Heinrich Fickler

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Heinrich Wilhelm Hermann Karl Fickler (born May 29, 1872 in Clausthal , today Clausthal-Zellerfeld , † after 1942) was a German lawyer , most recently a Reich judge .

Life

Fickler's ancestors were whitewashers . His father Karl (1837–1900) was a mine director in the Harz Mountains and then a secret upper mountain ridge and lecturer in the Prussian Ministry of Trade and Industry . His brother Erich (1874–1935) had been chairman of the supervisory board of the Rheinisch-Westphalian coal syndicate since 1927 .

After attending the Clausthaler Gymnasium from 1880 to 1889, Fickler studied law in Heidelberg , Munich and Berlin . In 1892 he entered the Prussian civil service and then worked as a trainee lawyer in Sangerhausen and Berlin. In 1897 he was appointed court assessor . He worked in Lübben , Luckau and Berlin . In 1902 he became a district judge at the Quedlinburg district court . In 1911 he was promoted to the District Court Councilor, and then to the Higher Regional Court Councilor in Naumburg . In the First World War he was a soldier as captain of the Landwehr . In 1924 he was a member of the German Evangelical Church Congress . In 1925 he came to the Reichsgericht . That year he was assigned as a judge to the IV and V Criminal Senate of the Imperial Court . In 1936 he was employed in the 4th Civil Senate for a few months . Then he was assigned to the 5th Civil Senate until 1938 and from 1940 to 1942 . Fickler specialized in land, mining and water law.

Honors

Works

  • The judicial authorities of Berlin: Part a: Ordinary courts; Commercial courts and guild arbitration courts; Military courts. In: From Berlin legal life. FS XXVI. Deutscher Juristentag , Berlin 1902, p. 33ff.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Heinz Boberach , Carsten Nicolaisen , Ruth Pabst: Nationwide institutions. Volume 1 of the Handbook of the German Evangelical Churches 1918 to 1949. Göttingen 2010, p. 47 .
  2. Marius Hetzel: The challenge of racial mixed marriage in the years 1933-1939. The development of the jurisprudence in the Third Reich. Adaptation and self-assertion of the courts (= contributions to the legal history of the 20th century, volume 20). Tübingen 1997, pp. 96, 98.