Friedrich Frankenbach

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Friedrich Wilhelm Frankenbach (born May 12, 1884 in Liegnitz , Lower Silesia , † 1942 ) was a German administrative lawyer.

Life

Frankenbach studied law at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . In 1903 he became active in the Corps Isaria . After graduating as Dr. iur. In 1910 he went to Marienwerder as a government assessor . In 1915 he became administrator of the Schwetz district office . In 1919 he went as a Councilor for Szczecin .

Under the direction of the Mayor of Osteroder , Christian Herbst , an "East Prussian Office" was set up in Berlin in June 1920 and maintained by the Free State of Prussia . At the end of 1921 it was officially named "East Prussian Mission to the Reich and State Ministry" under Frankenbach. This office enabled the President of the Province of East Prussia to influence all decisions that affected the cooperation between Königsberg and Berlin. In 1930 this representation was dissolved and its tasks largely assigned to the Reich Commissioner for Aid to the East (1931/32). As senior councilor , Frankenbach became head of the East Prussia office in 1923, in the chaotic year of the Weimar Republic . Since 1926 in the Prussian Ministry of the Interior, he became a member of the Presidium of the Economic Institute for Russia and the Eastern States . Since 1928 Ministerialrat in the Prussian State Ministry , he became head of the Landstelle (Osthilfe) in Berlin. Two years later, he moved to the Landstelle Schneidemühl in the same position . In 1934 he was appointed senior administrative judge . In 1942 he came to the Reich Ministry of the Interior . In the same year he died at the age of 58.

See also

literature

  • Klaus von der Groeben : Administration and Politics 1918–33 using the example of East Prussia . Kiel 1988, GoogleBooks
  • Dieter Hertz-Eicherode: Politics and Agriculture in East Prussia 1919-1930 . Westdeutscher Verlag 1969, GoogleBooks

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corp lists 1960 109/879
  2. Friedrich Frankenbach in the online version of the edition files of the Reich Chancellery. Weimar Republic
  3. ^ Rüdiger Döhler : East Prussia after the First World War . Einst und Jetzt, Vol. 54 (2009), pp. 219-235
  4. There were land sites in Königsberg, Köslin, Schneidemühl, Breslau, Oppeln and Berlin
  5. Acta Borussica (PDF; 2.2 MB)