Erich von Reden (District Administrator)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Erich von Reden

Erich Julius Adolph Johannes von Reden (born May 9, 1880 in Posen , † October 18, 1943 in Sigmaringen ) was a German administrative officer and judge.

Life

Erich von Reden was the son of the Privy Councilor Maximilian von Rede and his wife Luise, née Götz von Ohlenhusen. He studied law at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg . In 1901 he became a member of the Corps Vandalia Heidelberg . After graduating, he entered the Prussian civil service. He completed his government traineeship with the government in Marienwerder and with the government in Danzig , where he passed the government assessor examination in 1909. From 1917 to 1933 he was district administrator for the district of Lübben . In 1933 he had to vacate the office and went to Magdeburg with his family . As a result, he became government director and deputy district president of the government in Sigmaringen . Together with the District President Carl Simons , he was able to prevent the Hohenzollern Lands from being added to the State of Württemberg in 1938. Most recently until his death in 1943 he was administrative court director at the administrative court in Sigmaringen .

Reden had been married to Irma Lüntzel (1891–1943), the daughter of a district judge, since 1910. His wife had preceded him four months in death.

A portrait painted by Franz Lippisch in the late 1920s , showing von Reden as District Administrator in Lübben, was handed over to the Museum Lübben by the von Reden family in 2014.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c marriage register of the registry office Trier-Stadt No. 197/1910.
  2. a b Kösener corps lists 1910, 122 , 772
  3. ^ Secret State Archives Prussian Cultural Heritage Holdings I. HA Rep. 125, No. 3925
  4. Landkreis Lübben (Spreewald) administrative history and list of district administrators on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke)
  5. a b Portrait of the District Administrator returns (article from July 23, 2014 in the Lausitzer Rundschau)
  6. Michael Ruck : Corpsgeist and State Consciousness: Officials in the German Southwest 1928 to 1972 , 1996, p. 116 ( digitized version )
  7. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 68 , 703