Georg Mannkopff

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Georg Mannkopff (born September 1, 1859 in Köslin , † March 3, 1933 in Göttingen ) was a German district administrator.

Mannkopff was the son of the Privy Councilor Julius Mannkopff. He attended high school in Köslin from 1869 to 1879 and, after graduating from high school, studied law and political science in Marburg, Heidelberg and Berlin. In 1883 he became a trainee lawyer and did his legal clerkship at the district court and the regional court in Köslin. In 1885 he became a government trainee and was employed at the Kolberg District Office and the Stolp Mayor's Office. In October 1887 he passed the second state examination and became a government assessor in Potsdam.

In 1891 he became district administrator in the Wittlich district . In 1891/1892 he also did military service as a one-year volunteer and resigned as a first lieutenant in the reserve. He married in 1893. The marriage had four children. In 1903 he was first provisional, then definitely district administrator in the district of Göttingen . Since 1915 he was also a member of the Provincial Parliament of the Province of Hanover .

The abolition of the monarchy after the November Revolution was rejected by him. On September 1, 1919, he resigned from the provincial parliament and Erich Bachmann moved up for him. In February 1922, the SPD parliamentary group introduced a motion of no confidence against him in the district council, but could not get through. On October 1, 1924, he retired due to old age.

literature

  • Beatrix Herlemann , Helga Schatz: Biographical Lexicon of Lower Saxony Parliamentarians 1919–1945 (= publications of the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen. Volume 222). Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 2004, ISBN 3-7752-6022-6 , p. 130.