Konrad Ehrich
Konrad Friedrich Ehrich (born July 13, 1888 in Berlin ; † in the 20th century) was a German ministerial official in the Reich Chancellery .
Life
Since 1906, the beginning of his civil service career, Ehrich worked in the Prussian judicial administration . From 1909 to 1910 Ehrich did military service as a one-year volunteer . In January 1913 he was promoted to lieutenant in the reserve . During the entire period of the First World War he did military service in the war justice administration. In May 1918 he became a lieutenant in the reserve.
In 1920 he was promoted to chief government inspector. From 1923 Ehrich was ministerial officer in the Reich Ministry of Economics and from 1926 in the Reich Chancellery as a ministerial officer in the highest rank of the middle service .
During the time of National Socialism he was government councilor under Hans Heinrich Lammers , head of the chancellery from 1933 to 1937 , whose official representative he was at the opening of the Richard Wagner Festival in Bayreuth on February 16, 1939. Ehrich was responsible for "requests for support from private persons" and "transit matters". On January 1, 1937, he was promoted to the Upper Government Council .
Most recently, from December 1938, he was Ministerialrat in the Reich Chancellery a. a. responsible for public mail to Adolf Hitler (Department A) with connection to the Reich Ministry for Science, Education and National Education . In his files for 1945 there were thirteen notes from him indicating that the senders were classified as insane. In the Reich Chancellery, Ehrich was the NSDAP's confidant .
Orders and decorations
- Iron Cross 2nd class
- Iron Cross 1st Class
- Wound badge in black
literature
- The German Leader Lexicon 1934/1935 , Otto Stollberg Publishing House, Berlin (official handbook for Nazi celebrities)
Web links
- Konrad Ehrich in the online version of the Reich Chancellery Edition Files. Weimar Republic
Individual evidence
- ^ Georg Kretschmar , Carsten Nicolaisen , Gertraud Grünzinger: Documents on Church Policy of the Third Reich , Volume 4, Verlag C. Kaiser, 1971, ISBN 3579018663
- ↑ Hans Wilderotter: Everyday life of power. Berlin Wilhelmstrasse , Publications of the Historical Commission in Berlin, Verlag Jovis, 1998
- ^ Michael H. Kater , Albrecht Riethmüller : Music and Nazism. Art under tyranny 1933-1945 , Verlag Laaber, 2003, ISBN 3890075169 , excerpt from page 158
- ^ Friedrich Hartmannsgruber: Files of the Reich Chancellery 1933-194. Government of Hitler , Volume 4, Verlag Boldt, 2005, ISBN 3486576674 , pp. 715 + 814 excerpt
- ^ Helmut Heiber : files of the party chancellery of the NSDAP , 1983, page 367 digitized
- ↑ Martin Broszat : The State of Hitler. Foundation and development of its inner constitution , volume 4009 from dtv-Taschenbücher “Weltgeschichte”, German paperback publishing house, 1973, ISBN 3423040092 , page 296 excerpt
- ↑ Henrik Eberle : Letters to Hitler. A people writes to his Führer , 2007, page 10 digitized
- ↑ Gerhard Hirschfeld , Lothar Kettenacker : Der "Führerstaat", Myth and Reality , German Historical Institute in London, 1981
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Ehrich, Konrad |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Ehrich, Konrad Friedrich (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German ministerial official in the Reich Chancellery |
DATE OF BIRTH | July 13, 1888 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Berlin |
DATE OF DEATH | 20th century |