Darmstadt fraternity Frisia
Fraternity Frisia |
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coat of arms | Circle | |||||
Basic data | ||||||
University location: | Darmstadt , Germany | |||||
University / s: | Darmstadt University of Technology | |||||
Founding: | February 6, 1885 | |||||
Corporation association : |
Niederwald Deputy Convent (1892–1919) German Burschenschaft (1919–1997) New German Burschenschaft (1998–2014) |
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Color status : | colored | |||||
Colours: | black-white-blue | |||||
Colours: |
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Fox colors: | blue-white-blue | |||||
Fox colors: |
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Type of Confederation: | Men's association | |||||
Position to the scale : | optional striking | |||||
Motto: | United and Faithful | |||||
Field shout ( Panier ): | Frisia be the banner | |||||
Website: | www.burschenschaft-frisia.de |
The Darmstadt fraternity Frisia is a facultative striking and colored student union at the Technical University of Darmstadt . It was founded on February 6, 1885.
history
On February 6, 1885, the Academic Pharmacists' Association was founded at what was then the Technical University of Darmstadt with the colors black-white-blue . The fraternity of fraternity adopted the current name in 1891. Frisia entered into a friendship relationship with the Arminia Stuttgart fraternity in 1924, which is still in place today. The connecting house at Prinz-Christians-Weg 11 was bought in 1927 and ceremoniously inaugurated at Pentecost 1928. In 1941 the house was sold to the Protestant parish. The Aktivitas was established in 1940 with the fraternity Germania for companionship Friedrich Friesen merged. The Friesland Student Union and the old owners of Frisia merged in 1950 and rented a constant in Lauteschlägerstraße. In 1956 13 old men of the border team Old Prussia to Breslau were accepted into the old rule of Frisia.
Associations
The Frisia fraternity was accepted into one of the predecessor associations of the Rüdesheim Association of German Fraternities (RVdB) on February 2, 1892 . The RVdB merged with the German Burschenschaft (DB) in 1919 , and Frisia became a member of this association.
For the 1972/73 financial year, the Frisia fraternity was elected chairman of the German fraternity.
The Frisia was a co-founder of the Hambacher Kreis, which was founded in 1994. He was a group within the German Burschenschaft that tried to reorganize the umbrella organization after reunification according to more liberal principles.
The Hambacher Convent emerged from the Hambacher Kreis, which Frisia co-founded again. It is an independent forum for the friendly and free exchange of ideas between fraternities. The Hambacher Convent was founded in 1997 during the 110th foundation festival of the Arminia Stuttgart fraternity.
On June 30, 1997, the Frisia fraternity resigned from the German fraternity association. Frisia joined the newly founded association Neue Deutsche Burschenschaft (NeueDB) on June 13, 1998. In the 2003/2004 financial year she was the chairwoman of the NeueDB fraternity. The federal convention on Pentecost 2014 made the decision to leave the association NeueDB with immediate effect.
Fraternity house
The connecting house is located at Alexandraweg 14 on Mathildenhöhe . The building was built in 1899 by Paul Wallot (1841–1912, architect including the Reichstag ) for the Hessian cabinet councilor Gustav von Römheld (1861–1933, chairman of the grand ducal cabinet) as a picturesque, neo-baroque villa with a pointed roof and a tower. The interior was partially redesigned in 1900 by Joseph Maria Olbrich .
In the air raid on Darmstadt on the night of September 11, 1944, the building was destroyed to the ground. The Frisia fraternity bought the house in 1953. All that has been preserved from the original house is the magnificent portal and the outside staircase as well as parts of the property fence.
From the completion of the house in 1955 to 1964, the Friesenhaus also housed the old Darmstadt fraternity Germania on the upper floor. In the eastern part, facing the Mathildenhöhe, there was a narrow pub room and a batch room.
Known members
- Georg Beck (1901–1943), professor at the Technical University of Dresden
- Wilfried Diebschlag (1938–2004), professor at the Technical University of Munich
- Karl Gallwitz (1882–1945), Ministerial Director of the Construction Department of the Air Force Administration Office
- Hans Harms (1906–1975), economic manager
- Georg Heyl (1866–1942), professor at the Technical University of Darmstadt
- Gerhard Kritzler (1934–2013), entrepreneur
- Ernst Martens (1883–1981), civil engineer and politician
- Karl Schmidt (1875–1941), electrical engineer
- Julius Scriba (1866–1937), pharmacist
- Hans Süssenguth (1913–2002), manager
- Karl Hermann Zipp (1875–1940), electrical engineer
literature
- Hans-Georg Balder: The German (n) Burschenschaft (s) - their representations in individual chronicles. WJK, Hilden 2005, ISBN 978-3-933892-97-3 . P. 110.
- Michael Doeberl , Alfred Bienengräber (Ed.): The academic Germany. Volume 2: The German universities and their academic citizens . CA Weller, Berlin 1931. p. 725.
- Karl Fertsch: History of the Darmstadt fraternity Frisia . Volumes I to III. self-published, Darmstadt 1965.
- Willy Nolte (Ed.): Burschenschafter Stammrolle. Directory of the members of the German Burschenschaft according to the status of the summer semester 1934. Berlin 1934. pp. 1021-1022.
Web links
- Official web presence of the Darmstadt fraternity Frisia
- Collection of color cards of the Darmstadt fraternity Frisia
Individual evidence
- ^ EH Eberhard: Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 131.
- ^ Resignation from the New German Burschenschaft. In: burschenschaft-frisia.de , June 7, 2014, accessed on February 17, 2018
- ^ The Darmstadt Mathildenhöhe. Architecture on the move to modernity. (= Contributions to the protection of monuments in Darmstadt , Volume 7.) City of Darmstadt (Ed.) Darmstadt 1998. P. 94
Coordinates: 49 ° 52 ′ 32.5 " N , 8 ° 39 ′ 55" E