Julius Haussmann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Julius Haußmann (born July 27, 1816 in Ludwigsburg , † July 29, 1889 in Stuttgart ) was a German businessman, publicist and politician.

Life

Julius Haußmann finished his law studies in Tübingen without a degree and then worked in his father's pharmacy in Ludwigsburg. As part of his political activity, he was very committed to the local and state self-determination of the people and called for a strengthening of individual rights and freedoms. During the revolutionary years he took a leading role in the Reutlingen Whitsun meeting in 1849. They called for internal reforms to be accelerated. As a result, Haussmann had to flee to Switzerland . He returned voluntarily and was to several years imprisonment convicted. In 1854 he was released early from prison. Together with Karl Mayer and Ludwig Pfau he worked in the editorial office of the Stuttgart observer and was with them on January 6, 1864 a founding member of the Württemberg People's Party , which sharply rejected the path to a small German solution .

Since 1835 he was a member of the Corps Suevia Tübingen .

family

Julius Haußmann was the son of the court and city pharmacist in Ludwigsburg Karl Friedrich Haußmann (1779–1856) and born Carolina. Kausler (1790-1839). His first marriage was to Marie Josephine Stoffel (1827–1857). From her he got the twin sons Conrad (1857-1922) and Friedrich (1857-1907), both of whom were active politicians in the People's Party . In his second marriage he was married to Anna Leisler (1822–1862) from 1861.

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener corps lists 1910, 197 , 208.

literature