Ludwig Zimmerle

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ludwig Zimmerle (born November 12, 1867 in Ellwangen , † December 3, 1925 in Bad Urach ) was General Manager in Lithuania and President of the Senate at the Imperial Court .

Life

The Reich judge Ludwig von Zimmerle was his father. The Württemberger Zimmerle entered the judiciary in 1892. In 1898 he became a district judge in Stuttgart. In 1901 he was appointed district judge. In 1903 he was promoted to the district judge and transferred to Ravensburg. In 1912 he came to the Reich Justice Office as a Privy Councilor and lecturer. In 1914 he volunteered and was wounded near Verdun. In 1916 he was appointed to the Secret Upper Government Council. In 1917 he was complained about by the justice department and was in Berlin until the end of the war . From November 5, 1918 to December 1919, Zimmerle was general representative in Lithuania, and until mid-1919 also head of civil administration in Lithuania. He succeeded Friedrich von Falkenhausen . Zimmerle, who was anti-Soviet, was the liaison to the Lietuvos Taryba . He then became a personnel officer in the Reich Ministry of Justice. On July 1, 1923 he came to the Reichsgericht as Senate President of the III. Civil Senate . He was the second Catholic in this position by then. He died in the Hochberg sanatorium and was buried in Ellwangen.

Fonts

  • The gross nonsense in word and writing, Diss. 1900.
  • "The right of the district judge to reject the prosecution's application for the issuance of a penalty order" , The Courtroom, Volume 50, 1895, p. 44 .
  • "The concept of gross nonsense according to its historical development" , The Court Room, Volume 57, 1900, p. 442 .

literature

  • Adolf Lobe: Fifty Years of the Reich Court on October 1, 1929 , Berlin 1929, p. 346.
  • Hans Pfeifer: Zimmerle, Ludwig. Maria Magdalena Rückert (ed.): Württemberg biographies including Hohenzollern personalities. Volume I. On behalf of the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2006, ISBN 3-17-018500-4 , p. 312.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Günter Rosenfeld : Soviet Russia and Germany 1917 - 1922. Akademie Verlag, Berlin 1984, p. 240.