Heinrich Remigius Bartels

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Göttingen prison with the silhouette of Bartels
Walbeck Castle around 1860, Alexander Duncker collection

Heinrich Remigius Bartels (born September 6, 1880 in Schleswig , † January 6, 1958 in Göttingen ) was a German manor owner and member of parliament.

Life

Heinrich Remigius Bartels studied law at the Georg-August University in Göttingen . In 1902 he became a member of the Corps Saxonia Göttingen . From February 22 to 24, 1903, he was serving a prison sentence . After graduating, he entered the Prussian civil service. He completed his government traineeship with the government in Merseburg , where he passed the government assessor exam in 1910. In 1912 he retired from the Prussian civil service as a government assessor. Since then he has lived on his manor Walbeck (Hettstedt) .

At the First World War Bartels took over as captain of the reserve of Lancers Regiment. 16 part. As a regimental adjutant of Landwehr Regiment No. 27, he was seriously wounded in August 1914. At the end of the war he was with the staff of the 36th Infantry Division .

On October 24, 1917 Bartels was elected to the Prussian House of Representatives in the constituency Merseburg 5 (Mansfelder Seekreis, Mansfelder Gebirgskreis, Stadtkreis Eisleben) , to which he belonged until November 15, 1918, the end of the legislative period.

Expropriated from his property after the Second World War , he lived first in Naumburg (Saale) and finally in Göttingen. He was married to Maria Ruth von Funcke. The manor owner and district administrator Busso Bartels was his cousin.

literature

  • 517. † Bartels, Heinrich Remigius . In: Hasso von Etzdorf , Wolfgang von der Groeben , Erik von Knorre: Directory of the members of the Corps Saxonia zu Göttingen and the Landsmannschaft Saxonia (1840–1844) as of February 13, 1972 , p. 94.
  • Bernhard Mann : Biographical Handbook for the Prussian House of Representatives 1867-1918 (= Handbooks on the history of parliamentarism and political parties. Volume 3). Droste, Düsseldorf 1988, ISBN 3-7700-5146-7 , pp. 54-55.

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener corps lists 1910, 85 , 538
  2. ^ Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage Holdings I. HA Rep. 125, No. 310