Ludwig Imhoff (lawyer)

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Ludwig Philipp Imhoff (born June 30, 1878 in Mannheim ; † August 25, 1953 in Frankfurt am Main ) was a German lawyer and ministerial official.

Career

Imhoff, son of the businessman August Imhoff, received his doctorate in law in 1900. From 1905 to 1909 he was a judge in the colonial service in Samoa . After returning home he was a government assessor in the Baden state service from 1909 to 1914. His further career was interrupted by military service. From 1919 to 1924 and from 1925 to 1945 worked in the rank of government councilor, later as ministerial councilor , in the Reich Ministry of Economics . During this time he took part in economic congresses and foreign trade negotiations. In 1927 he was an advisor to Rudolf Breitscheid, a member of the League of Nations . In 1943 he was appointed ministerial conductor .

After the end of the Second World War, he was imprisoned until 1946. In 1947 he took over a job in a correctional facility. In 1948 he was a judge in Karlsruhe and then moved to the Central Office for Economic Affairs in the British Zone . After the founding of the Federal Republic of Germany, he was involved in customs policy and foreign trade in the Federal Ministry of Economics until 1951 .

Honors

Fonts

  • General tariff and trade agreement. GATT. Beck, Munich et al. 1952.
  • Wide world and wide life. My experiences in five continents. Self-published, Frankfurt am Main 1955.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Birth register StA Mannheim, No. 948/1878
  2. Death register StA Frankfurt am Main, No. 753 / I / 1953