Konrad Bargum

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Konrad Bargum

Konrad Bargum (born May 28, 1802 in Leck ; † July 5, 1866 in Schleswig ) a German lawyer and politician in Schleswig and Holstein.

Life

After graduating from school, Konrad Bargum studied law at the Georg-August University in Göttingen and the Christian Albrechts University in Kiel from October 1823 . He became a member of the Corps Holsatia Göttingen (1820) and the Corps Holsatia Kiel (1822). In 1827 he completed his studies with the state examination at the Gottorf Higher Court . From 1829 he was a lower court lawyer and from October 25, 1855 a notary in Kiel . In the 1850s he owned a brick factory .

politics

In 1842 he was elected to the Holstein assembly of estates for the 11th electoral district . He was one of the leading liberals in Kiel. He played a leading role in the Schleswig-Holstein uprising and mediated the formation of the Provisional Government on March 23, 1848 . From April to July 1848 he was President of the United Estates Assembly in Rendsburg . In the election for the constituent state assembly in Kiel on July 26 and 27, 1848, he was elected for the 32nd Holstein electoral district (Plön, Ascheberg). The constituent state assembly was constituted on August 15, 1848. He was President of Parliament until 1850. In 1853 he was elected for the 12th electoral district and in 1855 for the 2nd municipal electoral district in the newly established Holstein Estates Assembly. In 1856 the Assembly of Estates elected him to the Danish Imperial Council .

At the beginning of April 1862 he became mayor of Kiel (probably with Danish approval) . In 1864 - the year of the German-Danish War - he resigned from this office. He died two days after the Battle of Königgrätz , the preliminary military decision on the political future of Schleswig-Holstein. All in all, despite his role in the survey, he had managed to find his way back politically to the entire Danish state .

literature

Web links

Commons : Ludolf Conrad Hannibal Bargum  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener corps lists 1910, 78 , 28; 134 , 38.
  2. ^ Reminder of March 24, 1848 on the website of the City of Kiel (last accessed on July 12, 2019).
  3. Martin Rackwitz 2011.