Like the AHSC, Halve Hahn met in the Kloog in the 1920s . In 1921 the association had 170 members. Temporarily suspended, it was re-established in 1927 by eight inactive people. Egon Wibberich Isariae led it until 1934. As a color, a sports belt was worn across the belt. The color verse was “... and wrap the halve tap ribbon around my cold chest!” Relations with the two Cologne Corps and the AHSC were cordial. Weinheimers could become members. The Corps Rhenania Tübingen had banned its members from membership.

Koenigsberg i. Pr.

Crusader (1913): The lunch menu in the Hotel Kreutz was re-established in 1928 by Helmut Pichler Franconiae Tübingen. In 1929 35 corps were represented by the crusaders. One evening Siegfried Graf Lehndorff attended with his whole family. In 1929/30 Prince Wilhelm v. Prussia permanent guest. The crusaders kept in good contact with the Königsberger Corps and the AHSC. Study trips went to Marienburg (Ordensburg) , to Marienwerder and Danzig , to the Trakehnen main stud and to the Rominter Heide .

Leipzig

  • Leipziger Jungfer : The Leipzig Inactive Association , founded in the Thuringian court on November 13, 1890, celebrated the day of baptism in SS 1914 and received the honorary title Leipziger Jungfer . 27 members met every Friday evening. Not long after the re-establishment in December 1920, it died.
  • Nun (1929/30): Pope, prior and abbess chaired the meetings in the corps room of the Thuringian court, which the beer-delivering brewery owner, a Thuringian councilor, had donated. The nun's song was written here . If you came through the cellar window to take the picture and landed upside down on the beer table, you had to buy a champagne bucket of beer and answer three questions. One was: “In which shitty band did you enjoy your tape?” The Gose was spoken to and every year a truck was driven to the Kösener Congress with a keg of beer . From 1932 there were also women's parties.

Mainz

  • WC = Scientific Cränzchen
  • Stiftia

Marburg

  • Käsebrod: Around 1925 the Kosen Inactive Association had its own songbook.

Munich

  • Black company : Members of black corps came together as the Black Circle in the Bürgerbräu. The regular table stand was white with a black ring. When they noisily left a regulars' table with the Munich Swabians in the Franziskaner in November 1930 , they impressed the police with a military appeal . From then on, the district was called the Black Company (1930). The chairman Helmut Herzog became a "captain". There were also non-corporates among the regular guests. A woman was accepted as a "sutler". Until it was dissolved in 1934, Hans Michael Schmitt Bavariae and Hardy Zimmer Sueviae were still "company commanders".
  • Consuffia (1951)

Munster (Westphalia)

  • Mustache bandage
  • Prominentia , blue circle

Prague

PIC Wenzel: precursors of P rags I n-type active C were lub the "Idealistic evenings" of Frankonia Prague in Vinohrady . The PIC was created on January 24, 1932 in the Goldenes Kreuzl (Nekazanka No. 7). The founders were Prague Franks, Prague Swabians , Ansbacher , Munich Bavaria and Munich Huberten . The first Oberwenzel was Adalbert Sladek Frankoniae Prague. The colors were black – dark – dark. Upper and lower Wenzel wore dark purple, the rest of the Wenzel black velvet barrel . A gold ace of spades was embroidered on the Oberwenzel and a silver ace of spades on the others .

Aceofspades.svg

If I am morally bad, I go to the inactive association.
The black-black-blackest banner was always my last resort.
So I swear quite unabashedly that people drink instead of studying.

Rostock

Bützow Court Day (1912)

Swamp: The swamp chickens met in the 1880s and met on the gallery of the Rostocker Hof , in Warnemünde in the summer . They celebrated a big foundation festival on July 3, 1920 at Ruwoldt and Bade . Swamp cocks were Gottfried Eggebrecht and Hubert Galm (1931–1934). The inactive of the Corps Vandalia Rostock and the Corps Visigothia belonged to the approximately 80 members . Because of insulting the swamp, 42 saber and two pistol demands were brought to a Germanic Germanic from Munich . The court of honor set up by the Rostock AHSC approved Galm for a game on heavy sabers. It was held at Guestphalia Bonn . The swamp hosted the Bützower Hoftag .

Stuttgart

Blue Flower: Founded on July 6, 1927 by Kösenern and Weinheimers, the association actively participated in the bars and courses of the Stuttgart Corps . Your active members and the Hohenheim Germanic peoples were frequent guests at the Träuble .

Tübingen

Gösener Gegelverein (GGV): On May 17, 1887 THE VERY HIGH GGV WITH WHITE HERMELINE was founded. The charges are called Oberbulle (ob), Gegeldräger (gd) and Schreiberbulle (sb). The Gelbrüder wear a "permanent blue" wine tip with a slider in the shape of a coat of arms. The motto was “We are the Kösener bowling club, we bow the balls into the cones”. The GGV song has three identical stanzas: "We swore to the GGV, we shake hands with Gös'ner Gegel." The GGV met in the city ​​post office . Your host, a baker, was an honorary member. Erich Bauer became EM in the winter semester 1957/58. The constitution of the GVV is the oldest of an inactive association - and "a great satire of active life". During the GGV song, the Gegel brothers put their right hands on top of the 87 cm high "Gösener Gel" (after the founding year). At the meetings, the "collection" is raised - all coins under 1 mark, resp. 1 €. All foreign coins, including beer tokens, were put into a “travel fund” - “if the GGV goes abroad”. This “Ark of the Covenant” bore the coats of arms of GGV, Isaria and Rheno-Guestphalia in porcelain painting . The assets stored in it were "extraordinarily" reduced by the devaluation of the franc in the 1950s. On permanently blue paper, Charles de Gaulle was indignant for not having heard the VERY HIGH GGV WITH WHITE HERMELINE before. His loss of wealth certainly does not serve the glorious reputation of the admirable French nation. A transfer of the difference was requested, stating the account details. The letter probably went unanswered. In the meantime, the GGV met in the Rebstock ("at the Dattler") in Ammergasse. The GGV became homeless through several tenant changes and renovations, as well as the change from a cozy wine tavern to a restaurant that pays homage to the spirit of the times. It has been meeting at the Gutenberg in Langen Gasse for several years . After the acquisition of shares in a Stuttgart brewery, “UND EIGENER BRAUEREI” was added to the name.

The annual group of the GGV is characterized by the regular events in addition to the monthly meeting (oGGV) in Gutenberg. The Karl-Freytags-hike (KF is a now unknown, long-dead Gegelbruder who introduced a hike he had long cultivated on the Friday before Easter in the GGV), the foundation festival in summer, the wine tour in September, the reheating in November and the Christmas GGV in December form the framework for active community life.

Wurzburg

  • Burgritter (1890): The Burgritter met in the Bratwurstglöckle . Dimits wore a brown striker.
  • Wuschi-Wuschi (1929)
  • Julia (1955): The members wore a narrow blue ribbon with red percussion. They met in the Johanniterbäck .

Zurich

Auf die Nuss (1913): Founded by six inactive people, the association met in the Zur Blauen Blume restaurant .

Holiday associations

  • Ansbach - Bear Society (1878)
  • Kaiserslautern - Association of Peace Drinkers (VdFS)
  • Neustadt an der Weinstrasse - Krischertisch : Since 1900 the Krischertisch has united local active and inactive people. They met in the Gambrinushalle and in the Rodensteiner . Under the Oberkrischer Beutner Rhenaniae Würzburg, Franconiae Munich they moved in 1908 to the Augustiner . Since then there has been an annual (soon to be famous) Easter trip , via Lambrecht , Weidenthal , Frankenstein , Burg Frankenstein , the forester's house to Isenach and the Alte Schmelz to Bad Dürkheim . The journey home went via Deidesheim or Ruppertsberg . At the time of the French occupation of the Palatinate , the motto “Redd nix, think about it!” Before the morning pint there was a regular one hour drumming for the foxes and corps boys . When it was moved to the Schwarze Katz (1926), the Krischertisch became an inactive association that met all year round. One member was Alfred Köhler .
  • Speyer - Mohrentisch (1880): The approximately 30 Moors met in the sun, chaired by the Obermohren . A friendly relationship existed with the Krischern in Neustadt. Seven members died in the First World War. The color was dark – black – black – light black.
  • Szczecin - Szczecin Holiday Association (1920)

literature

  • Herbert Kater: The inactive and holiday associations of the Kösener SC Association . Once and Now, Yearbook of the Association for Corps Student History Research, Vol. 16 (1971), pp. 180-209.
  • Gottfried Koch: The "swamp" in Rostock. Reminder of an inactive association . Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 33 (1988), pp. 253-254.

Corps student inactive associations in the DNB

Remarks

  1. ^ Fritz Bunse (1910–1977) Ratisboniae was a well-deserved master of the barricade. Not identical to SS-Obersturmbannführer Fritz Bunse
  2. Möstert is the Rhenish corruption of moutarde = mustard
  3. ^ The 1st stanza was repeated softly after the 4th.
  4. Brauhaus Zur Kloog ( Memento of the original from November 8, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.koelner-brauerei-verband.de
  5. Kniesen (Saxon: gniesen) is bad posture on the scale.
  6. Hotel Seebode
  7. Mona Linsmaier (1910–2012), the "Sutler", was the corps sister of Würzburg Bavaria.
  8. ↑ City Post Tübingen
  9. thought up by Baumann Baruthiae

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa H. Kater (1971)
  2. Rüdiger Döhler : "Sint ut sunt sunt aut non sint!" (Ricci) - core (ige) sentences on corps students , ed. by the editors, in: Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 57 (2012), pp. 377–381
  3. a b Max-Helmut Bourwieg: Barricade , in: Heinrich Bonnenberg , Peter Speich: History of the Corps Borussia Breslau in Cologne and Aachen , Vol. III: 1948–1979 . Aachen 2019.
  4. a b c d e still existed in 1970
  5. Niels Maiweg Rhenaniae Tübingen, Rheno-Guestphaliae, Teutoniae Bonn, Frankoniae Brno; Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 19 (1974), p. 234.
  6. Corpszeitung der Makaren (1968).
  7. Gert Mannes Rhenaniae Bonn, Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 19 (1974), p. 232
  8. Detlev Deetjen Moenaniae: Lusatiae Breslau, Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 19 (1974), p. 232.
  9. ^ Felix Siebler Lusatiae Breslau
  10. ^ Robert Paschke : Student History Lexicon . GDS archive for university and student history. SH-Verlag 1999. ISBN 3-89498-072-9 .
  11. a b Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 19 (1974), p. 233
  12. ^ Wilhelm Kallenbach: Kösener inactive association "Sargnagel" Technical University of Danzig . Deutsche Corps-Zeitung 1/1962, pp. 39–40.
  13. ^ Robert Paschke : Student History Lexicon . Cologne 1999, pp. 228, 299 with further references
  14. Gdansk University Guide 1928/29
  15. ^ Egbert Weiß , Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 19 (1974), p. 231.
  16. Eckhard Oberdörfer: The Greifswald "trap" in the mirror of their guest books . Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 36 (1991), pp. 235-265.
  17. ^ R. Assmann: Inactive Association "Trap" Greifswald . Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 30 (1985), pp. 218 f.
  18. Otto Bothe (corpsarchive.de)
  19. Herbert Kater: Dr. Mex Eckhard Guestphaliae Würzburg. The founder of the Neobrummkrakelia . Deutsche Corpszeitung 59 (1958), pp. 55-58.
  20. Herbert Kater: The Kösener inactive association Neobrummkrakelia zu Jena . Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 17 (1972), pp. 175-191.
  21. ^ Paul Zänker: 50 Years of Philistines and Students in Jena 1878/1928. Personal experiences, letters and anecdotes (1928).
  22. Georg Brautlecht, Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 19 (1974), p. 232.
  23. Carl J. Wiese, Deutsche Corpszeitung, Volume 46, No. 1, April 1929, p. 23 f.
  24. Walter Hoffmann: The Stiftia in Mainz in 1871 . Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 21 (1976), pp. 235-259.
  25. ^ Academic monthly books 1913
  26. Klaus Gerstein: "More light into the black cathedral". On the history of the inactive association "The Anabaptists" (founded 1902) at the University of Münster . Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 51 (2006), pp. 199-209
  27. ^ Joseph Ernst Rheno-Guestphaliae, Deutsche Corpszeitung, April 1930.
  28. Dietrich Müller Sueviae Strasbourg († 1944), Deutsche Corpszeitung 1932.
  29. ^ G. Eggebrecht Neoborussiae Halle. KCL 1960, 54/276.
  30. ^ H. Galm Makariae Würzburg, Normanniae Halle, Budissae. KCL 1960, 140/462; 22/453; 88/294.
  31. ^ Rainer Assmann: Inactive Association "Gösener Gegelverein" (GGV) Tübingen, founded in 1887 . Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 30 (1985), p. 220.
  32. a b R. Assmann, Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 19 (1974), p. 233 f.
  33. Constitution OF THE VERY HIGH GGV WITH WHITE HERMELINE in Tübingen. Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 20 (1975), pp. 190-193.
  34. GGV zu Tübingen ( Memento of the original from April 4, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / ggv-zu-tuebingen.jimdo.com
  35. German Corps newspaper 1914
  36. ^ Fritz Nachreiner, Theodor Bachmayer: A short chronicle of the Neustädter Krischertisch . Laßleben 1931