Hermann Hengsberger

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hermann Hengsberger (born October 6, 1900 in Melsungen , † December 15, 1987 in Karlsruhe ) was a German judge.

Life

After graduating from high school in Frankfurt am Main , Hengsberger served as a flag junior with the German Army in Haguenau . He studied law at the University of Marburg and renoncierte on 19 January 1919 at the Corps Hasso Nassovia . When he was inactive , he switched to the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg . He passed the state examination in 1922 and was in 1923 in Marburg Dr. iur. PhD. In 1925 he passed the assessor examination. He became district judge in Hanau (1928), district judge in Greifswald (1931) and district court director at the district court of Lüneburg (1939). From 1939 to 1945 he took part in World War II , most recently as captain . After being taken prisoner in a former concentration camp by the English , he had to undergo denazification. While waiting, he began an apprenticeship as a carpenter in Lüneburg. He broke it off in 1947 when he was able to return to justice. In 1948 he was chairman of a criminal chamber in Lüneburg. From 1955 to 1968 he was a federal judge at the Federal Court of Justice . He belonged to the 1st and 3rd criminal senate. He worked on the Leipziger Commentary (9th edition) and on the Lindenmaier-Möhring . After his retirement he worked for a lawyer at the BGH.

On September 18, 1926, he married Lissy Rüdel from Hanau. The marriage resulted in two sons and two daughters; he also had nine grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Hengsberger was buried in Hanau next to his parents and brother Kurt.

Awards

See also

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d e corp table of Hasso-Nassovia 1959
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1996, 68/961.
  3. Dissertation: The action for the surrender of the child .
  4. a b c Helmut Poppelbaum: In memoriam Hermann Hengsberger IV . Corps newspaper of Hessen-Nassauer, number 91 September 1988.