Heinrich Horlbeck

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Heinrich Horlbeck

Heinrich Horlbeck (born November 5, 1897 in Bayreuth , † 1980 ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ).

biography

After attending primary and secondary school, Horlbeck completed a commercial and technical apprenticeship (paper and bookbinding) from 1912 to 1915. He then took part in the First World War. In 1928 he joined the NSDAP ( membership number 77.094) and its military arm, the Sturmabteilung (SA), in which he reached the rank of Standartenführer. Horlbeck headed the Gaupersonalamt full-time and was also head of the Gau area of ​​the party.

On November 29, 1941, Horlbeck joined the National Socialist Reichstag as a member for constituency 26 (Franconia) , from which he temporarily resigned on February 4, 1942 , in the replacement procedure for the deceased MP Heinrich Hager . On January 14, 1943, he rejoined the Reichstag as a substitute; this time for the MP Richard Wagenbauer and again for the constituency 26. Horlbeck belonged to the parliament this time until the end of the Nazi regime in the spring of 1945.

A font from 1964 records a master bookbinder Heinrich Horlbeck, who is based in Bayreuth and who is very likely identical with the member of the Reichstag.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Year of death after: Günther Weiss: The great violinist Henri Marteau (1874-1934): an artist's fate in Europe , Schneider 2002, p. 262
  2. ^ Armin Geus : Festschrift der Naturwissenschaftlichen Gesellschaft Bayreuth, 1889-1964 , 1964, p. 93.