Herbert Conrad Noehring

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Herbert Conrad Nöhring (born July 4, 1900 in Lübeck , † October 16, 1986 in Bodensdorf , Carinthia ) was a German diplomat .

Life

Herbert Nöhring's grandfather was Johannes Nöhring . Nöhring studied law and economics at the Georg-August University and was a member of the Corps Brunsviga Göttingen . He was a qualified lawyer and doctor of law doctorate .

Herbert Nöhring joined the foreign service of the German Reich in 1929 . He was accredited with the representations in Chicago , Budapest , Baghdad , Kosice , Pressburg , Bozen , Tangier and Paris . In Tangier, his official seat was Rue Bou Arrakia 50 and his official title was Consul General. On August 1, 1937, he joined the NSDAP .

At the end of June 1943, Nöhring was consul general in Thessaloniki, which was occupied by the Wehrmacht :

“If there are no concerns, I would ask the RFA to inform that the Aryanization of all local Jewish businesses and companies is in progress. As far as Greek companies are concerned, Aryanization is accelerated. "

- Herbert Nöhring in a letter to the Foreign Office on June 30, 1943

From 1945 he was a consultant at the state government of Schleswig-Holstein. Nothing is known about its denazification . He also ran a law firm and a notary's office in Lübeck. In 1950 he was promoted to ministerial director in the state government of Schleswig-Holstein and he became the representative of the state government in Bonn. He replaced State Director Dr. Franz Suchan (September 7, 1949 - September 14, 1950) on September 15, 1950 as a representative of the government of Schleswig-Holstein in the Federal Council and was in turn appointed on September 30, 1952 by Ministerialdirektor / Staatssekretär Dr. Julius Clausen (October 1, 1952 - November 30, 1965) was replaced in this position.

On December 10, 1952, Noehring was accepted into the Federal Republic of Germany's foreign service and was accredited as envoy in Beirut in 1953. In March 1957 Noehring was accredited as envoy in New Zealand.

Further accreditation as envoy came in 1962 in Apia , based in Wellington, before he retired in 1965.

Publications

  • The regulation of the international rivers after the Versailles peace treaty, a comparative representation to the earlier legal situation. Dissertation, Göttingen 1923, 16 pp.

literature

  • Maria Keipert (Red.): Biographical Handbook of the German Foreign Service 1871–1945. Published by the Foreign Office, Historical Service. Volume 3: Gerhard Keiper, Martin Kröger: L – R. Schöningh, Paderborn et al. 2008, ISBN 978-3-506-71842-6 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1996, 23 , 878
  2. Raanan Rein (Ed.): Spain and the Mediterranean since 1898. Routledge, 1999, ISBN 0-7146-4945-7 , p. 193 ( digitized version )
  3. ^ Martin Seckendorf, Günter Keber: The occupation policy of German fascism in Yugoslavia, Greece, Albania, Italy and Hungary (1941-1945). P. 236
  4. ^ Press and Information Office: Bulletin. 1957 ( digitized version )
  5. Hartmut Weber, Uta Rössel, Christoph Seemann: The Cabinet Protocols of the Federal Government. Volume 15: 1962. Oldenbourg Verlag, Munich 2005, ISBN 3-486-57739-5 , p. 162 ( digitized version )
predecessor Office successor
Wilhelm Brosch Consul General of the German Reich in Tangier / Morocco
March 18, 1941 to May 1942
Kurt Rieth
Johann Heinrich Mordtmann (1852–1932) Embassy of the German Reich in Thessaloniki
1943
Gebhardt von Walther Envoy of the German Federal Government in Beirut / Lebanon
1953–1957
Walter Hellenthal
Erich Boltze Envoy of the German Federal Government in Wellington / New Zealand
March 1957–1965
Heinrich Koehler