Fritz Tiebel

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Fritz Tiebel

Fritz Tiebel (born August 6, 1889 in Połajewo , Obornik district , Posen province ; † unknown) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

Live and act

Tiebel was the son of an elementary school teacher . From 1895 to 1901 he attended his father's elementary school in Schwenda in the Sangerhausen district in the province of Saxony . Then he visited the Latina in the Frankesche Stiftungen zu Halle an der Saale until 1905 . He then took private tuition to graduate from secondary school with a one-year volunteer certificate. In 1908 Triebel joined the postal service. Initially a postal assistant, he was promoted to postal assistant in 1912. In 1916 he married. From 1915 to 1918 he took part in the First World War in infantry regiments 93 and 264. On October 30, 1917, Tiebel was seriously wounded during the Third Battle of Flanders near Menin- Langemarck . After the end of the war he continued his work at the post office: in 1925 he became a postal inspector after having passed the administrative examination in 1921.

In November 1920 Tiebel joined the NSDAP. After the NSDAP ban in 1923 he became a party member again in May 1925 and took over the leadership of the NSDAP local group in Wittenberg . Temporarily he was deputy Gauleiter for the Gau Halle-Merseburg . In May 1928 he ran for elections to the Prussian state parliament without receiving a mandate. He also appeared as an imperial speaker for the NSDAP and was chairman of the investigative and arbitration committee (USchlA) in the Halle-Merseburg district.

In the general election of September 1930 Tiebel was a candidate of the Nazi Party for the constituency 11 ( Merseburg ) in the Reichstag voted, which it initially belonged to November 1,932th After Tiebel lost his mandate in the November 1932 election, he was able to return to the Reichstag after the March 1933 election, to which he was a member without interruption until the end of Nazi rule in May 1945. He was involved in the passage of the Enabling Act in March 1933.

During the Nazi era, Tiebel was the main branch manager in the Office for Civil Servants of the NSDAP and the permanent representative of Hermann Neef , the Reichsbeamtenführer and Reichswalters of the Reichsbund der Deutschen Officials (RDB). He was also the editor of the daily newspaper Die Kursächsische Tageszeitung and employee of the National Socialist Official Gazette (NSBZ). Before 1943, Tiebel resigned from the Post as a senior post councilor . He was last promoted to Oberführer in January 1942 in the Sturmabteilung (SA) . In the Halle-Merseburg district, Tiebel headed the office for civil servants; from October 1933 he was also the governor of the RDB.

Fonts

  • The civil service of Adolf Hitler. Speech given on June 4, 5, 6, and 7, 1940 , 1940.
  • Revolutionary bureaucracy. Speech given at the officials' rally on October 2, 1940 , 1940.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla , Martin Döring, Andreas Schulz: extras in uniform: the members of the Reichstag 1933–1945. A biographical manual. Including the Volkish and National Socialist members of the Reichstag from May 1924 . Droste, Düsseldorf 2004, ISBN 3-7700-5254-4 , p. 667 .

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