Enno von Loewenstern

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Enno Yan Peter von Loewenstern (born November 18, 1928 in Riga , Latvia , † April 8, 1993 in Bonn ) was a conservative German journalist of Baltic German origin.

Life

Enno von Loewenstern came from the Livonian branch of the Baltic German noble family von Löwenstern . The journalist and Spiegel editor Otto von Loewenstern (1924–1975) was his older brother.

The siblings grew up in Riga until the family was relocated to the Warthegau in 1939 as a result of the Hitler-Stalin Pact and fled to Bavaria in 1945 . After studying law at the University of Munich , Enno von Loewenstern worked as a journalist, initially in Bavaria, Deggendorf , Passau for the Passauer Neue Presse and in Munich for the Münchner Merkur . From 1972 he worked for Axel Springer Verlag in Hamburg . At the newspaper Die Welt , back then in Bonn , he became the editor in charge of the opinion page and deputy editor-in-chief.

He was considered a linguistic virtuoso southpaw on the opinion side. For years he had succeeded in attracting an ultra-conservative community to the paper. In 1988, ZEIT called him the right-wing far right in the right world on the Richter scale, which is open to the right.

Fonts

  • The lightning rod: Cheerful news from the courtroom. Passau: Neue-Presse-Verlag 1993 ISBN 3-924484-68-6
  • (with Alfred Jüttner and Dieter Blumenwitz): The German question: fundamentally problems and current aspects; Report of the German seminar of the Munich School of Politics from October 3rd to 5th, 1982 in cooperation with the Bavarian State Center for Political Education. Munich: Bavarian State Center for Political Education 1983
  • (as translator) Robert Conquest : Harvest of Death: Stalin's Holocaust in Ukraine 1929-1933. [From d. Engl. Enno v. Löwenstern] Munich: Langen Müller 1988 ISBN 3-7844-2169-5

Table tennis

Enno von Loewenstern played table tennis . From the mid-1950s to the 1960s he played in the TTC Fortuna Passau club, and later he was active at Lülsdorf-Rheidt. From 1980 to 1983 he was West German Champion three times in a row. At the German Senior Championships in 1982, he and Helmut Schneider finished second in doubles in the 50+ age group. From 1981 to 1984 he wrote regularly for the table tennis magazine DTS .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Der Spiegel, February 7, 1962, accessed April 8, 2013
  2. ^ Moritz Müller-Wirth: ZEITUNGSMARKT: "Heimatlos nach Berlin" , in: Focus from May 10, 1993, accessed on April 8, 2013
  3. Ennos Freude , glossary of September 2, 1988, accessed April 8, 2013
  4. Chronicle of the TTC Fortuna Passau (accessed on March 23, 2014)
  5. ^ A b Manfred Schäfer: In memoriam Enno von Loewenstern - For him table tennis was the ideal popular sport , DTS magazine , 1993/5 page 32
  6. Honor roll of the WTTV ( Memento of the original from February 2, 2016 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. (accessed on December 3, 2015) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / wttv.de
  7. Table tennis archive of Hans-Albert Meyer (accessed on March 23, 2014)