Ludwig Liebel

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Ludwig Liebel

Ludwig Liebel (born March 23, 1887 in Pirmasens , † September 12, 1962 in Kaiserslautern ) was a German politician ( NSDAP ). He was a member of the National Socialist Reichstag and the Bavarian state parliament .

biography

After finishing elementary school, Liebel attended the teacher training institute in Speyer from 1900 to 1905 and was then employed as an assistant teacher in the Palatinate. He passed an employment examination in 1909 and then worked until 1933 as a primary school and main teacher in Fockenberg-Limbach , later in Contwig . From August 1914 to 1918 he was used in the 22nd Infantry Regiment . In the war he had been wounded and a lieutenant was only allocated yet the reserve with the rank last. In 1920 he joined the NSDAP for the first time and after the party was banned again in October 1926 ( membership number 48,829). From 1927 he was Gauredner and from 1931 Reich speaker of the party. From the beginning of October 1928 to the end of January 1932 he was district leader of the NSDAP in Zweibrücken . In the Gau Rheinpfalz he was Gauamtsleiter of the office for civil servants from 1930 to 1934 and in the summer of 1931 for a few months the office for educators.

Liebel represented the NSDAP in the Bavarian state parliament from 1932 to 1933 and after its dissolution was a member of the National Socialist Reichstag from November 1933 , where he represented constituency 27 until the end of the war. At the beginning of 1934 he became managing director of NSKOV and deputy of the Reich War Victim Leader Hanns Oberlindober . At the beginning of October 1940 he left the office at his own request, as NSKOV officials reported by him for embezzlement remained in office. He was also head of the Reich Main Office of the NSDAP. From the beginning of October 1940 to mid-September 1944 he was also Lord Mayor of the city of Diedenhofen in Westmark. He then did military service as a major in the Volkssturm until March 1945. In April 1944 he was promoted to SA Standartenführer.

In the final phase of the Second World War he was taken prisoner of war in March 1945 and was interned in Vichy and Landau until August 1947. Released from internment due to illness, he took up residence in Langwieden . In August 1949, he was denazified as a "minor offender" in a court proceedings .

As early as 1932 in Kaiserslautern, Liebel published the demanding - but with a slight Nazi tendency - written, autobiographical local novel from the Palatinate, “Peasant Musicians and Soldiers” . In it he particularly describes the West Palatinate traveling musicians and his own war experiences in the ranks of the Royal Bavarian 22nd Infantry Regiment.

literature

  • Joachim Lilla , Martin Döring, Andreas Schulz: extras in uniform: the members of the Reichstag 1933–1945. A biographical manual. Including the Volkish and National Socialist members of the Reichstag from May 1924 . Droste, Düsseldorf 2004, ISBN 3-7700-5254-4 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Book data on Google Books