Country team Ulmia Tübingen
The Ulmia Landsmannschaft is the oldest student association at the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen . It was founded on November 6, 1815. It is a dutiful men's association and is one of the oldest connections between the Coburg Convent and Germany. The connection house is located at Stauffenbergstrasse 10 on the Österberg .
Color
- Fuxenband : black-yellow with silver percussion in the width of a beer to be worn over the right shoulder
- Boys band : black-white-yellow with silver percussion to bear in beer bandwidth over the right shoulder
- Student hat: yellow hat in the size of a medium plate, boy’s hat with all-round boy colors, fox hat with all-round fox colors and two surrounding silver stripes
history
Even before 1805, a group of students from Ulm (hence the Latinized name Ulmia ) came together under the name Ulma. The first secure mention comes from the year 1805. During this time the member advertising area was extended from Ulm to the Danube area. Associated with this was a renaming from Ulmia to Danubia . At that time the colors of the federal government were black and white, the colors of the city of Ulm.
At the beginning of the 1820s, Danubia merged with the name Obersuevia, which emerged from the Württemberg Landsmannschaft. In the following years up to 1840 one finds documented mentions of a society Ulmia with the colors black-white-black. These then also became the official founding colors. In the German Revolution of 1848/49 the colors were changed to black-white-yellow - yellow out of sympathy with the liberal anti-Prussians in the Grand Duchy of Baden . After a lengthy suspension and several changes in the corporation association (including from 1861 to 1863 in the KSCV ), Ulmia was reconstituted in 1887 by members of the Landsmannschaften Cimbria Kiel (today Slesvico-Holsatia), Ghibellinia Tübingen, Guilelmia and Palaeomarchia Halle. Shortly afterwards, the Ulmia Landsmannschaft was the strongest association in the Coburg Landsmannschafter Convent.
In 1935, like all connections, Ulmia was dissolved by the National Socialists. Although there was no longer any active life, the solidarity among the federal brothers was unbroken. So the Ulmia Landsmannschaft was reconstituted on April 30, 1949 with eight active members and around 200 old men in Bebenhausen. In 1955 it was possible to move into the Ulmerhaus on Tübingen's Österberg again after it had been used by French occupation troops since the end of the Second World War.
Known members
classified according to year of birth in the individual categories.
minister
- Ludwig von Golther (1823–1876), Minister of Culture of Württemberg
- Karl von Schmid (1832–1893), politician (National Liberal Party, German Reich Party) and Minister of the Interior of the Kingdom of Württemberg
- Albert von Schnürlen (1843–1926), Württemberg infantry general and war minister
Civil servants
- Johann Michael Lindenmayer (1796–1858), senior bailiff in Württemberg
- Polykarp Pflieger (1867–1932), chief magistrate of Vaihingen and Ehingen
- Karl Kircher (1874–1939), senior administrator and district administrator in Württemberg
- Wilhelm Friedrich von Krauss, District President in Ludwigsburg
- Andreas contactors, Assistant Secretary of State a. D. and ministerial director in the Ministry of the Interior, Digitization and Migration
Lord Mayor
- Julius Gös (1830–1897), Lord Mayor of Tübingen (1874–1897)
- Heinrich von Wagner (1857–1925), Lord Mayor of Ulm
- Hermann Haußer (1867–1927), Lord Mayor of Tübingen
Politicians and elected officials
- Konrad Dietrich Haßler (1803–1873), pedagogue, theologian, orientalist, philologist, politician and preservationist
- Walther Baerwolff (1896–1969), teacher and politician (DNVP) , member of the Reichstag , member of the Bavarian state parliament
- Günther Oettinger (* 1953), politician (CDU), Prime Minister of Baden-Württemberg , EU Commissioner
- Rainer Wieland (* 1957), lawyer and politician (CDU), Vice-President of the European Parliament
- Gunther Krichbaum (* 1964), politician (CDU) and member of the Bundestag
Mediciners
- Michel Buck (1832–1888), physician, cultural historian and Swabian dialect poet
- Kurt Lindemann (1901–1966), orthopedist, professor and rector of Heidelberg University
- Gerd Huber (1921–2012), psychiatrist
Individual evidence
- ^ Wilhelm G. Neusel: Small castles, large villas: Tübingen connecting houses in portrait . Edited by the Tübingen Connections Working Group (AKTV). Tübingen: AKTV 2009, ISBN 978-3-924123-70-3 , p. 243.
- ^ EH Eberhard: Handbook of the student liaison system . Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 110.
- ↑ Schütze moves to the Ministry of the Interior in Baden-Württemberg . In: Magazin: politik & kommunikation - Germany's specialist portal for political communication, accessed on April 15, 2018.
literature
- The liaison system in Tübingen . Documentation in the year of the university anniversary in 1977. p. 61.
- Martin Biastoch : Tübingen students in the German Empire. A socio-historical investigation . Sigmaringen 1996 (Contubernium - Tübingen Contributions to the History of University and Science, Vol. 44), ISBN 3-51508-022-8
- Max Lindemann: Handbook of the German Landsmannschaft . 10th edition, Berlin 1925, pp. 239–241.