Karl winner

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Karl Sieger (born August 27, 1883 in Zülpich , † June 23, 1961 in Gladbach ) was a German administrative lawyer .

Life

Karl Sieger was the son of the businessman and spirits manufacturer Heinrich Sieger and Victoria Henriette Maria Hubertina Christina born. Boisserée . After visiting the school in Bonn , which he Easter 1903 with passing the final examination left, he studied among others at the universities of Freiburg , ( summer term 1903 and winter term 1904/05) and Bonn ( registration May 3, 1906) law . In 1904 he became a corps bow bearer of Hasso-Borussia Freiburg .

Upon completion of his studies, Sieger entered the Prussian administrative service as a court trainee on July 31, 1906 . His appointment as a government assessor followed in February 1912. Subsequently, he was employed as an unskilled worker in the Ostprignitz district offices and, from February 1919, in the Aachen district . After his appointment to the government council (February 27, 1919), Karl Sieger was delegated the administration of the district office of Heinsberg (May 1919) and in the same way of the district of Düren (July 1919). In October 1919 Sieger took over the management of the Bergheim (Erft) district , initially on a provisional basis, before this was finally transferred to him on July 16, 1920. After the Reichstag election in March 1933 , he retired on April 18, 1933, with effect from October 1, 1933.

marriage

The Catholic Karl Sieger married on October 20, 1919 in Kelz Else Bessenich († 1942), the daughter of the farmer and manor owner Karl Bessenich and Josefine geb. Bumpy .

literature

  • Horst Romeyk : The leading state and municipal administrative officials of the Rhine Province 1816–1945 (=  publications of the Society for Rhenish History . Volume 69 ). Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-7585-4 , p. 746 .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Horst Romeyk : The leading state and municipal administrative officials of the Rhine Province 1816-1945 (=  publications of the Society for Rhenish History . Volume 69 ). Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-7585-4 .
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 32 , 225.
  3. ^ Herbert M. Schleicher: 80,000 death notes from Rhenish collections. (= Publications of the West German Society for Family Studies eV , New Series No. 44), Volume IV, Cologne 1989, without ISBN, p. 530.