KDStV Arminia Heidelberg

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KDSt.V. Arminia Heidelberg

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Basic data
University location: Heidelberg
University / s: Heidelberg University
Founding: July 17, 1887
Corporation association : CV (1887)
Association number: 15th
Cartel / District / AG: Marburg district
Abbreviation: ArH!
Color status : colored
Colours: black-white-blue
Colours:
Fox colors:
Cap: black flat cap
Type of Confederation: Men's association
Religion / Denomination: Roman Catholic
Position to the scale : not striking
Motto: Vincit veritas!
Total members: approx. 300 (2001)
Website: arminia-heidelberg.de/

The Catholic German Student Union Arminia Heidelberg (KDStV Arminia Heidelberg) is a Catholic German student union founded in Heidelberg in 1887 . She belongs to the Cartell Association (CV). She is also a member of the Marburger Kreis.

history

The KDStV Arminia was founded on July 17, 1887 at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg and joined the Cartellverband (CV) in the same year .

In the 19th century, Heidelberg University was strongly liberal , which at the time was synonymous with anti-clerical . Therefore, until 1887 there was no colored Catholic connection at the oldest university in what was then the German Empire . It was founded by five members of the Cartell Association studying in Heidelberg. One of the founders, the philosopher August Messer , dealt with the events surrounding the foundation in his 1905 novel Katholische Studenten .

As early as 1909, Arminia - the only time so far alone - provided the suburb of the Cartell Association with the suburb President Eduard Christmann.

In 1927 the building of its own connection house in the Klingenteichstrasse above the city succeeded. For the inauguration on May 18, 1927, Nuncio Eugenio Pacelli, who later became Pope Pius XII. , the connection. Shortly afterwards, Arminia had the largest influx in its history with 28 new entrants within one semester.

In 1930 the convent felt compelled for the first time to establish that membership in the NSDAP was incompatible with the principles of Arminia and would lead to exclusion.

In 1933, due to pressure from the new rulers, the catholicity principle was abolished and renamed "D. St. V." accepted - in fact the Catholic character was retained. In 1935 Aktivitas was forcibly dissolved; the old gentlemen's association existed until 1938. As a curiosity, it can be noted that the private home association - the owners' association of the Arminenhaus in personal union with the old owners - was re-established by order of the authorities for the purpose of liquidating the house and satisfying the liabilities and, since the liquidation was not ended until 1945, it continued to exist.

In 1947 active operations could be resumed, in 1953 the arminenhaus came back into the possession of the association.

The student unrest associated with 1968 did not leave Arminia unaffected. The number of receptions fell significantly, but the cut was not as strong as in other corporations, which largely abolished student traditions. From the 1980s the number of members stabilized again. Arminia is one of the tradition-conscious connections in the Cartell Association and emphatically represents this position in the CV.

In 1987 the 100-year-old foundation festival was celebrated with well over 1000 visitors.

The liaison members are called Heidelberger Arminen . Arminia Heidelberg is number 15 in the association's internal order of Cartel connections. The official abbreviation is ArH .

Color and motto

The compound carries the colors black and white blue, with silver percussion . The fux colors are blue-white-blue. The head color is a black flat cap .

The motto of the non-beating Arminia is Vincit veritas! what the truth wins! means.

Known members (selection)

  • Gustav Trunk (1871–1936), center politician, Baden minister and later president
  • Konrad Beyerle (1872–1933), constitutional lawyer, legal historian and politician
  • Wilhelm Cuno (1876–1933), Director of HAPAG and Imperial Chancellor of the Weimar Republic 1922–1923
  • Eberhard Nickel (1900–1970), MdL North Rhine-Westphalia (1950–1958)
  • August Neuburger (1902–1999), Member of the Bundestag (1949–1961)
  • Hermann Eyer (1906–1997), hygienist, microbiologist and university professor
  • August Marx (1906–1990), economist and priest
  • Edmund Banaschewski (1907–1992), publisher
  • Hugo Fink (1910–1986), Bavarian State Secretary (1966–1970)
  • Johannes Dyba (1929–2000), Archbishop (titular) and Bishop of Fulda from 1983 until his death in 2000
  • Karl Miltner (1929–2020), Member of the Bundestag (1969–1988) and Regional President of the RB Karlsruhe (1988–1994)
  • Winfried Brohm (1932–2012), constitutional and administrative lawyer, university lecturer
  • Hannspeter Disdorn (1934–2017), German Ambassador to Albania (1995–1999)
  • Hans Küppers (1934–2009), politician and city planner
  • Elmar Wadle (* 1938), legal historian, Vice President of the Constitutional Court of Saarland
  • Paul Kirchhof (* 1943), former judge at the Federal Constitutional Court D., university professor
  • Rolf W. Günther (* 1943), Full Professor of Radiological Diagnostics (1984–2010), University Hospital of RWTH Aachen University
  • Dieter Anders (* 1944), Attorney General in Frankfurt am Main
  • Norbert Herr (* 1944), Member of the Bundestag (1993–1994), MdL Hessen (1995–2013)
  • Ernst Klar (* 1952), surgeon and university professor
  • Joachim Rumstadt (* 1965), managing director of the electricity producer STEAG
  • Lars Patrick Berg (* 1966) MdL Baden-Württemberg (since 2016)

Marburg district

Arminia Heidelberg is a member of the Marburger Kreis, an interest group based on color students of 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:

The Marburger Kreis organizes a circular ring event every winter semester.

literature

  • Gerhart Berger, Detlev Aurand: ... Weiland Bursch zu Heidelberg ... A commemorative publication by the Heidelberg corporations for the 600th anniversary of Ruperto Carola . Heidelberg 1986, pp. 186-191.
  • Florian Werr : History of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations. Ferdinand Schönigh, Paderborn 1890.
  • Complete directory of the CV born in 1913, M. Du Mont Schauberg, Strasbourg in Alsace, 1913
  • 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 policy path of the Cartell Association of Catholic German Student Associations (CV) from the end of the First World War to the destruction by National Socialism. Society for CV History, Munich 1970
  • S. Schieweck-Mauk: Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections, community for German student history. Würzburg 1997, ISBN 3-89498-040-0
  • Society for Student History and Student Customs V. (Ed.), CV-Handbuch, 3rd edition, Regensburg, 2000, ISBN 3-922485-11-1

Individual evidence

  1. ^ EH Eberhard: Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 68.
  2. August Messer: The Philosophy of the Present In Self-Representations, Vol . 3 . Ed .: Dr. Raymund Schmidt. Meiner, Leipzig 1922.
  3. ^ Eckhard Oberdörfer: Der Heidelberger Karzer , Cologne 2005, p. 192.

Web links