Julius Multiply

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Julius Multiply
Julius Multiply
Senator Vermehren’s office in Königstr. 39 (around 1900)
1916 visiting the Lübeck Regiment , Vermehren (13)
More grave in the new part of the Burgtorfriedhof
Family coat of arms (also on the tombstone)

Julius Vermehren (born March 8, 1855 in Lübeck ; † February 5, 1928 there ) was a lawyer and notary as well as a senator for the Hanseatic city of Lübeck.

Life

Julius Vermehren was the son of the general agent of the same name of the German Life Insurance Company in Lübeck and his wife Wilhelmine, nee. Christians. The architect Paul Vermehren was his older brother. After the early death of the father, the task of raising children fell to his mother alone, who also took other students into retirement. After visiting the so-called candidate school he went to the Katharineum and laid here at Easter 1874 Director Breier the High School from.

He studied law at the University of Tübingen and later Berlin .

In the meantime, he did his military duty as a one-year volunteer with the fusilier battalion of the 76ers (the later 162s ) . After several exercises as a Landwehr officer, he took his leave from this .

He holds a PhD in both rights . He was a member and later an honorary member of Corps Suevia Tübingen .

In 1879, Vermehren was admitted as a lawyer and notary in Lübeck . He also participated for several years in addition to office the position of a prosecutor assistants true. On May 26, 1897, he associated with Ernst Wittern to one of the largest law firms . On March 15, 1902, the lawyer Otto Schorer joined the company as the third partner.

As a co-founder of the Father City Association , he took over the office of secretary and contributed significantly to the shape of the civil association.

In 1887 he was elected to the citizenship and the following year to the citizens' committee. He belonged to both bodies, with brief interruptions, until his election to the Senate . He has been elected several times as a member of important commissions and deputations . The trust of his fellow citizens appointed him on October 26, 1903 to the position of second spokesman for the citizenship .

As a civil deputy, he was a member of the administrative authority for municipal communal institutions, the tax authority, the central poor deputation and the high school authority during his 25 years of activity.

He also worked in the non-profit and political sectors. As a co-founder of the Reichsverein, he chaired it until 1896. At his suggestion, the local branch of the German Ostmarken-Verein was founded in 1902 . In the same year he was appointed head of the Lübeck Lawyers' Association . The Hanseatic Bar Association appointed him to its board . He was also a member of the board of directors of the St. Marien Congregation for years.

He then became a member of the Lübeck Senate in 1904. As a senator he was from 1904 mayor of the town hall, in the civil servants' commission, the tax authorities and the customs commission as well as in other specialist commissions. Since 1917, Vermehren has been a member of the Commission for Reich and Foreign Affairs and since 1919 the city’s deputy to the Reichsrat .

In honorary office he was head of the Bruskow Foundation, the von Stiten Foundation and the von Wickede Foundation since 1904 , and of the Westerauer Foundation since 1915 . He lived at Königstraße 39 and had a summer house in front of the castle gate on Jerusalemsberg 6.

As an honorary member of the Comradeship Association of the 76ers and 162s in Lübeck , he emerged from the mass of members through his work, as the festschrift for the 25th anniversary of 1920 shows several times.

Julius Vermehren was married to Isabell Nölting (1862–1956), a daughter of Carl Georg Nölting (1822–1889) and Marie Auguste Angelika, née. Schultze (1833-1914). The two had four children, including Oscar, Kurt and Felicitas.

Isa Vermehren , Erich Vermehren and Michael Vermehren , children of his son Kurt and his wife Petra , are his grandchildren.

Vermehrens grave is in the Burgtorfriedhof . After Julius Vermehren, the Vermehrenring in the Lübeck-St. Gertrud named.

literature

  • Emil Ferdinand Fehling : Lübeck Council Line. Lübeck 1925, no.1030
  • Kösener corps list, 1960
  • Jan Zimmermann : St. Gertrud 1860-1945. A photographic foray. Bremen 2007, p. 112 ff. ISBN 978-3-86108-891-2
  • City Papers ; Lübeck, December 18, 1904, article: Senator Dr. Julius Multiply
  • Joachim Lilla : The Reichsrat: Representation of the German states in the legislation and administration of the Reich 1919-1934 a biographical handbook with the involvement of the Bundesrat Nov. 1918 - Febr. 1919 and the State Committee Feb. - Aug. 1919. Düsseldorf: Droste 2006 ISBN 3 -7700-5279-X , pp. 126-127
  • Karl-Ernst Sinner: Tradition and Progress. Senate and Mayor of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck 1918-2007 , Volume 46 of Series B of the publications on the history of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck published by the Archives of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck , Lübeck 2008, p. 243

Web links

Commons : Julius Vermehren  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Hermann Genzken: The Abitur graduates of the Katharineum in Lübeck (grammar school and secondary school) from Easter 1807 to 1907. Borchers, Lübeck 1907. (Supplement to the school program 1907) urn : nbn: de: hbz: 061: 1-305545 , No. 724
  2. 25 years of the Comradeship Association of the 76 and 162 in Lübeck
  3. Genealogical handbook of bourgeois families (Hamburger Familien Volume 3), 1912, p. 385
  4. According to Jan Zimmermann: "I had a lot on my mind that I would like to say to the youth on this occasion". Thomas Mann's participation in the 400th anniversary of the Katharineum in Lübeck in September 1931 , in: Your very devoted Thomas Mann: Autographs from the archive of the Buddenbrookhaus. Edited by Britta Dittmann, Thomas Rütten, Hans Wisskirchen and Jan Zimmermann. Lübeck: Schmidt-Römhild 2006 (from the archive of Buddenbrookhaus 1), pp. 133–170, here p. 139