Ernst Harmening

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Ernst Harmening

Ernst Karl Julius Harmening (born January 28, 1854 in Bückeburg , † August 25, 1913 in Meran ) was a lawyer, writer and member of the German Reichstag .

Life

Harmening attended high school in Bückeburg and studied law at the universities in Jena and Halle (Saale) . During his studies in 1872 he became a member of the Arminia fraternity in the castle cellar . In 1875 he joined the Grand Ducal Saxony-Weimar State Service as an accessist and was employed in Eisenach until he passed his second legal examination . In 1879 he was transferred to Jena as an assessor, where he worked at the Higher Regional Court, in particular in the library facility. At the same time he ran the business of the public prosecutor and left the public service at the beginning of 1882 in order to be admitted as a lawyer at the Joint Thuringian Higher Regional Court in Jena.

In 1889 he was sentenced to six months for a fortress because of a brochure ("Wer da?") In which he had insulted the Duke of Koburg. He wrote the novel "Matthias Overstolz" (1881) and the poems: "Mirjam. High Song of Love "(1881)," Earth and Eden "(1883) and" Osterburg, Tagebuchblätter "(1890). He was the founder of the Freemason Lodge Friedrich for serious work in Jena.
From 1890 to 1893 he was a member of the German Reichstag for the constituency of the Grand Duchy of Saxony-Weimar-Eisenach 2 Eisenach , Dermbach and the German Liberal Party .

literature

  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume I: Politicians. Sub-Volume 2: F-H. Winter, Heidelberg 1999, ISBN 3-8253-0809-X , pp. 238-239.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Carl-Wilhelm Reibel: Handbook of the Reichstag elections 1890-1918. Alliances, results, candidates (= handbooks on the history of parliamentarism and political parties. Volume 15). Half volume 2, Droste, Düsseldorf 2007, ISBN 978-3-7700-5284-4 , pp. 1386-1393.