Julius Dehne

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Julius Dehne (born January 13, 1873 in Löbau ; † August 14, 1950 in Radebeul ) was a German lawyer , administrative officer and politician ( DDP , DStP, LDP ).

Life

Julius Dehne was born as the son of the Löbauer merchant Julius Eduard Dehne. After graduating from high school, he began studying law at the University of Leipzig , which he completed with the first state examination in law. He graduated from 1896 to 1900, the clerkship at the District Court Eibenstock and the district court of Bautzen , the Second Law was state exam and received his PhD later Doctor of Laws . He also practiced briefly as a lawyer in several law firms and from 1900 worked as an assistant judge at the Dresden District Court . A year later he joined the Saxon local government, became a city ​​councilor and had been since 1902Mayor of the city ​​of Riesa . In 1908 he became a paid city councilor in Dresden and from 1911 to 1916 he was Lord Mayor of the city ​​of Plauen . In addition, he was a member of the First Chamber of the Saxon State Parliament from 1913 to 1916 . Then Dehne took up a job in the Saxon civil service; from 1916 to 1919 he was Saxony's deputy representative to the Federal Council and at the same time acted as a representative of Saxon industrial and commercial interests in Berlin . He was also a board member of the War Food Office from 1916 .

After the First World War, Dehne took over from 1918 to 1924 as ministerial director in charge of the department for industry, trade and commerce in the Saxon Ministry of the Interior. He joined the German Democratic Party (DDP) and was elected to the Saxon state parliament in 1920, to which he was a member until 1930. From 1919 to 1924 he was first deputy authorized representative and from 1926 to 1927 then authorized representative of Saxony to the Reichsrat . From August 1924 to January 1926 he was director of the Saxon Bank in Dresden . In the government of the Free State of Saxony led by Prime Minister Max Heldt , Dehne served as Minister of Finance from January 27, 1926 to January 13, 1927 and as Minister of the Interior from January 13, 1927 to March 5, 1927. A few weeks after his appointment as Minister of the Interior, Dehne again took over the management of the Saxon Bank in Dresden and therefore left the state government. After the Sächsische Bank was taken over by the Sächsische Staatsbank on January 1, 1937, Dehne retired.

From 1946 to 1949 Dehne was President of the State Audit Office of Saxony. At the same time he was chairman of the LDP local group Radebeul and the LDP district association Dresden as well as honorary chairman of the regional association Saxony of the LDP.

Dehne married Elsa Sophia Seurig in 1903 in Blasewitz , today Dresden. From 1939 at the latest, he was a retired Minister of State. D. in the Dresden villa suburb of Radebeul-Niederlößnitz in the now listed Villa Körnerweg 3 , which also belonged to him. Dehne's last place of residence after the Second World War was Wasastraße 60 in Radebeul-Serkowitz .

See also

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Negotiations of the Saxon State Parliament. 5th legislative term, 8th session, October 9, 1930, p. 226 (B).
  2. Erich Reichelt: State life under the Saxon constitution of November 1, 1920 (= Leipzig jurisprudential studies booklet 32). Theodor Weicher, Leipzig 1928 (reprint Zentralantiquariat der DDR, Leipzig 1970), p. 76.
  3. ^ Frankfurter Zeitung of December 30, 1936. (The claim in Andreas Thüsing (ed.): The Presidium of the State Administration of Saxony. The minutes of the meetings from July 9, 1945 to December 10, 1946. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2010, p. 506, Dehne was dismissed from the Saxon Bank in 1933, is incorrect.)
  4. ^ Andreas Thüsing (Ed.): The Presidium of the State Administration of Saxony. The minutes of the meetings from July 9, 1945 to December 10, 1946 . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2010, p. 506.
  5. ^ Address book Radebeul, 1939, p. 90.
  6. Last place of residence and date of death supplemented according to written information from the Radebeul City Archives .