Hans Falke of Lilienstein

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Baron Hans (Johann Baptist) Falke von Lilienstein (born September 24, 1862 in Vienna , † February 24, 1932 in Graz ) (pseudonym: Hans Falke) was an Austrian poet and lawyer, most recently court counselor of the higher regional court in Graz and long-time editor of the newspaper des Styrian Singers' Association.

He was the son of the section head in the Austrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Baron Johann Falke von Lilienstein (1827-1896) and brother of the writer Amalie Falke von Lilienstein .

He attended the academic and the Schotten grammar school in Vienna and from 1873 to 1879 the grammar school of the Benedictine monastery in Kremsmünster . He then studied law at the University of Vienna. He then did his military service in an artillery regiment in Vienna.

After passing the three state exams in December 1884, he came to the district court in Cilli in Styria as a legal intern. There he became an auscultant in 1887 , from May 1889 he worked at the district courts of Friedau, Passau and Marburg in Styria, and in the last town also went through the auditorium practice at the garrison court in order to become a reserve military judge. In 1890 he became a lieutenant auditor in the reserve. In February 1892 he was transferred to Laas in Carniola as judge adjunct and in 1893 to Gonobitz in the same capacity , came in 1896 as district judge to Flitsch in the coastal region, in 1899 as kk court secretary to Görz , was since 1903 kk regional judge in Rovigno (Istria) and was appointed in 1906 as such moved to Klagenfurt . There he was councilor of the higher regional court in Graz.

Works

  • The Novice from Kremsmünster (story in verse), 1890
  • Pastor Habermann (epic), 1893
  • Fiat lux, a song from the recent past (epic), 1894
  • How It Comes, Rhyming Stories, 1902
  • Fischer Menis (Sang from the Mountains), Poems, 1905.
  • According to custom and law. Village stories from Upper Austria, 1907
  • Fiends. Würzburg history from the 17th century; Who should it be. A painless post-war story, 1926
  • My people. The German hero song, 1929

literature