Karl Braunias

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Karl Braunias

Karl Braunias (born June 16, 1899 in Vienna ; † August 19, 1965 ibid) was an Austrian ambassador , lawyer and university professor.

Life

From 1924 to March 21, 1933 Braunias taught as a private lecturer at the "Institute for Statistics of Minority Peoples " at the University of Vienna , IX, Michelblumengasse 8, German national folk research, German and comparative law and he published in the journal for geopolitics by Karl Haushofer , Erich Obst . On March 22, 1927 Braunia joined the box office of the Foreign Office of the Federal Chancellery. From March 21, 1933 to December 19, 1956 he was a university lecturer for general political science at the University of Vienna.

Karl Braunias on May 1, 1938, referring to his services to the Nazi Party in Austria during this in Austria was illegal in the NSDAP received in the Foreign Service of the German Reich applied. In 1939 he was consular officer in the Reich governorate of Vienna and assigned to Andor Hencke , representative of the Foreign Office in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia . From 1939 to 1942 he was employed in Wilhelmstrasse (Berlin-Mitte) . From 1942 to 1943 he was employed in the Reichsarchiv-Wien , then the law for the restoration of the professional civil service was applied to him as well, he was given permanent retirement on December 31, 1943 as a senior government councilor .

On April 30, 1945 he was appointed to the Section Council in the Federal Chancellery in Vienna. From May to November 1946 he was charge d'affaires in Moscow . On December 8, 1949 he was appointed Counselor promoted second-class. From 1949 to 1952 he was Chargé d'affaires in Belgrade . On March 7, 1952, he discussed the subject of the Austrian State Treaty with the British Ambassador in Belgrade , Sir William Ivo Mallet . From March 1955 to April 1956 he was Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary in Budapest . He was called back in April 1956 and retired on December 31, 1963 .

Awards

Publications

  • The Germans in Bessarabia . In: German Political Issues from Greater Romania , May 1923.
  • The political parties in Romania . In: The Political Parties of the States of the Globe , H. 17, 1926.
  • The minorities in Romania . Pp. 46-80.
  • Parliamentary suffrage: general Th. , Volume 2. de Gruyter, 1932; 320 pp.
  • F .: Constitutional law, general political theory; Ed .: The parliamentary suffrage 1932
  • National idea and state design . 1933.
  • Volume 2 of Parliamentary Suffrage: A Handbook on the Formation of Legislative Bodies in Europe
  • The right to vote in the individual states
  • Austria as a nation . In: J. Nadler, Heinr. v. Srbik (ed.): Austria's heritage and mission in Germany . Salzburg / Leipzig 1936
  • The further development of the old Austrian national law . 1938.
  • Czechoslovak constitutional life in the mirror of democracy .
  • The fundamental rights and freedoms under the new Soviet constitution . 1939.
  • The Slovaks . Stuttgart / Berlin 1942.
  • Braunias, Neraviglia (ed.): The modern sciences ud tasks d. Diplomacy . Graz 1965.

literature

  • Maria Keipert (Red.): Biographical Handbook of the German Foreign Service 1871–1945. Published by the Foreign Office, Historical Service. Volume 1: Johannes Hürter : A – F. Schöningh, Paderborn et al. 2000, ISBN 3-506-71840-1 , p. 266 f.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rolf Wörsdörfer: Hotspot Adria 1915–1955: Construction and articulation of the national in the Italian-Yugoslav border area . P. 233, footnote 38
  2. ^ Followers and climbers: Nazi diplomats after 1945 at Ballhausplatz . In: profil (magazine) , November 14, 2009.
  3. ^ Günter Bischof, Anton Pelinka, Michael Gehler: Austrian foreign policy in historical context . P. 130
  4. ifz-muenchen.de (PDF; 7.2 MB)
  5. Edmund Glaise von Horstenau: A general in the twilight: the memories of Edmund Glaises . P. 450, footnote 23
  6. List of all decorations awarded by the Federal President for services to the Republic of Austria from 1952 . (PDF; 6.9 MB)
predecessor Office successor
Karl Waldbrunner Austrian Chargé d'Affaires in Moscow
May to November 1946
Norbert Bischoff
Walter Conrad-Eybesfeld Austrian Chargé d'Affaires in Belgrade from
1949 to 1952
Walter Wodak
Olivier Rességuier Austrian ambassador in Budapest from
March 1955 to April 1956
Walther Peinsipp