Johannes Müller (District President)

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Johannes Müller (born August 27, 1901 in Eisenach ; † January 9, 1944 near Lemberg ) was a German lawyer with a doctorate, civil servant and SS leader in World War II.

Life

Müller was born the son of a senior postal inspector. In 1924 he switched to the Thuringian state service.

After attending school, Müller studied law in Jena, Berlin and Kiel. In 1925 he received his doctorate in Jena to the Dr. jur. He completed his training in 1928 with the passing of the Great State Examination in law and the appointment of a court assessor.

From 1930 he was appointed to the Ministry of the Interior in the state of Thuringia under Wilhelm Frick . In April 1932 he was promoted to the government council. In May 1932 Müller was appointed to the board of directors of the district office in Sonneberg and in August 1935 he was appointed to the staff of the Fuehrer's deputy , in October 1935 he was promoted to senior government councilor and in November 1937 to ministerial councilor. On July 25, 1938, he was appointed provisional district president in Köslin. This office was finally awarded to him on February 7, 1939. Müller was the district president in Köslin until his death in 1944 .

After the “ seizure of power ” in early May 1933, Müller joined the NSDAP ( membership number 2.890.114). In the SS (SS No. 278.230) he rose to SS-Oberführer in June 1939 . Müller took part in the Second World War. From 1943 he served in the 2nd SS Panzer Division "Das Reich" and died in January 1944 of a war wound.

Fonts

  • Property and police. An administrative study on the justification of the sentence: The owner is obliged to keep his property in a police-like condition , 1925. (Dissertation)

Individual evidence

  1. Administrative region of Köslin , accessed on November 1, 2013
  2. a b c d Hedwig Schrulle : Administration in dictatorship and democracy: the district governments of Münster and Minden / Detmold from 1930 to 1960, Schöningh, 2008, p. 670. Online Online
  3. Regional authorities and scientific universities for the five eastern German states, the former Prussian eastern provinces, etc. incorporated areas in Poland, Austria and the Czech Republic, Walter de Gruyter, 1995, p. 63 online
  4. ^ Extract from the SS seniority list