Ferdinand Kunhardt

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Georg F. Kunhardt

Georg Ferdinand Kunhardt (born April 10, 1824 in Hamburg ; † March 8, 1895 ibid) was a lawyer and Hamburg senator.

Act

Kunhardt was captain of the civil military from 1856 to 1857 . After studying and obtaining his doctorate in Heidelberg , he became a judge at the Hamburg Lower Court in 1861 . From 1859 to 1868 Kunhardt was a member of the Hamburg Parliament . From December 1865 to December 1867 Kunhardt was President of the Citizenship.

On May 10, 1869, Kunhardt was elected to the Senate for the late Alfred Rücker . Kunhardt had an influential position in the Senate; he officiated as the first police officer and later as head of the Hamburg justice administration.

In November 1880, he was the first police officer to order Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Dietz to be expelled from Hamburg.

After his leg was amputated due to illness and he had almost completely lost the ability to speak, Kunhardt resigned in December 1887.

Kunhardtstrasse in Hamburg-Eppendorf is named after him.

"Georg Ferdinand Kunhardt Dr.", collective grave Senators (IV),
Ohlsdorf cemetery

Since May 29, 1833, Kunhardt was a member of the Hamburg Gymnastics Association from 1816 and since 1844 a member of the Corps Vandalia Heidelberg and in 1859 was one of the founders of the Hamburg Academic Club .

Kunhard's uncle was the Senator Christian Heinrich Alardus .

On one of the collective grave plates in the Ohlsdorf cemetery Senators (IV) from the Althamburg Memorial Cemetery commemorates Ferdinand Kunhardt, among others.

literature

  • German Gender Book , Vol. 19, Hamburg Gender Book, Vol. 2, 1911, p. 161
  • Wilhelm Heyden : The members of the Hamburg citizenship. 1859-1862 , Hamburg 1909, p. 65

Individual evidence

  1. For the expulsion of Dietz see here [1]
  2. See Richard J. Evans : Tod in Hamburg, 1990, p. 478
  3. ^ Carl Heitmann: Timeline of the history of the Hamburg gymnastics club from 1816: 1816 - 1882. Herbst, Hamburg, 1883, p. 6. ( online )
  4. ^ Kösener corps lists 1910, 122/103
  5. German Gender Book Volume 19, Hamburg Gender Book Volume 2, 1911, pp. 390 ff