Josef Tzöbl

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Josef Tzöbl (born March 17, 1900 in Siebenhirten , Lower Austria , † October 31, 1968 in Vienna ) was an Austrian politician of the Christian Social Party (CSP).

education and profession

After high school he did his doctorate in law studies at the University of Vienna and became Secretary General of the Christian Social People's Association for Lower Austria. As the successor to Karl Gottfried Hugelmann , he came to the Federal Council as a member of the Christian Social Party (CSP). Between 1930 and 1938 he was a member of the council of the then independent Seven Shepherd. From January 1935 he was also managing director of the Austrian Association for People's German Work Abroad (ÖVVA), which was founded in 1934 at the suggestion of Federal Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss . He also headed its body, the Austrian Correspondence for Volksdeutsche Arbeit (ÖKVDA). He published in 1934 "Patriotic education" and in 1936 the magazine "Austria and the rights of minorities". From 1933 he was managing director of the state milk traffic office. After 1945 he was head of the political office of the ÖVP. From 1960 to 1964 he was also a member of the supervisory board of the Austrian Alpine Mining Company . He was buried in the Vienna Siebenhirten cemetery .

Political mandates

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Matricula Online - Birth Book Siebenhirten, Entry 29, 2nd line
  2. entry about Josef Tzöbl in Biolex, the Weblexikon the ACA .
  3. Irmgard Bärnthaler : The Fatherland Front. History and organization . Europa Verlag, Vienna / Frankfurt / Zurich 1971, ISBN 3-203-50379-7  ( formally incorrect ) , p. 170 .