Luitpold Weilnböck

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Luitpold Weilnböck as a member of the Reichstag in 1912

Luitpold Weilnböck (born February 19, 1865 in Vilshofen , † December 21, 1944 in Schillingsfürst ) was a German farmer and politician ( DNVP ).

Live and act

Weilnböck was born in 1865 in Vilshofen as the son of the middle-class leather worker Franz Xaver Weilnböck and his wife Viktoria, née Eisenhofer. He attended elementary school and an agricultural school in Landsberg am Lech . Then he was a member of the military, from which he resigned as a purser aspirant. After that he lived as an agricultural officer in northern and southern Germany. From 1891 to 1912 he lived as a tenant of the castle estate in Hummendorf, then as a farmer in Stadtsteinach and as a Stadtsteinach economist in Upper Franconia. During the German Empire he was a member of the Bavarian State Parliament from 1905 to 1912 and of the Reichstag from 1912 to 1918 . From 1917 to 1918 Weilnböck was involved in the right-wing conservative Fatherland Party .

During the Weimar Republic , Weilnböck was involved in the Bavarian Land Association and in the Association of Farmers , as its deputy chairman he was a member of the Weimar National Assembly in 1919 and from 1920 to 1924 and from 1930 to 1932 as a member of the DNVP for constituency 26 of the Reichstag . He was also a member of the Reichskalirat and chairman of the Stadtsteinach district council, he was also the regional chairman of the Association of Farmers in Bavaria and a member of the executive committee of the Association of Farmers in Berlin and a member of the agricultural district committee for Upper Franconia (Chamber of Agriculture).

The estate of Weilnböck, who also published several studies on topics such as feed barley imports or the eastern settlement, is now being kept in Stuttgart .

Weilnböck's son-in-law Konrad Frühwald senior and his grandson Konrad Frühwald junior also belonged to the Bavarian state parliament.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Rainer Hering and Peter Borowsky: Living social history. Commemorative publication for Peter Borowsky . 2003, p. 333.
  2. ^ Church book Vilshofen 007 baptisms, page 138, matricula.eu
  3. ^ Franz Kühnel: Hans Schemm. Gauleiter and Minister of Education (1891–1935) . 1985, p. 74.
  4. Erich Matthias and Rudolf Morsey : Sources for the history of parliamentarism and the political parties . P. 162.
  5. Manfred Kittel: Province between Empire and Republic . 2000, p. 142.
  6. Dieter Gessner: Agradepression and presidential governments in Germany from 1930 to 1933 . 1977, p. 198.