Günther Flindt

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Günther Flindt (born February 25, 1910 at Junkertroylhof near Danzig, today Gmina Stegna ; † July 20, 1997 in Hanover ) was a German administrative lawyer and ministerial official.

Life

Flindt's parents were the landowner Bruno Flindt and his wife Hedwig geb. Skowronski. In Osterode i. Ostpr. he attended the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gymnasium. He graduated from high school at the age of 17. He started at the University of Ludwig-Maximilians- to study law and was established in May 1928 by the Corps Franconia Munich admittiert . On January 18, 1929 recipiert , he clung twice the batch of Conseniors . For the third semester he moved to the Friedrich Schiller University Jena to become active as a support boy in the Cartel Corps Franconia Jena . There after two semesters as an excellent consenior and senior inactivated , he went to the Albertus University in Königsberg . There he passed the legal traineeship exam in 1932. In 1933, at the age of just 23, he was promoted to Dr. jur. PhD . In 1936 he passed the assessor examination at the higher court . He switched from the judicial service to the administrative service of the Free City of Danzig and became a senior councilor . After Danzig was reorganized in September 1939, he was taken over into the immediate Reich service. In 1940 he joined the municipal service of the Hanseatic City of Danzig as a city councilor.

Wehrmacht

Before the Second World War, Flindt had started with exercises in the army (Wehrmacht) as a flak soldier. He voluntarily took part in the smashing of the rest of the Czech Republic and in the attack on Poland . After being deferred in November 1939, he was re-enlisted in March 1942. He stayed with the flak on the Eastern Front until the Wehrmacht surrendered (World War II) , most recently with the rank of lieutenant . He received the Iron Cross 2nd Class, the War Merit Cross (1939) , the Flak Combat Badge and the Wound Badge (1939) . From a Czech hospital he was taken prisoner by the Americans, who transferred him to the Red Army on May 16, 1945 after a week . He reached Lebedjan and Ryazan via a few intermediate storage facilities and finally to the mining area of Stalinogorsk . After working underground for four and a half years, he was released on January 1, 1950.

Westphalia and Lower Saxony

Since the beginning of 1950 he was back in the profession, as a lawyer in Kamen and later in Dortmund, where he worked for a short time at the regional insurance office. In 1951 he married the farmer's daughter Hildegard geb. Stank from Fischerbabke in the Danziger Niederung district . The son Michael (* 1953) and daughter Marianne (* 1955) emerged from the marriage. According to the law regulating the legal relationships of persons falling under Article 131 of the Basic Law as civil servants z. Wv. Recognized, it was adopted by the state of Lower Saxony in 1953 . In the Lower Saxony Ministry of Education and Culture , he rose from senior government councilor to ministerial director in just under two and a half years . In November 1963 he moved to the Lower Saxony Ministry of the Interior as State Secretary . In July 1965 he was put on hold . On January 1, 1966, he established himself as a lawyer and notary in Hanover. Enrollment at the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz University in Hanover was a disappointment. The students and their inadequate study requirements made him think. He was shocked and amused by the professors' mistakes. He was involved in the Free Democratic Party . Since January 1966 chairman of the Alter Jenenser Franconia Association, he was instrumental in moving his second corps from Frankfurt am Main to Regensburg. Retired from the AHV chairmanship after seven years and was Honorary Council Chairman for many years. When several corps of the green circle began to shake the fencing principle in 1970 , he campaigned “with passion for the maintenance of the designated gauges”. In his last years he could see the stars but could no longer read them. Cared for and accompanied by his wife, he was 87 years old.

literature

  • Deutsche Corpszeitung 81 (1980), p. 81 f.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Kösener Corpslisten 1996, 38 , 1002; 37 , 730;
  2. Dissertation: The abuse of the cloakroom ticket in its criminal law meaning .
  3. a b c Biographienbuch der Franconia München