Hildegard Damrow

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Hildegard Damrow (born June 26, 1918 in Düsseldorf , † June 16, 1975 in Hamburg-Fuhlsbüttel ) was a German court reporter .

Life

Damrow studied sociology , economics and newspaper studies and received a PhD in sociology. When Dr. Hildegard Damrow lived in Berlin on Leipziger Strasse and later in the Westend at Bayernallee 44. In 1948/49 she belonged to the first German People's Council and subcommittee 6 "Press and Broadcasting" of its cultural policy committee through the Democratic Women's Association of Germany . Her journalistic career is said to have started in the editorial office of the Hamburg daily newspaper Die Welt . She later became a court reporter for the Hamburger Abendblatt , where her name was drdalready made a name at the end of 1951. In the online archive of the Hamburger Abendblatt, the earliest publication "by Dr. Hildegard Damrow" is an article In the hall stood the horror. Sylvia Jamitzky back in court on December 8, 1951. At that time, however, she was already active in the " From Human to Human " special editorial team, whose management passed to her in 1956 with the death of Hans Erasmus Fischer. From March 1957 she published as Dr. Hildegard Michaelis-Damrow or Dr. Hildegard Michaelis; In 1961, she also published her book Law Must Be Right under the name Hildegard Michaelis. From 1963 she called herself Damrow again, occasionally also Damrow-Michaelis at first. Most recently she was married to the lawyer and managing director of the Federal Association of the Phonographic Industry, Joachim Viedebantt, until she died of cancer shortly before reaching the age of 57 .

Uwe Nettelbeck wrote in DIE ZEIT in 1967 :

"Hildegard Damrow, a court reporter for the newspaper Hamburger Abendblatt and Welt am Sonntag and author of a weekly in the Hamburger Abendblatt appearing mailbox Aunt column" Person to person "is certainly a hardworking journalist who writes what she can. But even her careless use of headline vocabulary such as " beast in human form " shows that she belongs to that line of court reporters that Mostar did not mean when he spoke of the " legitimate disciples of Pitaval ", to whom he himself belongs. "

Fonts

  • Hildegard Michaelis: Right must remain right. A journey through the known and unknown justice system. Düsseldorf / Vienna: Econ Verlag , 1961.
  • Hildegard Damrow (preface by Gustav Heinemann ): Women in court. A report on female crime. Frankfurt am Main / Berlin: Ullstein Verlag , 1969.
  • Hildegard Damrow and Werner Correll : Marital conflicts - conflict marriages. The problems of partnership . Goldmann, 1972

literature

  • Heinz EO Hartmann: Hildegard Michaelis: Right must remain right. (Review of law must remain law .; PDF; 107 kB) 1963, pp. 381–382.
  • Hans Peter Bull : criticism of the judiciary. (Review of law must remain law ). In: The time . December 8, 1961, No. 50.
  • Obituary Hamburger Abendblatt June 18, 1975, archiv.abendblatt.de
  • Who's who in Germany 1974, page 270 : DAMROW Hildegard (Dr.rer.pol.), Journalist and writer; b. Düsseldorf, June 26, 1918; m. Joachim Viedebantt (lawyer); four c. Educ. study of sociology, pol. econ. and journalism graduating, 1946. Car. journalist (Dept. Editor, "Hamburger Abendblatt", legal correspondent, columnist for "Welt am Sonntag"). Publ. Incl .: "Law must remain law", 1961; "Women in court", 1969. A. 18, Alsterchaussee, 2 Hamburg 13.
  • Who is who? The German who's who 1976, page 146 : [...] cath., M. m. Joachim Viedebantt (RA), 4 Kd. - Stud. Sociol., Volksw., Zeitungswiss. - S. 1946 Journ. (including department head. Hbg. Abendbl., court reporter and columnist Welt am Sonntag) - BV: including law must remain law, 1961; Women in Court, 1969; Marital conflicts 1971

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Bundesarchiv Signature DA 1/3349 "Lists of names of the delegates of the 3rd German People's Congress for Unity and Just Peace and for the German People's Council"
  2. Ernst Buchholz: Who is the blonde in court? ( Memento from February 11, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) . Hamburger Abendblatt December 31, 1951
  3. http://www.abendblatt.de/hamburg/article451416/Der-direkte-Draht-von-Mensch-zu-Mensch.html
  4. Uwe Nettelbeck: Churning murders . DIE ZEIT November 24, 1967, zeit.de