Johann Pfannebecker

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Johann Pfannebecker (born May 15, 1808 in Flomborn ; † March 7, 1882 in Worms ) was a lawyer, government councilor, district councilor, member of the First Chamber of the Estates of the Grand Duchy of Hesse and a member of the Reichstag .

Career

Pfannebecker attended the Grünstadt Latin School and studied law at the Universities of Giessen and Heidelberg from 1828 to 1831 . In 1850 he became a councilor in Mainz and conductor of the Worms government commission, and from 1852 to 1874 he was the district councilor of the Worms district .

In 1850 Johann Pfannebecker was a member of the Erfurt Union Parliament , from 1868 to 1870 a member of the Customs Parliament and from 1871 to 1874 of the German Reichstag for the constituency of Hesse 7 (Worms-Heppenheim) and the National Liberal Party .

From 1851 to 1866 he was also a member of the First Chamber of the Estates of the Grand Duchy of Hesse .

Life

In 1851 he married Johanna Elisabeth Emilie, b. Renz. She was the daughter of Georg Friedrich Renz , former mayor of Worms. The only child from this marriage, a son, was born in 1852 and died in 1870. Pfannebecker owned large properties in the area between the old town and the railway line of the Hessian Ludwig Railway . Here he built a representative three-story residential building on Karmeliter Strasse (today: Wilhelm-Leuschner-Strasse ), which connected the train station, which opened in 1853, with the city. After the death of Johann Pfannebecker's widow, it was sold and demolished in favor of new buildings.

literature

  • Hannelore Götz and Klaus-Dieter Rack: Hessian MPs 1820–1933. Supplementary volume, Darmstadt 1995 (Darmstadt Archive Writings, Volume 10)
  • Hermann Kalkoff (Ed.): National Liberal Parliamentarians 1867–1917 of the Reichstag and the individual state parliaments. Publication distribution center of the National Liberal Party of Germany, Berlin 1917
  • Jochen Lengemann : MdL Hessen. 1808-1996. Biographical index (= political and parliamentary history of the state of Hesse. Vol. 14 = publications of the Historical Commission for Hesse. Vol. 48, 7). Elwert, Marburg 1996, ISBN 3-7708-1071-6 , p. 291.
  • Klaus-Dieter Rack, Bernd Vielsmeier: Hessian MPs 1820–1933. Biographical evidence for the first and second chambers of the state estates of the Grand Duchy of Hesse 1820–1918 and the state parliament of the People's State of Hesse 1919–1933 (= Political and parliamentary history of the State of Hesse. Vol. 19 = Work of the Hessian Historical Commission. NF Vol. 29) . Hessian Historical Commission, Darmstadt 2008, ISBN 978-3-88443-052-1 , No. 669.

Web links

Remarks

  1. ^ The district council (in today's terminology: district administrator ) was the state superior of the mayor before the introduction of local self- government.
  2. The building has not been preserved.

Individual evidence

  1. Annual report from the Royal Progymnasium in Grünstadt im Rheinkkreis , Frankenthal, 1823, p. 11; (Digital scan)
  2. ^ Fritz Specht, Paul Schwabe: The Reichstag elections from 1867 to 1903. Statistics of the Reichstag elections together with the programs of the parties and a list of the elected representatives. 2nd Edition. Carl Heymann Verlag, Berlin 1904, p. 265.
  3. ^ Ferdinand Werner : The train station and its consequences. From Karmelitergasse to Kaiser-Wilhelm Strasse - civil building in Worms 1850-1914 . In: Der Wormsgau 33/2017 (2018), pp. 127–192 (162).
  4. ^ Ferdinand Werner : The train station and its consequences. From Karmelitergasse to Kaiser-Wilhelm Strasse - civil building in Worms 1850-1914 . In: Der Wormsgau 33/2017 (2018), pp. 127–192 (143).
  5. ^ Ferdinand Werner : The train station and its consequences. From Karmelitergasse to Kaiser-Wilhelm Strasse - civil building in Worms 1850-1914 . In: Der Wormsgau 33/2017 (2018), pp. 127–192 (162).