Franz Stumpf (politician, 1876)

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Franz Stumpf - picture in the rococo hall of the old country house in Innsbruck .
Cross for Franz Stumpf on the wall of the Thierberg Chapel near Kufstein

Franz Stumpf (born March 30, 1876 in Sablat , Bohemia (today: Czech Republic ), † February 28, 1935 in Innsbruck ) was an Austrian politician of the Christian Social Party and governor of Tyrol .

Life

At the request of his parents, the son of a doctor was also supposed to enjoy an academic education, and was then sent to Hall in Tirol , where he attended elementary school and then high school. During this time he became a member of the middle school connection K.Ö.St.V. Star Corona Hall . He then enrolled at the University of Innsbruck , where he studied physics as well as at the Technical University of Vienna and graduated with a doctorate . During his studies, he did voluntary military service with the Kaiserschützen for a year . Stumpf attended a teacher training college in Bolzano and then worked as a professor at the teacher training academy in Vienna.

In 1907 he was elected as a member of the Austrian Reichsrat for Hopfgarten im Brixental , Kitzbühel and Kufstein , and in 1908 he was also elected to the Tyrolean state parliament . In 1918/19 he was a member of the Provisional National Assembly, he was also elected to the Constituent National Assembly.

From 1918 to 1919, Stumpf held the position of regional councilor in Tyrol, and from 1919 to 1921 he was deputy governor. In 1921 he was elected Governor of Tyrol and held this office until his death. From April 14, 1931 to May 2, 1934, Stumpf was a member of the Austrian Federal Council , and from December 1, 1932 to May 31, 1933, he was President of the Federal Council.

Stumpf belonged to the circle of friends of the publicist Friedrich Funder .

Honors

He was a member of the Catholic student association AV Austria Innsbruck and since 1926 of the KDB Vindelicia Innsbruck in the RKDB (today in the ÖCV ).

literature

  • Günther Messner: Governor Dr. Franz Stumpf and the Tyrolean Home Guard . Innsbruck 2007, (Innsbruck, University diploma thesis).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heinrich Obermüller: Forbidden and persecuted: From the beginnings to 1918, Austrian Association for Student History, 2003, p. 160
  2. [1] Street directory on Statistics.at, accessed on August 16, 2014
  3. Fritz Aldefeld (ed.): Total directory of RKDB Neuss 1,931th