KDStV Hercynia Freiburg im Breisgau

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KDSt.V. Hercynia

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Basic data
University location: Freiburg in Breisgau
University / s: Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg
Founding: June 24, 1873
Corporation association : Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations ( 1873 )
Association number: 7th
Cartel / District / AG: Marburg district
Abbreviation: Mr!
Color status : colored
Colours: Violet-gold-red
Colours:
Fox colors: Violet-gold-violet
Fox colors:
Cap: Freiburg flat cap
Type of Confederation: Men's association
Religion / Denomination: Roman Catholic
Position to the scale : not striking
Motto: United and loyal!
Field shout ( Panier ): Hercynia be the banner
Total members: 484 (2017)
Website: hercynia.de

The Catholic German student union Hercynia [ hɛɐˈt͡syːnia ] (KDSt.V. Hercynia) in the CV of Freiburg im Breisgau is a non-striking Catholic German student union founded in 1873 .

history

The founding time

Hercynia was founded at the time of the late Baden Kulturkampf , in which the Grand Duchy of Baden and the Roman Catholic Church argued about the position of the church within society. Due to the closure of the theological Konviktes in the course of the aforementioned Baden Kulturkampf , the Aenane Gustav Karle transferred from the seminary to the medical faculty, where he managed to establish a Catholic student association from the Cartell Association. The KDStV Hercynia was founded on June 24, 1873, St. John's Day , at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg by members of the KDStV Aenania Munich and AV Guestfalia Tübingen associations by signing the deed of foundation. Admission to the Cartell Association took place at the Cartell Assembly in Stuttgart on October 14, 1873. Together with the recently founded KDStV Markomannia Würzburg , Hercynia is one of the first two associations that were established from the Cartell Association for the purpose of expanding to other universities. The first honorary members were accepted on July 7, 1875, including Joseph von Buß (center politician, see section on Kulturkampf) and Count Max von Kageneck. The senior gentlemen's association was established in 1880, with the later Chancellor Constantin Fehrenbach being elected first senior senior gentleman. The poet Heinrich Gassert , himself from the ranks of the Hercynia, wrote the text of the song "Let your colorful hats" , which was accepted as the official CV federal song in 1885 , for the Cartell Association .

Baden and academic culture war

Until the early years of the 20th century, Catholic fraternities were a thorn in the side of political elites. This conflict was carried out on a political level by the numerous center politicians represented at the Hercynia and by the students at the university. During a multi-day debate on the budget of the Baden Ministry of Culture in April 1904 , the Hercyne and center politician Constantin Fehrenbach commented on the right to exist of Catholic corporations and the accusation that they increased the denominational division of society:

But it is not correct that the establishment of these corporations also created a rift in public life. The crack is there, that's a historical fact, we can't help it, it's centuries old, and we just have to endure this big crack, and the denominational student corporations also take part in the effort to bridge it through mutual tolerance part, and one cannot say that those who unite here denominationally brought about a further tear in the people. One would have a right to do this if one could prove that these denominational corporations have aggressive tendencies towards those of different faiths. “( Constantin Fehrenbach :).

At that time, the Academic Kulturkampf , a struggle between beating and non-beating denominational student associations, was in full swing in Freiburg at the level of university politics . In the student committee of the University of Freiburg, which was founded in 1904 to regulate student affairs, the Catholic associations should not be represented as individual associations, but only as a group, since the established associations saw their influence waning due to the spin-offs of denominational associations taking place at that time. In February 1905 the Freiburg Student Committee passed the following resolution:

“Here in Freiburg, where an annihilation struggle of the Catholic corporations is impossible due to their all too powerful backers and due to the confession of the population, we give the call to vigorously take a front against these not only denominational, but political connections, so that it doesn't also from the academic state may say: Zuntrum is trump! " .

In this context, the recognition of the Hercynia newly founded KDStV Hohenstaufen (on June 6, 1905) became the subject of discussions in the student committee. After no agreement could be found, the Vice-Rector announced that the committee would be dissolved. Before the committee could be dissolved, however, it was blown up by members of the Freiburg fraternities, who accused the Catholic corporations of undermining the peace and providing electoral assistance to the center . As a result, a special committee of anti-denominational students was formed on July 24 and a non-beating special committee on December 16.

Towards the end of the Academic Culture Contest, at the festivities of the 1907 Katholikentag (on November 18), which was presided over by the KÖStV Austria Wien , Constantin Fehrenbach appeared as a speaker, with the equality of the Catholic student body again in the foreground of his remarks. In the invitation to the University's Festkommers from 1908, the tensions between the connections and a gradual fading of the conflicts are thematized as follows:

"After the confessional split that occurred several years ago and the ensuing struggles that kept them separate for a long time, our student body has for the first time unanimously come together again in unanimous numbers in honor of their exalted Rector Magnificentissimus, to honor our most noble sovereign prince, To show love and loyalty. "

By the time of the Weimar Republic at the latest , the conflict between beating and denominational students had vanished. In part, presumably because of the revaluation due to the dwindling political influence of the corps after the abdication of Kaiser Wilhelm II (member of the Corps Borussia Bonn ) and the numerous political offices held by old men of various denominational associations. Constantin Fehrenbach , who was Chancellor of the Weimar Republic from June 25, 1920 to May 4, 1921, is the most prominent of the Hercynia .

Number of members and establishment of new connections

At the turn of the century, the Hercynia activism had grown to 120 to 130 active members, so that the first subsidiary KDStV Ripuaria Freiburg im Breisgau was founded on June 6, 1899, following the repeal of the singularity principle in the Cartell Association (1897) .

When the second subsidiary of Hercynia, the KDStV Hohenstaufen, was founded on June 6, 1905, the zeitgeist of the Academic Kulturkampf made itself felt. The patriotic sentiment of the Catholic corporations was questioned from the camp of weapons students (striking student associations), which is why the national principle was more strongly emphasized by them as a reaction. So the KDStV Hohenstaufen Freiburg (like all subsequent subsidiary connections of Hercynia) was founded with a German name and the Hohenstaufen motto "Virtus patriae, amico fidem!" (= "Bravery to the fatherland, loyalty to friends!" ) Takes up the principle of Patria. This trend was also noticeable at association level, where z. B. The word "patriotic love" found its way into the statutes of the Cartell Association in 1907. The corps' displeasure with the expansion of denominational student associations was formulated by the then presiding corps, Hasso-Borussia, to the vice-rector of the university, Theodor Axenfeld , as follows: "Such an approach to denominational associations would seriously endanger the peace among the corporations at the local university . " . At this time (winter semester 1909/10) the Catholic student associations in Freiburg enjoyed great popularity among students, so 233 of 1064 Catholic students were organized in Catholic student associations (rate: 21.9%). The KDStV Falkenstein was founded on January 9, 1913 (colors: orange-green on a white background; motto: German and loyal! ) And on May 29, 1924 the KDStV Wildenstein (colors: black-white-violet; motto: Faithful German alleweg!) , later changed to: In necessariis unitas, in dubiis libertas, in omnibus caritas! ).

The KDStV Landeck was founded on February 25, 1929 (colors: pink-Prussian blue on a white background; motto: I serve! ) And celebrated its publication on June 24, 1929, the day Hercynia was founded, with the participation of the entire Freiburg CV. The foundation had become necessary because in the past three years there were over 100 applications from new students and these could not be included in the CV links in these numbers. Since Landeck did not have a house of his own, the connection was to be merged into the National Socialist German Student Union as early as 1934 by a law . In order to avoid this synchronization, a takeover contract was concluded with the Hercynia, as a result of which all Landeckers also received the Hercynen ribbon. After the end of the war, the KDStV Landeck was not re-established, the subsidiary connection finally merged in 1949 with the parent connection Hercynia. With the death of the last remaining Landecker in 2003, this connection ceased to exist.

According to the last complete directory of the Cartell Association before the Second World War, the Hercynia consisted of 767 federal brothers in 1931 and was the second largest student association in the Cartell Association after the founding association of the Cartell Association ( KDStV Aenania Munich , 1027 members). The Hercynia - known as the "fox stable of the Cartell Association" - enjoyed extreme popularity among the first-year students, even after the establishment of five subsidiary associations.

Hercynia founded five subsidiary associations ( see details ):

Name of the connection founding Record in the CV Colours Circle status
KDStV Ripuaria 1899 1899 Colors of the KDStV Ripuaria Freiburg im Breisgau active
KDStV Hohenstaufen 1905 1905 Colors of the KDStV Hohenstaufen Freiburg im Breisgau active
KDStV Falkenstein 1913 1913 Colors of the KDStV Falkenstein Freiburg im Breisgau active
KDStV Wildenstein 1924 1924 Colors of the KDStV Wildenstein Freiburg im Breisgau Circle Wildenstein.jpg active
KDStV Landeck 1929 1929 Colors of the KDStV Landeck Freiburg im Breisgau Not re-established after WWII, absorbed in Hercynia.

In contrast, Arminia, which is also based in Freiburg, is the only CV connection in Freiburg that was not founded by Hercynia and initially had to belong to the KDV until 1910 due to the singularity principle .

First and Second World War

Postcard for the enrollment of the 3000th student, Walter Stegmüller, in Freiburg

In the time before the First World War, the Hercyne Walter Stegmüller made a name for himself, who became known as 'King Coincidence' because he was first celebrated as the three thousandth student at the University of Freiburg, then as the first delinquent to inaugurate the newly opened detention center and shortly afterwards fatally injured in a tragic accident ( see detailed description ).
During the First World War the Hercynenhaus was orphaned, 56 members of the association fell. Active operations could be resumed under difficult conditions. The Freiburg honorary citizen Carl Kistner played a key role in this.

In 1925, Hercynia took over the sponsorship of the KDStV Vandalia Prague to Munich , which moved with its members to Munich in 1950.

After the forced dissolution of the CV in 1935, the Aktivitas of Hercynia was also suspended in 1938 and the Hercynenhaus was confiscated (see also Himmler decree of June 20, 1938 ). Because the Hercynenhaus was not sold before the suspension, as was the case with other CV connections, it was possible to get the Hercynenhaus refunded in the post-war period.

38 Hercynes fell during the Second World War ; 8 Hercynen fell victim to the tyranny of the National Socialists and Red Army soldiers. The priests Heinrich Becker, Hubert Berger , and Hans Rindermann were interned in the pastors' block of the Dachau concentration camp . The lawyer Bruno Helbig-Neupaur and the archpriest Aloys Schulz were imprisoned by the Gestapo for several months . Ministerialrat Hans Quecke was murdered by an SS commando on April 29, 1945 in Munich after taking part in the Bavarian freedom campaign . The priests Johannes Lindenblatt and Otto Rust were murdered by the Red Army in 1945 in Rastenburg and Naumburg am Queis, respectively .

The Hercynia old gentlemen's association was re-established in post-war Germany on April 30, 1947 in Düsseldorf . Exactly one year later, with the help of ten members from other CV connections from all over Germany, Aktivitas was also re-established.

Recent history

After 1877/1878, 1884/1885 and 1890/1891, the Freiburg Cartell Association took over the suburb of the umbrella association for the fourth time in 1971/72. The Hercyne Stephan porter became the local president . At the 86th Cartell meeting under the direction of the Hercynen gatekeeper, the so-called "Freiburg Spring" took place, which meant an end to the questioning of the basic values ​​of the association and as a result, the CV has been committed to the principle of only Catholic male students since then as members. After the end of the one-year term of office, there was no local association that wanted to take over the suburb next, so Stephan Pförtner took up a second term (1972/73) and then introduced a mandatory sequence for the suburb.

Hercynia was also mentioned in Karsten Hohage's humorous autobiography about his student days in Freiburg, where she appears under the pseudonym "Arkynia" (Greek translation of Hercynia) in the chapter "Capture the Flag", in which the protagonist tries to connect the flag Stealing Arkynia from the flagpole:

Also a CV whose wealth was legendary in the city. The house was in a park-like garden on the slope of a hill, a small palace with huge, always cleaned rung hangers, a spacious sandstone terrace, several oriels and turrets and a couple faxing. The flag was not waving on the facade of the Arkynen, but on a mast about three meters high, a few meters next to the double-winged entrance door in the finest carving. [After stalking and climbing the said flagpole] Siegurd, finally arriving at the top, spent another eternity fiddling with the pliers on the flag fastening, which apparently did not want to come off. Suddenly a jet of water spurted out of one of the windows of the house, Siegurd screamed and shot down the bar, falling rather than sliding. One must admit that the Arkynen did not laugh until Siegurd got up again, dripping and apparently intact. "Everything okay, color brother wet sack? The lock on the flag is probably too solid for your hardware store tongs, isn't it? If you want to come in for a beer, you unfortunately have to drink in the entrance hall, otherwise you will wet the floorboard for us. " Karsten Hohage in a shared flat for men with compulsory drinking )

In the year 2011/2012, the local association took over the Freiburg Cartellverbandes the sixth time the suburb of Cartellverbandes , with Ramon man from the KDSt.V. Falkenstein Freiburg held the office of suburban president.

The Hercynia has always been inviting people to a wide variety of academic lectures, which are very popular in Freiburg.

Hercyne House

The Villa Hasse (today Hercynenhaus )

In 1911 the search for a fraternity house in Freiburg began. Ultimately, the choice fell on the Villa Hasse, built around 1890, today's Hercynenhaus . The Hercynian flag was hoisted for the first time on June 24, 1911. On June 24, 1938, the 65th day Hercyniae was founded, the house was confiscated by the state police and used as an administration building as NS property by the SS standards. In the post-war period, the Hercynenhaus was used by the Loretto Hospital as a military hospital and returned to the Hercynia after winning the legal dispute. It was not until July 15, 1952 that the Loretto Hospital cleared the Hercynenhaus. The Hercynenhaus was completely refurbished between 1983 and 1984. In the course of modernization measures, the Villa Hasse was placed under monument protection in 2017 by the State Office for Monument Preservation , both in terms of the facade and the interior . Also in 2017 the Park Creator Werner Semmler were out on the upper part of the property and the adjacent on the initiative Lorettokapelle like around trees, over the to open starting at the visitor four lines of sight from Lorettoberg the Lorettoberg umgenbende valley.

Hercynenberghaus

The Hercynia Mountain House ( 47 ° 51 ′ 50.9 ″  N , 8 ° 5 ′ 19.6 ″  E )

In 1925 the "Hüttenverein Hercynia eV" was founded and an area on the Titisee was acquired for the establishment of a Hercynen rest home. Two years later (May 30, 1927) the Götzenberg i. Bärental the Hercynenberghaus ( 47 ° 51 ′ 50.9 ″  N , 8 ° 5 ′ 19.6 ″  E ) can be purchased. In order to forestall the feared action by the National Socialists against Catholic connections, the association was renamed "Hüttengemeinschaft am Götzenberg". After the seizure by the Gestapo in June 1938, the Berghaus was reimbursed on March 19, 1952 after a restitution suit had been won. The Berghaus is essentially a more than 250-year-old mountain farm, which is run all year round by a tenant and is open to Hercynen and friends of the Cartell brothers. The deep attachment of many returning guests to the Berghaus was also mentioned in contemporary literature.

Goals and principles

The Hercynia is based on the principles of the CV ( religio , scientia , amicitia and patria ) . She wants to establish a lifelong friendship (Lebensbund) , which is borne by her couleur student traditions and comment . According to the tradition of the Cartell Association, only male, Catholic students and academics can be accepted as members. The Hercynia is non-hitting, so rejects student fencing and the mensur , and describes itself as politically independent.

Color and insignia

The name Hercynia

The connection name Hercynia is derived from the term used by the Roman historian Tacitus (55 to about 116 AD) for the forest areas from the edge of the Alps to the Harz as hercynia silva " Hercynia silva " (Latin Hercynia silva, Greek = Arkynia). The members of the KDStV Hercynia are called "Freiburger Hercynen" and not "Harzer", as is usual with some student associations of the same name. The official abbreviation within the Cartell Association is Hr! and the Hercynia is number seven in the official order of the Cartel connections .

Color

Hercynia
coat of arms

The connection has the colors purple-gold-red with gold percussion . The fox colors are violet-gold-violet with golden percussion . The head color today is a flat cap with a cloth made of purple felt. The colors violet-gold-red stand for the color of the theological Konvikt, which was dissolved in 1873 (violet) and the Baden state colors (gold-red). In addition to the conventional interpretation, the three founding principles of Hercynias can also be assigned to the colors: the violet of the church and faith, the gold of science and the red of friendly love and solidarity.

coat of arms

The Hercynia coat of arms shows a four-part shield. In heraldic reading, in the upper left quarter this contains the colors of the connection violet-gold-red in an inclined position as well as the Hercyne's circle in black. The next quarter shows a golden clover leaf cross on a black background, under which the founding date of the connection is indicated in golden letters. It symbolizes the catholicity principle. In the next quarter a red flower, the Eberstein Rose , with its five petals can be seen in a golden circle on a purple background . In the golden circle around the Ebersteiner Rose is the motto of the association: "UNITED AND TRUE!". The rose stands together with the Alemannic griffin , which is depicted in black on a golden background in the last quarter, for the geographical home of the connection. Three ostrich feathers in the connecting colors emerge from the helmet resting above the shield as a helmet ornament.

Motto

Hercynia Circle

The Hercynia motto is: United and loyal! .

Circle

The Hercynian Circle is a color student monogram of four letters, V , C , F , H , and a call sign. These letters stand for V IVAT C RESCAT F LOREATQUE H ERCYNIA (Hercynia live, grow and prosper). Another interpretation is V IVAT C IRCULUS F RATRUM H ERCYNIAE (Long live the circle of the Brothers of Hercynia). The callsign stands for IN AETERNUM and means that the connection still has an active part.

The stylized H in the middle stands for the name of the compound, Hercynia. The stylized V in the lower half stands for VIVAT (live). The stylized C in the lower part of the middle arch stands for CRESCAT (grow). The upper part of the middle arch, together with the line above, forms a stylized F and stands for FLOREAT (bloom or thrive).

Marburg district

Hercynia Freiburg is a member of the Marburger Kreis , a community of interest students among the oldest connections within the Cartell Association (CV). While the Marburger Kreis initially (from 1986 ) came together to support the then weakly staffed VKDSt Rhenania Marburg, nowadays the common endeavor is in the foreground to counteract the decline of couleur student mores and to strengthen the catholicity principle within the CV.

The Marburger Kreis consists of the following member associations:

Every winter semester, the Marburger Kreis organizes a circular ring meeting, the highlight of which is the ring bar.

Known members

The list is sorted chronologically by year of birth.

  • Franz Josef Ritter von Buß (1803–1878; first honorary member 1875), politician, canon lawyer, member of the National Assembly and chairman of the First Catholic Congress
  • Johann Baptist Alzog (1808–1878, honorary member 1976), Catholic clergyman and church historian
  • Christian Roos (1826–1896, honorary member 1890), Catholic clergyman and Archbishop of Freiburg im Breisgau
  • Justus Knecht (1839–1921, honorary member 1881), religious educator, auxiliary bishop of Freiburg im Breisgau
  • Cornelius Krieg (1838–1911, honorary member 1880), Catholic clergyman and pastoral theologian
  • Ludwig Marbe (1839–1907, honorary member 1875), politician (center), member of the Baden state parliament and the Reichstag
  • Karl Lauck (1840–1906, honorary member 1889), politician (center), member of the Reichstag
  • Emil Armbruster (1843–1908, honorary member 1892), politician (center), member of the Baden state parliament
  • Ludwig Seitz (1844–1908, honorary member 1877), painter and director of the Vatican Galleries
  • Hermann Herder (1864–1937, honorary member 1911), publisher and managing director of the Herder publishing group
  • Florian Werr (1851–1917), Catholic clergyman, publicist and politician (center), publisher of the association journal Academia
  • Constantin Fehrenbach (1852–1926), politician, President of the Reichstag, President of the Weimar National Assembly, Reich Chancellor (center)
  • Leonhard Schanzenbach (1852–1938, honorary member 1885), Catholic clergyman and papal. House prelate
  • Johannes Baptist von Kiene (1852–1919), politician, Minister of Justice of the State of Württemberg (center), founding member of Hercynia
  • Christian Meurer (1856–1935), canon lawyer, university professor and rector of the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg, suburb president 1877–1878
  • Heinrich Gassert (1857–1928), doctor, writer and songwriter, author of the CV federal song "Let, you multicolored-caped groups"
  • Ferdinand Kopf (1857–1943), politician, President of Chamber II of the Baden State Parliament and the Constituent National Assembly of Baden (center)
  • Lorenz Werthmann (1858–1921, honorary member 1890), Catholic clergyman, social politician and founder and first president of the German Caritas Association
  • Karl Oréans (1863–1960), Romance philologist
  • Karl Fritz (1864–1931, honorary member 1913), Catholic clergyman and Archbishop of Freiburg im Breisgau
  • Franz Josef Wittemann (1866–1931), politician, lawyer, President of the Baden State Parliament, Minister of the Interior and President of the State (center)
  • Otto Rust (1871–1945), Catholic clergyman and archpriest, martyr of the 20th century
  • Konrad Beyerle (1872–1933), constitutional lawyer, legal historian and politician (center, BVP)
  • Hubert Naendrup (1872–1947), legal scholar and rector of the Westphalian Wilhelms University
  • Joseph Sauer (1872–1949, honorary member 1928), archaeologist and art historian, rector of the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg
  • Alwin Reinke (1877–1949), lawyer, local politician (Center Party) and writer
  • Benedikt Kreutz (1879–1949), President of the German Caritas Association
  • Heinrich Joseph Vogels (1880–1972), Catholic clergyman and New Testament scholar
  • Klemens Löffler (1881–1933), historian and librarian
  • Johannes Lindenblatt (1882–1945), priest, martyr of the 20th century
  • Paul Simon (1882–1946), Roman Catholic clergyman, rector of the University of Tübingen, provost in Paderborn
  • August Nuss (1883–1958), politician, member of the Hessian state parliament (center)
  • Heinrich Wiechens (1884–1949), District Administrator of the Gersfeld District (today the Fulda District) (center)
  • Raymond de Waha (1886–1950), Minister of State f. Agriculture and social welfare in Luxembourg
  • Adolf Horion (1888–1977), monsignor and one of the most important coleopterologists
  • Götz Briefs (1889–1974, honorary member 1924), social theorist
  • Hubert Berger (1889–1948), priest, victim of National Socialism
  • Heinrich Remy (1890–1974), inorganic chemist, textbook author and professor
  • Augustin Schuldis (1891–1954), Catholic clergyman, papal house prelate and honorary dome capitular of the Archdiocese of Freiburg
  • Karl C. Schwendemann (1891–1974), diplomat
  • Ernst Föhr (1892–1976), theologian and politician, member of the state parliament of the Republic of Baden and the Reichstag (center)
  • Hans Struth (1893–1972), publisher
  • Paul Schulte (1895–1974, honorary member 1935), flying missionary, founder of the Missions-Verkehrs-Arbeitsgemeinschaft, book author
  • Theophil Herder-Dorneich (1898–1987), publisher
  • Nikolaus von Ballestrem (1900–1945), nobleman, industrialist and politician (center)
  • Hans Speidel (1900–1984), District Administrator of the Hechingen District
  • Hermann Kopf (1901–1991), politician, member of the German Bundestag (CDU)
  • Heinrich Schnitzler (1901–1962), police officer
  • Hans Quecke (1901–1945), Ministerialrat, resistance fighter in the Bavarian Freedom Campaign, victim of National Socialism
  • Josef Brandel (1901–1964, honorary member 1958), Lord Mayor of Freiburg im Breisgau
  • Heinrich Klosterkemper (1902–1976), administrative lawyer and district administrator
  • Bernhard Panzram (1902–1998), Catholic clergyman, university professor, rector of the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg
  • Otto Krapp (1903–1996), lawyer and Minister of Justice of Lower Saxony (center)
  • Camill Wurz (1905–1986), politician, member of the Baden state parliament, President of the state parliament of Baden-Württemberg (CDU)
  • Hermann Schäufele (1906–1977, honorary member 1958), Catholic clergyman and Archbishop of Freiburg im Breisgau
  • Heinz Trettner (1907–2006, honorary member 1958), General Inspector of the Bundeswehr
  • Ernst Feßler (1908–1979), President of the State Central Bank of North Rhine-Westphalia
  • Otto Ernst (1909–1993), President of the Federal Debt Administration
  • Franz Cardinal Hengsbach (1910–1991), Bishop of Essen, Cardinal
  • Karl Pütz (1911–1945), lawyer, policeman, SS leader and war criminal
  • Norbert Brock (1912–2008), pharmacologist and cancer researcher
  • Bernhard Hellmann (1912–1990), clergyman
  • Christian van Marwyck (1912–2005), doctor, hygienist and microbiologist at the University of Münster, director of the State Hygiene Institute in Bremen
  • Hugo Ott (* 1931, honorary member 1988), historian and Heidegger biographer
  • Helmut Ottenjann (1931–2010), folklorist and prehistoric archaeologist
  • Rudolf Mosis (* 1933, honorary member 1968), theologian
  • Alfred Biolek (* 1934, temporary member), television entertainer and talk show host
  • Joseph Schumacher (* 1934), Catholic theologian
  • Friedrich-Wilhelm Schildberg (1934–2018), physician and university professor for surgery
  • Günther Kindermann (* 1935), gynecologist
  • Norbert Heinen (administrative lawyer) (* 1936), former district administrator of the Unterwesterwaldkreis and the Westerwaldkreis
  • Herbert Haag (* 1937), sports educator
  • Hermann Borgs-Maciejewski (1938–2008), judge at the Federal Administrative Court
  • Hansjörg Elshorst (* 1938), sociologist, founding member and managing director of Transparency International
  • Norbert Feldhoff (* 1939), Provost of Cologne Cathedral
  • Werner Hilgers (* 1939), ancient historian, managing director of the German Museum Association
  • Franz Schmithüsen (1940–2015), forest scientist
  • Norbert Gross (* 1941), President of the Bar Association at the Federal Court of Justice
  • Józef Michalik (* 1941, honorary member 1988), chairman of the Polish Bishops' Conference, Archbishop of Przemyśl
  • Hartmann Römer (* 1943), physicist
  • Hadrian Koch (* 1944), religious
  • Bertold Mathias Reinartz (* 1946), politician, member of the German Bundestag (CDU)
  • Stephan Holthoff-Pförtner (* 1948), lawyer and entrepreneur, local president 1971–1972 & 1972–1973
  • Ferdinand Kirchhof (* 1950), Vice President of the Federal Constitutional Court
  • Eberhard Schockenhoff (1953–2020, honorary member 1998), priest, moral theologian and former member of the National Ethics Council
  • Stefan Hartmann (* 1954), theologian
  • Albrecht Weiland (* 1955), publisher
  • Heiner Scheffold (* 1962), district administrator of the Alb-Donau district
  • Peter Wilhelm Patt (* 1963), member of the Saxon State Parliament (CDU)
  • Thomas Schwartz (* 1964), priest, honorary professor, author, television presenter and founding senior of the KAV Capitolina Rome
  • Michael Friedrich (* 1966), gynecologist
  • Stefan Mückl (* 1970), legal scholar at the University of Freiburg and the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome

See also

literature

  • Florian Werr : History of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations. Paderborn 1890.
  • Complete directory of the CV. Born in 1913, Strasbourg in Alsace 1913.
  • Society for Student History and Student Customs V. (Ed.): CV manual. , 3rd edition, Regensburg 2000, ISBN 3-922485-11-1 .
  • S. Schieweck-Mauk: Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections. Association for German Student History, Würzburg 1997, ISBN 3-89498-040-0 .
  • Heinz Moll (Ed.): Witnesses for Christ. The German Martyrology of the 20th Century , on behalf of the German Bishops' Conference, Schöningh, Paderborn 1999, ISBN 3-506-75778-4 .
  • Helmut Moll (ed.): Witnesses for Christ. The German Martyrology of the 20th Century , on behalf of the German Bishops' Conference, Schöningh, 6th edition, Paderborn 2015, ISBN 978-3-506-78080-5 .
  • Friedrich Schulze and Paul Ssymank : The German student body from the oldest times to the present. Munich 1932 (reprint), ISBN 3-923621-90-6 .
  • Thomas Steinmann: History of Hercyne. Hercyne stories. Volume 1, Freiburg 1993.
  • Peter Stitz: The academic culture struggle for the right to exist of the Catholic student corporations in Germany and Austria from 1903 to 1908. Society for CV History, Munich 1960.
  • Peter Stitz: The CV 1919–1938: The university-political path of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations (CV) from the end of the First World War to its destruction by National Socialism. Society for CV History, Munich 1970.
  • Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume II: The German Universities and their Academic Citizens. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931.
  • Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume IV: The coats of arms of the German corporations at home and abroad. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931.
  • Martin Dossmann : Freiburg's beauty laughs at us again ... - The student associations in Freiburg im Breisgau , WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2017, ISBN 978-3-944052-99-1 .
  • Bernhard Grün , Christoph Vogel: The Fuxenstunde. Supplementary volume: Catholic German Student Union (KDStV) Hercynia Freiburg / Breisgau in the CV. Bad Buchau 2019, 216 pp.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ EH Eberhard: Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 44; Martin Dossmann: "Freiburg's beauty laughs at us again ...", The student associations in Freiburg im Breisgau , Hilden 2017, p. 98.
  2. Florian Werr : History of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations. Paderborn 1890. p. 253
  3. Florian Werr : History of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations. Paderborn 1890. p. 254
  4. Florian Werr : History of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations. Paderborn 1890. p. 257
  5. Martin Dossmann: "Freiburg's beauty laughs us again ...", The Student Associations in Freiburg im Breisgau , Hilden 2017, p. 349 (fn. 1531).
  6. Peter Stitz: The academic culture struggle for the raison d'être of Catholic student corporations in Germany and Austria from 1903 to 1908. Society for CV History, Munich 1960, p. 20.
  7. Wolfgang Ihle: 100 years of KDStV Hohenstaufen zu Freiburg im Breisgau, A connection story as a study of the change in consciousness of Catholic academics in the 20th century , Freiburg, 2005, p. 30.
  8. Peter Stitz: The academic culture struggle for the raison d'être of Catholic student corporations in Germany and Austria from 1903 to 1908. Society for CV History, Munich 1960, p. 85. Further source: Academia, XVIII, p. 131 u. 318.
  9. Martin Dossmann : "Freiburgs beauty laughs us again ...", The student associations in Freiburg im Breisgau , Hilden 2017, ISBN 978-3-944052-99-1 , pp. 129-133.
  10. Peter Stitz: The academic culture struggle for the raison d'être of Catholic student corporations in Germany and Austria from 1903 to 1908. Society for CV History, Munich 1960, pp. 105-106.
  11. Miriam Rürup: A matter of honor. Jewish student associations at German universities 1886–1937 , Göttingen 2008, p. 257.
  12. ^ Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume II: The German Universities and their Academic Citizens. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931. p. 770.
  13. ^ S. Schieweck-Mauk: Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections. Association for German Student History , Würzburg 1997, ISBN 3-89498-040-0 , p. 640.
  14. ^ Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume II: The German Universities and their Academic Citizens. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931, p. 769.
  15. Peter Stitz: The academic culture struggle for the raison d'être of Catholic student corporations in Germany and Austria from 1903 to 1908. Society for CV History, Munich 1960, p. 118.
  16. Wolfgang Ihle: 100 years of KDStV Hohenstaufen zu Freiburg im Breisgau, A connection story as a study of the change in consciousness of Catholic academics in the 20th century , Freiburg, 2005, p. 30.
  17. Christopher Dowe: Also Bildungsbürger, Catholic students and academics in the Kaiserreich , Göttingen, 2006, p. 312.
  18. ^ Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume II: The German Universities and their Academic Citizens. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931, p. 769.
  19. ^ Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume II: The German Universities and their Academic Citizens. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931, p. 770.
  20. ^ Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume II: The German Universities and their Academic Citizens. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931, p. 769.
  21. ^ Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume II: The German Universities and their Academic Citizens. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931, p. 769.
  22. ^ Society for student history and student customs eV Munich (ed.): Resistance and persecution in CV , 1st edition, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-922485-01-4 , p. 216.
  23. ^ Fritz Reiser: The oldest semester of the Freiburg student body and his Freiburger Band- und Karzerpoesie In: Freiburger Almanach Achtes Illustrierter Jahrbuch 1957, No. 8, 1957, S. 56-61.
  24. ^ Doreen Fiedler: Prison University. (No longer available online.) University of Freiburg, November 2009, archived from the original on November 13, 2016 ; accessed on November 14, 2016 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.studium.uni-freiburg.de
  25. ^ Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume II: The German Universities and their Academic Citizens. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931. p. 769.
  26. ^ Society for Student History and Student Customs V. Munich (Ed.): Resistance and persecution in CV , p. 58, 1st edition, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-922485-01-4 .
  27. Helmut Moll (ed.): Witnesses for Christ. The German Martyrology of the 20th Century , on behalf of the German Bishops' Conference, Schöningh, pp. 4–8, 6th edition, Paderborn 2015, ISBN 978-3-506-78080-5 .
  28. ^ Society for Student History and Student Customs V. Munich (Ed.): Resistance and persecution in CV , p. 167, 1st edition, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-922485-01-4 .
  29. ^ Society for Student History and Student Customs V. Munich (Hrsg.): Resistance and persecution in CV , pp. 99-100, 1st edition, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-922485-01-4 .
  30. ^ Society for student history and student customs eV Munich (ed.): Resistance and persecution in CV , pp. 160–162, 1st edition, Munich 1983, ISBN 3-922485-01-4 .
  31. Helmut Moll (ed.): Witnesses for Christ. The German Martyrology of the 20th Century , on behalf of the German Bishops' Conference, Schöningh, pp. 476–479, 6th edition, Paderborn 2015, ISBN 978-3-506-78080-5 .
  32. Helmut Moll (ed.): Witnesses for Christ. The German Martyrology of the 20th Century , on behalf of the German Bishops' Conference, Schöningh, pp. 790–791, 6th edition, Paderborn 2015, ISBN 978-3-506-78080-5 .
  33. Joachim Röderer: Carstellversammlung - Catholic fraternities meet in Freiburg . In: Badische Zeitung . June 6, 2012.
  34. ^ Occupied Newspaper # 8, accessed July 24, 2017
  35. ^ Website of the "Autonomen Antifa Freiburg" on the lectures by Dr. Gysi, General Schneiderhan and General Wegener dated December 16, 2006. Accessed September 6, 2016.
  36. Fantastic Lorettoberg views of Freiburg: The viewing curtains have fallen. accessed on youtube.de on October 29, 2017
  37. ^ Chronicle of the "Hüttengemeinschaft am Götzenberg" - From the "Hut" to the "Berghaus" on the homepage of the Hüttengemeinschaft am Götzenberg eV. Accessed on September 11, 2016.
  38. ^ "The loose thread of tenderness" from www.zeit.de from January 13, 2018
  39. Mareike Nieberding, "Oh, Papa - How my father and I found each other again", will be published on January 15, 2018 by Suhrkamp Verlag, Berlin, ISBN 978-3-518-46812-8
  40. ^ Michael Doeberl : Academic Germany; Volume IV: The coats of arms of the German corporations at home and abroad. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931. Plate LXI.
  41. Florian Werr : History of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations. Paderborn 1890. p. 249
  42. Florian Werr : History of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations. Paderborn 1890. p. 249

Web links

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