Julius von Königswarter

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Julius Baron von Königswarter (born August 25, 1854 , † May 29, 1918 ) was a German entrepreneur in Hanover and consul general of Portugal .

Life

From Königswarter member was originally from to Austria-Hungary belonging Königswart in Western Bohemia derived, later ennobled Jewish family Königswarter . The Baron had with Sophia Runne , who died at a young age, a 1890 illegitimate son, the future SPD -Politiker Wilhelm Königswarter . He was married since 1885 to the actress Henriette (nee Jonas), who appeared under the stage name Helene Jolanda in the theater in Breslau.

Julius Baron von Königswarter studied law and was awarded a Dr. jur. PhD . In 1884 von Königswarter founded the chemical factory Königswarter & Ebell in Linden near Hanover together with the chemist Paul Ebell . By 1907 at the latest, the company had applied for a patent for a laundry detergent called “Ding an sich”. The company also appeared briefly as K&D with a “registered trademark ” .

Königswarter was also z. B. also as a shareholder in the company Hannoversche Centralheizungs- und Apparate-Bau-Anstalt AG , Centralheizungswerke AG since 1903 , which apparently also manufactured systems relevant to the chemical industry.

When Julius von Königswarter died in 1918, his son took over "his industrial shares", but lost a large share in the hyperinflation . In 1935 the company Königswarter & Ebell was taken over by the Hanoverian VARTA and ruled by the Quandt family around 1940 . Königswarter & Ebell later joined TIB Chemicals AG in Hagen .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Drewes, K .: Jüdischer Adel: Nobilitierungen von Juden in Europa des 19. Century . Campus Verlag, 2013, ISBN 978-3-593-39775-7 ( page 353 ).
  2. ^ Kai Drewes: Jewish nobility. The ennoblement of Jews in Europe in the 19th century. ( Preview on google books )
  3. ^ Hans Jaeger:  Königswarter. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 12, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1980, ISBN 3-428-00193-1 , p. 362 ( digitized version ).
  4. a b Bernd-Ulrich Hergemöller (ed.), Nicolai Clarus (collaborator): Man for man. Biographical lexicon on the history of love for friends and male-male sexuality in the German-speaking area. Volume 1, Lit Verlag, Berlin / Münster 2010, ISBN 978-3-643-10693-3 , pp. 673 f., 1483, 1552. ( limited preview of Google books )
  5. In Mann für Mann it is written about the illegitimate son, but then that von Königswarter was married to Sophia Runne .
  6. ^ Kai Drewes: Jewish nobility. The ennoblement of Jews in Europe in the 19th century . Campus, Frankfurt 2012, ISBN 978-3-593-39775-7 , pp. 342, note 218 ( books.google.de - supplement and family tree ).
  7. Ludwig Sittenfeld: History of the Breslau Theater from 1841 to 1900. P. 193 (online)
  8. ^ A b Hans Arends, Curt Mossner, Julius Mossner: Directory of directors and supervisory boards. Finanz-Verlag, 1915, p. 571. ( Preview of Google Books )
  9. a b Andreas-Andrew Bornemann: 1884–1935 Chemische Fabrik Königswarter & Ebell Linden in front of Hanover on postkarten-archiv.de, last accessed on June 24, 2017
  10. ^ J. Springer: Königswarter & Ebell. In: Färber-Zeitung, magazine for dyeing, fabric printing and total ink consumption , 18th year 1907.
  11. a b Heinz Abel: About us. Website of the Königswarter & Ebell Chemische Fabrik GmbH. Retrieved January 7, 2013.
  12. Joachim Scholtyseck: The rise of the Quandts. A German entrepreneurial dynasty. CH Beck, Munich 2011, ISBN 978-3-406-62251-9 . ( Preview on google books )