Highland Association of Catholic New German Connections
The Highland Association of Catholic neo-German connections (HV) was a corporation Association of non- color-bearing fraternities , which was founded in 1917 and after the Second World War in Quickborn-Hochschulring has risen.
history
The Hochlandverband was founded in April 1917. In it, students gathered in connections that had emerged from the Catholic youth movement and whose ideas wanted to preserve and put into practice at the universities. All of life was placed under the religious idea of Christianity. In doing so, drugs and smoking were avoided - i.e. abstinence . There were weekly church service visits, closed retreats as well as Sunday trips and excursions. Spiritually, the highlands were strongly influenced by Romano Guardini . The HV was closely connected to the Catholic youth movement and was a member of their Quickborn Association . After the First World War there were separate women's associations . From 1920 to 1925, the Hochland -verbindungen were incorporated as student guilds into the non-academic Quickborn-Hochschulring, in which they were broken up after the Second World War. In 1927 there were 14, in 1929 18 connections with a total of over 500 members. The association newspaper was called Neues Studententum until 1934 and later Die Brücke und Burg Rothenfels . The association badge was a blue flower on a silver background, the motto was: Deo et patriae . In Austria emerged after 1945 the Catholic Highland Youth Austria
Member connections
with (w) are the student connections
Berlin
- Winfrid
- Hathwiga (w)
Wroclaw
- Lioba (w)
- Markwart
- Parzival
- Wilfried
- Franziskus (at the Franziskaner-Studienanstalt Breslau-Carlowitz)
Freiburg
- Caritas (w)
- Freiburg
Munich
- Munich
- Highlanders Munich (w)
Muenster
- Irmingard (w)
See also
literature
- EH Eberhard: Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig 1924/25, pp. 245–246.
- Bernhard Grün, Christoph Vogel: The Fuxenstunde . Manual of Corporation Studentism. Bad Buchau 2014, pp. 163-164, ISBN 978-3-925171-92-5 .