Horst Bartholomeyczik

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Horst Bartholomeyczik (born August 13, 1903 in Goluchow , † June 2, 1975 in Mainz ) was a German civil lawyer and SS-Obersturmbannführer .

Origin and education

Bartholomeyczik comes from an East Prussian family. He attended the gymnasium in Lötzen and the Königstädtische Gymnasium in Berlin . His studies in law and economics took him to the universities of Königsberg and Breslau , where he passed his legal traineeship in 1928 . After the assessor examination (1932, Berlin) he received his doctorate in 1934. In 1939 he qualified as a professor at the University of Breslau. His teachers were Walter Schmidt-Rimpler (1885–1975) and Heinrich Lange . He was a member of the student union Turnerschaft Markomannia Königsberg (today: Alte Turnerschaft Eberhardina-Markomannia Tübingen).

time of the nationalsocialism

In 1937 Bartholomeyczik joined the NSDAP (membership number 4.245.226). In 1939 he became SS-Obersturmbannführer and began to work for the Race and Settlement Main Office of the SS (RuSHA), to which he belonged until 1944. At the end of 1939 he was appointed by Konstantin von Neurath as deputy head of the land office in the Reich Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia , but left there on September 1, 1940. Bartholomeyczik took part in the research for the General Settlement Plan East . In 1943/44, for example, the German Research Foundation (DFG) funded his work on the subject of “Research into the legal requirements and the legal form of the eastern settlement”. He was a lecturer at the University of Posen, founded by the National Socialists, and the universities in Frankfurt, Göttingen and Breslau. In Breslau he was also a district judge. Bartholomeyczik was a member of the Inheritance Law Committee of the Academy for German Law .

Work after 1945

After 1945 Bartholomeyczik worked as an in-house counsel for industrial companies and as a tutor after he had to leave the university because of his involvement in the Nazi regime of crimes. He also stood up for the interests of other professors who had been removed from college for precisely this reason after 1945. In 1956, however, he was appointed to a civil law professorship at the University of Mainz , which he held until his retirement in 1972. In the meantime, he was also a senior judge in Koblenz .

Bartholomeyczik published over 70 major publications. His academic work focused on commercial law as well as inheritance and family law.

Publications

  • Voting in the system of our legal acts. (Dissertation), 1934
  • The community of heirs in future law. (Habilitation thesis), 1939
  • Research into the legal requirements and the legal form of the Ostsiedlung . DFG- funded project, continuation of the "General Settlement Plan", 1943 and 1944
  • The art of interpreting the law . 4th edition 1967
  • Inheritance law , with Wilfried Schlueter , 10th edition 1975

literature

  • Ernst Klee : "Horst Bartholomeyczik". In: Personal Lexicon for the Third Reich. 2003. p. 29.
  • Wolfgang Harms et al. (Ed.): Development tendencies in commercial and corporate law. Festschrift for Horst Bartholomeyczik. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1973, ISBN 3-428-02969-0
  • Wolfgang Harms: Obituary for Horst Bartholomeyczik. In: Neue Juristische Wochenschrift 1975, p. 1550.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Isabel Heinemann : "Race, settlement, German blood". The Race and Settlement Main Office of the SS and the racial reorganization of Europe. Wallstein, Göttingen 2003 (Neue Zeit, Vol. 2), ISBN 3-89244-623-7 , pp. 135, 150.
  2. ^ Isabel Heinemann, Willi Oberkrome , Sabine Schleiermacher, Patrick Wagner : Science - Planning - Expulsion. The National Socialists' General Plan East. Catalog for the exhibition of the German Research Foundation. DFG, Bonn 2006, p. 26.
  3. Martin Maletzky: The right of inheritance of the tax authorities. Utz, Munich 2001 (Munich Legal Contributions, Vol. 21), ISBN 3-8316-0064-3 , p. 227 .
  4. Wolfgang Harms et al. (Ed.): Development tendencies in commercial and corporate law. Festschrift for Horst Bartholomeyczik. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1973, SI