Munich Senior Citizens' Convention

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The Munich Senior Citizens 'Convention (MSC) is the senior citizens' convent of 24 corps at the Ludwig Maximilians University , the University of the Federal Armed Forces in Munich and the Technical University of Munich with the Weihenstephan Science Center for Nutrition, Land Use and the Environment . The SC zu München was created as a "cartel" of the (Kösener) Corps at the LMU. In contrast, the Polytechnic SC united the corps at the Polytechnikum, which later became the TH Munich. On June 7th, 1862, the newly united SC in Munich joined the Kösener Seniors Convents Association . As before, theSC to Munich only the Kösener Corps.

The oKC in 1951 determined that the MSC was allowed to exist because the Corps Suevia Munich and the Corps Cisaria had founded it in 1944. He also approved the MSC to accept the Weinheim Corps . The extended Munich Senior Convent was constituted on 15 June 1951 the Corpshaus of Arminia . It currently unites ten Kösener, seven Weinheimer, one non-association and four affiliated foreign corps. In its diversity it is the largest and most influential senior citizens' convention.

Archival material

Are received SC-Comments from August 15, 1841 May 9, 1855 and 25 November 1864. Three log books (1844-1852, 1862-1871, 1871-1880) are at Makaria . Some protocols are at Franconia (WS 1865/66 - SS 1870), some at Suevia (November 1, 1923 to June 1, 1934). Wolfgang Gottwald made typed excerpts. A comprehensive history of the Munich Senior Citizens' Convention is still pending. Approaches come from Max Weigl . The time up to 1853 was worked through in 2003 by Hans-Bernd Herzog .

Landshut

The University of Landshut was founded on November 25, 1799 as the successor to the University of Ingolstadt ; teaching began in 1800. The university was confirmed in 1802. When the Electorate of Bavaria was elevated to a kingdom , it was called the Royal University of Landshut from January 1, 1806 . On October 3, 1826, she was moved to Munich.

On November 4, 1799, the country teams are banned. At the end of 1801 colored cockades appeared and five students applied for colored uniforms . Since January 6, 1806, only white and blue (Bavarian) cockades are permitted. The Bavarian, Swabian and Franconian country teams, constituted in 1806, were already banned on January 20, 1807. In 1809 a free corps was formed against Tyrol. In 1809/10 there is a senior citizens' convention. In 1810 a Tyrolia with white and green is created. In 1811/12 “colored” bands were noticed: red – white – green (or green – white – orange) of Tyrolia and green – red – gold (black – red – yellow) of Franconia. In the summer semester of 1812, the rector forbade students from Main Franconia to rent a private drum floor because a connection could easily arise. After the authorities got their hands on an SC Comment in January 1813 , Maximilian von Montgelas issued an anti-liaison mandate on February 28, 1813. With the threat of relegation and two months in prison, every student is obliged to take a hand vow to the rector that he will not belong to any association.

On June 20, 1813 the Palatia with blue-white-red emerged as the 5th national team from a table society of the Upper Palatinate . Out of affection for Friedrich Wilhelm (Braunschweig-Lüneburg-Oels) they wear black velvet caps with skulls and white tassels. In September 1813 "Anton von Schlichtegroll confesses to Bavariae that in the winter semester 1812/13 there were already five country teams: one each from Baier, Tyrol, Palatinate, Swabian and Franconian". On August 31, 1813 five Bavarians, two Swabians, one Franconian and one Palatinate were evicted. Commissioned by the five country teams in Landshut, two delegates negotiate with the Erlangen Senior Citizens' Convention on September 7, 1813 . From September 1813 to June 1814 extensive investigations against all five country teams took place. On March 6, 1814, a reverse (right) is introduced. House searches took place on January 12, 1815 . In 1817 the SC consists of Bavaria, Palatia and Suevia. From December 1817 there is an official investigation against them . Bavaria shared with its 136 members on July 13, 1821. Under the leadership of Seniors August v. Nagel step out of 17 Bavarians as Bavaria-Isaria . On the next day, 37 former renunciations join. On July 15, 1821, Isaria (I) was reciprocated to the SC. In the same month (or July 19, 1826?) All four corps introduced fox ribbons. When an SC letter with the SC seal and 12 signatures to the Würzburg Senior Citizens' Convention was intercepted on February 1, 1822 , eight SC members were diminished . In June 1822, official investigations are initiated and unauthorized companies are banned. The SC founded a court of honor on January 19, 1823 and passed an SC comment on February 19.

In response to an anonymous denunciation by the SC on August 11, 1823 , Maximilian I Joseph forbade all connections to the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg , the Friedrich Alexander University of Erlangen and the University of Landshut. He renewed the ban on September 22nd, 1823 and initiated official investigations. Since they dragged on until 1824, they are evidently fruitless. The "closed season" from 1814 to 1823 can be explained by the government's belief that it could suppress the fraternity by tolerating the country teams . In order to prevent an official ban, the SC disbanded on March 17, 1824. On November 24, 1824, Suevia and Palatia renew the SC. Bavaria and Isaria rejoined on January 16, 1825.

On April 18, 1826, Ludwig I wanted to move the university to his royal seat in Munich. His transfer decree was issued on October 13, 1826. The university is guaranteed by the Minister, Count Armansperg Bavariae.

Munich

1826-1838

The entry of the university into Munich (1826)

Two days after the university opened, the SC met for the first time on November 17, 1826. Four days later, he discredited the newly constituted fraternity (probably Amicitia ) . In December, the SC announced the disrepute to the Würzburger SC. He gave strangers Buxen satisfaction and only joined the Munich decision after asking. The Landsmannschaft Helvetia (I), formed on Christmas Eve 1826, is likely to be merged into the Germania fraternity . Some members were in disrepute of the SC in Freiburg .

On January 7, 1827, Slash Comment is at bat introduced; the engraving comment on Pariser remains for theologians until around 1865. On January 18th, some former fraternity members reported the formation of a Corps Germania . Assuming the name Arminia , it is recognized as the 5th SC Corps on January 22nd, despite the fraternity colors black, red and gold . Informed about this on February 28, 1827, the Würzburg SC recognized Arminia. At the same time, Suevia submitted her constitution to the authorities . On March 17th, Alemannia was accepted into the SC as 6th Corps with white-green-black. From the suspended Corps Arminia and the (in SC-disrepute) Amicitia a union was established on June 15, 1827, Markomannia . Arminia is part of the fraternity and wants to break up. It probably merges seamlessly with the marcomannia, which emerged in August 1827. The Corps Alemannia is called from June 26th 1827 Rhenania with royal blue - white - scarlet red . On July 31, 1827, the four permitted corps are admitted. On January 26, 1828, Fuchs Zetlmeisl Isariae died on a scale against Karl von Schrenck Palatiae. The Corps Rhenania surprisingly disbanded on March 11, 1828. On June 27, 1828, all connections were broken. On August 3, 1828, Isaria went into SC disrepute because she did not recognize an SC disrepute about her sub- senior Helldobler . The SC zu Erlangen, Würzburg and Freiburg recognize the disrepute. On July 18, 1830, Helvetia II entered the black-green sub-SC from Suevia and Isaria with green-gold-red. On December 28, 1830, Ludwig I (Bavaria) closed the university for cat music against the rector Joseph Franz von Allioli on Christmas Eve.

Germania is officially banned on January 18, 1831. Without Helvetia II, which was suspended on that day, the SC reunited on March 7, 1831. The four corps Suevia, Bavaria , Palatia and Isaria were approved on May 18, 1831. Germania remains banned. Germania and Isaria found a liberal alliance on February 4, 1832. On March 16, 1832, the SC consists of Suevia, Palatia and Bavaria, who receive the royal guarantee on April 10, 1832. On the other hand, Isaria and Germania are dissolved. On May 16, 1832, 16 Germanic tribes were arrested in the Little Rose Garden ; Germania is dissolved. Shortly before Christmas 1832, Bavaria left the SC and declared Suevia and Palatia in disrepute. Against the SC, consisting of Suevia and Bavaria in 1833, Palatia forms a counter SC until May 1834.

A royal rescript of July 14, 1833 forbids students with small registers (pharmacists, foresters and technicians) to become active. Palatia was the first to abolish the Renonce Band on February 23, 1834 , whereupon 13 Renonce boys resigned. In May 1834 the SC again consists of Suevia, Bavaria and Palatia. Rhenania receives no guarantee and dissolves in April 1835. 15 Rhenans opened Franconia on November 26, 1835 . In November 1835, Suevia and Palatia declared Bavaria in disrepute, which Bavaria replied (until March 4, 1836). Officially donated on January 3, 1836, Franconia joins the SC with Suevia and Palatia. Bavaria followed on March 4, 1836. In 1837/38 two SC exist side by side: Suevia / Bavaria and Palatia / Franconia. An official rescript from 1838 requires a philosophical biennium and forbids becoming active. Compliance is closely monitored by a separate authority, the Ephorat.

1839-1846

In 1839, the Minister of the Interior, Karl von Abel, turned down applications from students to found a musical and literary student association. To the death of the cand. Iur. Felix Zimmermann from Zweibrücken , secretary of Franconia, is allowed a torchlight procession on February 26, 1840 for the four approved connections. He moved from the old university on Neuhauser Strasse through Kaufinger Strasse, Rosenstrasse and Sendlinger Strasse to the cemetery. The new university building at Siegestor will be officially opened on August 25, the birthday of Ludwig I (Bavaria) . On August 15, 1841, the SC created an SC-Comment and required its own drum doctor (valid until May 9, 1855).

Regarding the "participation of students of general sciences in unauthorized student associations" it says on November 20th:

"The examples of the rudeness and the indolence of all who belong to such connections are evident both in the semester exam and in the case of the absolutorials, and even in the case of those punished for excesses, two thirds of them will always be members of student associations."

According to the decree of December 23, the members of guaranteed connections (= the corps) should receive colored identification cards in order to be able to better control their illegal active students with small matriculation. The waiver is withdrawn immediately upon objection by the SC. On the next day (Christmas Eve 1841) the Royal Police Directorate indicated to the Royal Ministerial Commissary that “there are only 81 members in all four permitted student associations, and are therefore approaching their own dissolution every year”. Since the far greater number of legitimation cards have already been issued, the minority of the four connections are provided with special cards, "which the gendarmerie have already been informed of for a sample and for inspection with the requisition, the Royal Police Directorate through appropriate tightened supervision on the Wearing badges without a legitimation card to support this vigorously. "

According to a letter from the University Police of January 6, 1842 to the Ministerial Comissaire, colored cards were intended for philosophers and students with a small matriculation based on Art. XI of the ordinance of November 2, 1838. Upon their complaint, they were issued to the students of the four compounds. According to the directive of March 30, 1842, the seniors should undertake at the beginning of the summer semester not to accept any philosophers and technicians. The request made by some students on September 3, 1841 for the formation of a medical association is rejected by the Ministry of the Interior on April 13, 1842. A similar request from Würzburg was also rejected on May 20, 1844. On May 28, 1842, a notice on the LMU notice board banned all moves without the Rector's permission. Due to a duel years ago , entire student associations are hostile to each other. Therefore, on March 27, 1843, all senior citizens were summoned to appear before the rector.

From January 14, 1844 to November 18, 1844, Bavaria and Palatia form their own SC. On July 1, 1844, a secondary SC is created with Palatia and Isaria II, which is constituted on August 3. On November 18, 1844, the two part-SC Palatia – Bavaria (since January 14, 1844) merge with Suevia – Franconia.

1847-1854

Lola Montez (1847)

On February 7, 1847, Suevia and Palatia fell into infamous SC disrepute. Abel's ministry came on February 27, 1847 under the leadership of Georg Ludwig von Maurer ( justice ) and Freiherr Friedrich Philipp von Zu Rhein ( interior ). The five corps thanked for the abolition of the nine-year ephorate with a torchlight procession on May 15, 1847. Suevia was returned to the SC on July 18. Isaria's Consenior Dorner is stabbed to death on July 22nd. Although she received the Royal Corps Guarantee on July 30th, Lola's Alemannia was never recognized by the SC. On November 19, 1847, the SC decided to invite the two outside corps to a meeting on a common front "in particular towards the newly emerging so-called Rhenania". The next day, Suevia, Bavaria and Franconia celebrate a Communkneipe on the Schwabenkneipe in the Zweibrückensaal. Under the leadership of the Rhenania fraternity and following the example of the SC, the obscurants - the still forbidden, only secret connections - organize a torchlight procession on November 23rd. On the following day, Palatia again and Isaria II again, at their request from the previous day, are reciprocated in the SC in order to be able to take a stronger stand against the fraternity. Isaria was constituted on August 8, 1844.

A torchlight procession to the funeral of Joseph Görres on January 31, 1848 is prohibited. After a communal pub on February 7th in the Ottosaal in the Au , the SC Presidium will move from Suevia to Palatia. On February 9, 1848, King Ludwig closes the university. The next day, 700 students demonstrate in front of the rector Friedrich von Thiersch . A citizen's deputation is sent to the king. After a crowd on Barer Strasse in front of her house, Lola Montez was expelled on February 11th. The university will open its doors again on February 14th. On the same day, the five corps, with the participation of numerous obscurants, organize a ceremonial torchlight procession with 350 torchbearers for the Frankenfuchsen stud who died of typhus . phil. Georg Röhring from Bamberg. On February 18, 1848, the Free Association Rescript allowed all other connections as competition to the five corps that were previously guaranteed. It is the basis of the diversity of colors in Munich, which is still in effect today.

On February 21, a student appeal was issued against the proscription lists of the Lolamannen supporters. On March 4, 1848, the Munich arsenal was stormed. The Munich Student Freicorps SFC is formed on Shrove Sunday . The next day (March 6th) the whole garrison is sworn in on Dultplatz. The free corps of students and artists are approved. For almost four years, Isaria II left the SC on May 16, 1848, which considered it a club. At the beginning of June 1848, a small minority of traditionalists split off from Franconia. You are against hosting the second Wartburg Festival . Under Emmerich von Moers there are only 10, then 13 corps boys and 10 renonces. On June 7, 1848, Palatia becomes a club and Franconia leaves the SC.

On November 4, 1848, the State Ministry of the Interior for Church and School Affairs issued new regulations on student associations. Palatia renounced SC rights in the winter of 1849 and entered and entered repeatedly until May 1851. In November 1849, Suevia declared herself (is 1867) a life corps . Makaria was first accepted into the MSC on May 16, 1850. After Franconia was resumed in January and Palatia in May 1851, Isaria II completed the MSC of six corps on February 1, 1852.

1855-1870

On March 1, 1855, the SC brought a torchlight procession for the late CB Lehner Bavariae. On May 9th, the SC comment of August 15, 1841 was revised. In SS 1855, the Nassovia connection fell into disrepute with the SC. From February 4th to May 31st, 1856 Makaria was in SC disrepute. On March 3, 1856, Palatia and Isaria declare their departure. The SC now only consists of Suevia, Bavaria and Franconia. In 1857 the MSC crashed a PP suite against the SC zu Würzburg . In February 1860, a new SC comment replaced the old one from May 1855. After a good five years, Makaria came out of the SC disrepute on May 31, 1862. A week later, on June 7th, 1862, the reunited SC joins the KSCV (Bavaria, Franconia, Isaria, Makaria, Palatia and Suevia).

On July 5, 1864, the SC split occurs when Suevia, Palatia and Bavaria leave the KSCV. You therefore drive into SC disrepute. The SC comment will be revised in November. On May 16, 1865, Suevia, Bavaria and Palatia return to the MSC. In 1867 the SC Comment is revised. On June 4, 1867, Suevia declares itself to be an armed corps again. Palatia and Bavaria leave the MSC and KSCV on May 7, 1869, because they only want to vote viritim (individually) . They'll be back on July 22nd. On July 8, 1870, Suevia fell into disrepute for four weeks for non-compliance with SC and KSCV regulations.

1871-1913

Josef Bernpointner

The first individual report received from the SC in Munich was dated December 9, 1872. Isaria becomes an armed corps on April 4, 1873 . On June 20, 1874, the SC discredited the connections of the Polytechnic SC. It does not end until March 9, 1877. “Because of insulting the SC by joking in the cantus on the SC squat” and “for ostensibly leaving the SC squat”, Suevia travels in SC from December 22, 1874 to January 4, 1875 - Reputation. On January 14, 1875, a new SC Comment is ratified. After the SC disrepute against Normannia on December 5, 1875, Makaria went into SC disrepute on November 3, 1876 for 180 days. Makaria appeals to the Giessen Senior Citizens' Convention and receives a 28-day disrepute on December 18, which she takes on. The SC disrepute over the three polytechnic corps Vitruvia, Germania and Rheno-Palatia is lifted on March 9, 1877. From the oKC on May 17, 1877, the MSC presides in the KSCV. On August 9, 1877, Makaria became an armed forces corps. The Transrhenania connection was disreputed on February 22nd, 1878. On June 15, 1882, Palatia became a temporary weapon corps. Founded on November 24th, 1882, Brunsviga renamed the MSC until June 26th, 1883. Already in June 1884 it was suspended until February 10, 1886. Against two votes, the oKC 1886 recognized the reconstitution.

After a dispute with officers of the Royal Bavarian 1st Heavy Rider Regiment "Prince Karl von Bayern" in SS 1887, the forced suspension of the SC and the replacement of a black-white-yellow Gothia instead of Makarias can be omitted at the last moment. On December 15, 1887, the "debate about the application for admission of the SC of the TH in KSCV and the like of the Innsbruck SC in KSCV" begins. The MSC rejects the request from Cisaria and Rheno-Palatia , received on May 14, 1888, for reasons of principle.

In 1896/97 the MSC is again suburb of the KSCV ( Döbner Bavariae). Gothia was the first Austrian corps to renounce on June 4, 1897 near the suburb of Munich. Ratisbonia followed on January 28, 1898 . The two corps are recipients of the KSCV on March 4 and May 28, 1898. According to the decision of February 8, 1898, the Corps Normannia at the Veterinary University does not receive any satisfaction from the SC until further notice . On February 10, 1898, the Transrhenania country team renounced the MSC. On May 25, 1898, Ratisbonia awards the corps ribbon to 117 old men. Transrhenania was accepted into the MSC on June 20, 1898. On February 8, 1899, the MSC voted unanimously against awarding the corps ribbon to AH of the former Transrhenania country team. Transrhenania then awarded the ribbon to only eight of these AH on May 17, 1899; 111, however, are corps ribbon bearers , who later receive the ribbon without exception.

In May 1904, an SC torchlight procession honors the inactive Franconia André and the inactive Bavarian Freiherr Schirndinger von Schirnding , who were struck by lightning in a Würzburg beer garden. In May 1905 all Munich connections under the Praesidium der Franconia bring a torchlight procession to the 100th anniversary of Friedrich Schiller's death. In March 1906 the SC, the PSC and the Aschaffenburger Forst-SC celebrate a Kommers for the 85th birthday of the Prince Regent in the Kindlkeller . At Franconia's suggestion, permanent consensus conventions were introduced in 1907 . On the 10th anniversary of Otto von Bismarck's death, almost all Munich connections bring a torchlight procession on July 8, 1908. In November 1908 they pay homage to him in the Walhalla in front of his bust erected on October 18 .

On November 4th (or December 9th) 1910, the Aschaffenburg Forest Corps Hubertia , Arminia and Hercynia were accepted into the SC and thus into the KSCV. Ferdinand Heinz Franconiae, Rhenaniae Würzburg initiates negotiations with the other striking connections in the SC. They lead to a loose association. For the 90th birthday of Prince Regent Luitpold , the association celebrates a Kommers in the Kindlkeller on March 4, 1911. For Luitpold's death in December 1912, he brought a funeral procession. From May 31 to June 2, 1913, a corps student celebration in the Kelheim Liberation Hall commemorates the Wars of Liberation .

1914-1921

Old men from Franconia registered actively in June 1915 and reopened the corps. The war SC is mainly necessary for reception games because the MSC rejects reception without games. In May 1918 the Allgemeine Deutsche Waffenring was founded in Jena . During the November Revolution and the civil war-like conditions during the suppression of the Munich Soviet Republic , the MSC 1919/20 was suburb of the KSCV for the third time . Adolf Neidhardt Bavariae becomes the local speaker, Karl Berchtold Makariae becomes first chairman of the Austrian Commission of the KSCV . Berchthold directs the applications for membership of all Austrian corps not yet accepted into the KSCV to the good end.

Ten months after the Treaty of Versailles , from March 20 to April 25, 1920, the MSC alarm company went into the Ruhr uprising . She is in the battalion of Godin in the time volunteer corps "von der Tann" within the Epp protection brigade . It is intended to break the main resistance of the Reds on Reichsstrasse 1 between Hamm and Dortmund. In the afternoon the battle is decided by taking the Pelkum cemetery ; Captain Spatz , Isaria's sub-senior , is killed with two MSC comrades. In the fight for Pelkum, a large number of workers and working-class Samaritans are killed, wounded, murdered or shot dead in the fight. Eighteen wounded face 200 dead on the opposite side. On June 16, 1920, the SC company celebrates the closing ceremony in the Pullach Citizens' Terraces . A Makare heads the festival committee. Franconia and Bavaria appear without women and drive in simple SC disrepute for the SS 1920. After objection and complaint to the suburb (October 28), the oSC settled the dispute on January 21, 1921 oSC. Except for Arminia and Brunsviga, all corps overturn eight PP suites against Bavaria and Franconia. 97 games are fought.

Under MSC leadership, the oKC 1920 unanimously approved the predating of the three former Aschaffenburg forest pennals on July 7th: Hubertia on November 14th, 1844, Arminia on January 5th, 1845 and Hercynia on November 15th, 1847. The oKC also approved Ratisbonia's band awards to 50 corps members, 49 of whom fought. In February 1921, the WSC and KSCV celebrate their first post-war Kommers in the Kindlkeller. The third uprising in Upper Silesia saw the last deployment of Bavarian students. Six Munich Francs travel there as tourists and get on the SC train of a student battalion from the Freikorps Oberland . They will be returned on July 13th.

1922-1946

At the ceremony for the 450th anniversary of the LMU on June 17, 1922 overact the corporations. In the subsequent Kommers all connections and the finch shaft are involved for the first time . Rhaetia suspended on November 29, 1922 in Innsbruck and reconstituted on April 30, 1923 in Munich. The oKC 1923 rejects her urgency request for reception in the MSC with 12:18; because the MSC refuses and, in the opinion of the plenary, cannot be forced to accept it. On July 16, 1926, a new SC comment was decided. With a torchlight procession on November 15, 1926, the entire student body commemorated the 100 years ago when LMU moved from Landshut to Munich. From 1930 onwards, there were several trials of strength between the MSC and the NSdStB , which escalated to a permanent exclusion of double membership. The student associations, including the MSC, were not willing, regardless of political sympathies, to submit to the power-political claims of the NSdStB and to give up their independence. At first it was about a duel demand for two Munich Francs, which escalated from 1930, was depicted in the relevant media and u. a. was presented to the Supreme Party Court of the NSDAP . The initial strong presence of the National Socialists at Munich universities - the student body was considered brown in the 1920s - began to reverse. There were sharp disputes in the elections for the ASTA in 1931. In January 1933, the weapons student associations, including the MSC, turned against the Nazi presence at the universities.

During the time of National Socialism , the SC celebrates a Reichsgründungskommers on January 27, 1934 in the Tonhalle . As the leader of the German corps student body, Max Blunck speaks extensively. Suevia was expelled from the KSCV and thus from the SC on May 22nd, 1934 for failure to comply with the Aryan paragraph . On October 1, 1934, it opens again until July 29, 1939. 1935 suspend Isaria and Franconia in October, Brunsviga, Hercynia and Transrhenania in November and Germania in December. In February 1936 Arminia, Hubertia and Ratisbonia suspend, on March 1, 1936 Bavaria, in May 1936 Palatia and 1939 Makaria (and again Suevia). In 1944, Cisaria and Suevia renew the SC.

“Filled with the will to uphold and defend the arms student tradition, student honor and true student interests with all means at their disposal, the armies Corps Suevia and Corps Cisaria join the Munich SC. They undertake to stand together in unswerving loyalty and recognize him present MSC Comment as binding. The MSC regards it as a noble duty to unite all like-minded connections. "

- Suevia and Cisaria, November 20, 1944

New beginning

In the post-war period , eleven Kösener and two Weinheimer corps reconstituted in Munich:

  1. Bavaria July 13, 1947
  2. Palatia January 20, 1948
  3. Arminia February 1, 1948
  4. Suevia April 24, 1948
  5. Makaria 1948
  6. Hercynia January 1, 1949
  7. Vitruvia June 4, 1949
  8. Transrhenania October 9, 1949
  9. Germania November 10, 1949
  10. Hubertia 1949/1950
  11. Franconia April 21, 1950
  12. Isaria May 11, 1950
  13. Ratisbonia December 14, 1950

The SC-Hocke on December 3, 1948 in the Hofbräuhaus am Platzl with 70 participants is the SC's first public appearance (Suevia, Rheno-Palatia, Bavaria, Palatia and Makaria). Two weeks later, the SC decided that all those Bavarians and people from the Palatinate who had not fought by the end of the winter semester 1948/49 must take off the three-colored ribbon. On the same day (the day before Suevia's 145th Foundation Festival), the first four games after the war take place between Makaria and Suevia.

"German Senior Citizens' Convention"

During the time of National Socialism , Hercynia (KSCV) and Guestphalia (WSC) found a common SC comradeship . In 1943/44 Cisaria (WSC) and Suevia (KSCV) renew the MSC. During those years the special self-confidence of the MSC emerged. In the post-war period he wants to unite the two corps associations that have not yet been reconstituted into a German Seniors' Convention . On January 17, 1949, the MSC unanimously approved Suevia's proposal:

"The SC, which has been newly constituted in Munich since 1948, takes over the legal succession of the Kösener and Weinheimer SC here and the resulting rights and obligations."

On 1st / 2nd March 1949 Makaria directs the 1st SC- drum day and the 1st drum day of Palatia in a beer cellar near Pfaffenhofen. Five Bünder fight 15 games. After the Corpsphilisterverband Munich was reconstituted in February 1950, Hubertia, Hercynia and Transrhenania join the MSC on May 15, 1950; Franconia follows on June 26th. In accordance with the resolution of January 1949, the SC considers the merger of the two corporation associations KSCV and WSC to be necessary in the Munich resolution of September 14, 1950 . He advertises the idea to all other SC and travels together to the association meetings in Bad Godesberg and Weinheim . According to an aoSC decision of December 14, 1950, the Kösener Corps should not join the community of interests . After the KSCV had reconstituted at the Godesburg in 1951 , the WSC followed suit in 1952. For the second time , the German Senior Citizens' Convention will not be held, albeit for reasons other than 1934 . On the Kösener side, Walter Ballas , Hans-Reinhard Koch and Werner Ranz opposed the idea as early as 1950. Ranz saw "among the merger opponents the best forces for constructive cooperation". They contented themselves with a second cartel agreement that Koch and Herbert Scherer signed on October 2nd, 1954. After heated arguments, it was renewed in 2009.

Come and go

Isaria and Ratisbonia joined the SC on January 15, 1951. Makaria applied for the reintroduction of the PP suites in February 1951 . On June 23, 1951, the MSC from all Kösener and Weinheimer corps was founded on the Arminianerhaus , the SC senior at the time was Curtze Bavariae Munich . Rheno-Palatia changed from WSC to MSC on June 1st, 1954. The Corps Donaria zu Weihenstephan , which emerged from the Naumburg Senior Citizens' Convention and renamed the WSC , was accepted into the other MSC on February 14, 1955. The Brunsviga Munich , which was moved back from Bonn , returned to the MSC on May 13, 1957. After 25 years, the MSC is celebrating another Kommers on May 8, 1958 at Nockherberg .

Ratisbonia suspended on June 1, 1969. Transrhenania takes over its tradition and welcomes 60 old men. Rheno-Palatia is suspended from August 1, 1973 to November 1, 1975 and from May 25, 1982 to October 24, 1986. Brunsviga , which was suspended on May 19, 1974, was reconstituted as Rhenania-Brunsviga on December 17, 1977, merging with Rhenania Erlangen . On November 1, 1977, the MSC becomes a suburb of the KSCV for the fifth time and is the chairman of the oKC in 1978 and 1979. The term of office ends on August 1, 1979. Ratisbonia is reconstituted on April 22, 1994 and relocated to Ulm. Since 2009 she has been back in Munich as a suspended corps.

The MSC sponsorship of the Corps Frankonia-Brünn zu Salzburg in 1961 is still flourishing today.

Regulations of the MSC

The MSC Presidium changes regularly in the order of seniority .

  1. Suevia , KSCV
  2. Palatia , KSCV
  3. Bavaria , KSCV
  4. Isaria , KSCV
  5. Franconia , KSCV
  6. Hubertia , KSCV
  7. Arminia , KSCV
  8. Makaria , KSCV
  9. Cisaria , WSC
  10. Rheno-Palatia , KSCV
  11. Vitruvia, WSC
  12. Germania , WSC
  13. Transrhenania , KSCV
  14. Normannia, WSC
  15. Suevo-Guestphalia , WSC
  16. Saxo-Thuringia , WSC
  17. Alemannia , WSC
  18. Donaria (Freising), free of association

The student fencing weapon is the basket bat.

The batch numbers are (as in Göttingen, Jena, Leipzig and Passau) xxx, xx, x.

The MSC carries the chrysanthemum ball .

Munich SC song

The Munich SC song is no, you can't understand us from Thomas Hübbe (1867–1942), a member of the gymnastics club Cimbria Greifswald. The student song is sung to the tune of Heidelberg du Jugendbronnen . The alternative is not just fulfilling one's duty . Raimund Lang wrote another 3rd stanza for the Catholic associations .

No, you cannot understand us
who never had a band of boys
wrapped
around their young chests like an evergreen tire .
You who
trot on the path of virtue through the hard existence
and
have lost your youth's sweet pleasure.

After the agony and heat of the day
, we flee to the old house
and in a ribbon and colorful hat
we drive out worries.
And the fellows who sing this,
that's our flesh and blood,
that souls devour themselves
in the hot ardor of love.

He who lies down with good cheeks
can rest gently and safely,
but no one should ask
that we do the same.
If we forge our weapons
and every man wields them,
then leave us contented,
because it is none of your business.

When we have once finished,
the grave flashes a bare defense,
and you too will be buried,
but no fellow will lower your spear.
Let's rave about, let's sing
until the song ends,
but don't talk about things
you don't understand.

Affiliated Corps

Munich management of the Kösener associations

In 1877, 1897, 1920, 1957, 1978, 1979 and 2003, the MSC provided the suburb of the KSCV. Munich corps students initiated the founding of the VAC on April 21st of the three emperor year . The Corpsphilisterverband München provided the VAC board four times. In 2013, he organized the celebrations for the 125th anniversary of the VAC. Wolfgang Heubisch , Bavarian State Minister for Science, Research and Art , spoke at the Kommers im Augustiner .

Membership of the SC zu Munich 1838 to 1848

semester Suevia Bavaria Palatia Franconia Isaria total Alemannia Files in the Ministry of the Interior
WS 1838/39 19 + 27 = 46 12 + 14 = 26 11 + 12 = 23 14 + 13 = 27 126 124-134 of December 18, 1838
SS 1839
WS 1839/40 16 + 6 = 22 10 + 10 = 20 15 + 4 = 19 13 + 3 = 16 67 183-186 of December 2, 1839
SS 1840
WS 1840/41 14 + 15 = 29 15 + 8 = 23 8 + 9 = 17 5 + 9 = 14 83 175–178 of December 30, 1840
SS 1841 15 + 9 = 24 14 + 6 = 20 11 + 7 = 18 16 78 179-182 from 3./5. July 1841
WS 1841/42
SS 1842 16 30th 15th 17th 78 188-191
WS 1842/43 18th 43 26th 24 111 93, 193-197 o.D.
SS 1843
WS 1843/44 165-167
SS 1844
WS 1844/45 14th 17th 20th 17th 68 140-156
SS 1845 14th 17th 20th 17th 68 143
WS 1845/46 19th 16 16 16 67 110-123 of January 26, 1846
SS 1846 17th 13 20th 18th 68 101-107 of June 28, 1846
WS 1946/47 22nd 21st 23 18th 84 76-92 of January 1, 1847
SS 1847 42 42 46-14 34 28 182 11 26–40 from July 26th and August 8th
WS 1847/48 42 44 45 34 44 209 18th 41 from January 6th and pp. 49-59 undated
SS 1848 39 37 now all freely allowed
WS 1848/49 40 86 67 30th 46 268 from the RV

literature

  • Alfons Beckenbauer: The Landshut University 1800–1826. Ludwig, Munich 1992, ISBN 978-3-7787-2122-3 .
  • Karl Bosl: The Ludwig Maximilians University Landshut Munich. A spiritual and cultural change. Einst und Jetzt , Volume 24 (1979), pp. 7-15.
  • Werner Ebermeier: Student life 200 years ago . Munich 2007.
  • Roland Engelhart: The German study system around 1900 from the perspective of the Munich Nunciature. Dedicated to Axel Borsdorf and Dieter Langewiesche . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 36 (1991) pp. 129-149.
  • Franz Xaver Freninger : The register book of the University of Ingolstadt – Landshut – Munich: Rectors, professors, doctors 1472–1872; Candidates 1772-1872 . Friedberg (Bavaria) 1872. GoogleBooks
  • Hans-Bernd Herzog: "There can be nothing beautiful" - History of Suevia 1803-1853 . Munich 2003. ISBN 3-87707-620-3 .
  • Carol Jebens: Political currents among the Munich student body from 1826 to 1833. The dispute with the fraternity . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 43 (1998), pp. 71-77.
  • Joachim Kuhn: History of the Corps Palatia in Munich. 1813 to 1987 . Munich 1987.
  • Rüdiger Kutz: The Munich Student Freicorps (March 6, 1848 to May 15, 1849) . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 31 (1986), pp. 15-46.
  • Rüdiger Kutz: Spotlights on the Munich students in the revolutionary year 1848 , in: Sebastian Sigler : Friendship and Tolerance. 200 years of Corps Bavaria in Landshut and Munich . Munich 2006, ISBN 3-932965-86-8 , pp. 189-207.
  • Ferdinand Kurz: The Corps Bavaria to Landshut and Munich . Munich 1910.
  • Philistine Association of Bavaria [Munich]: Landshut diary by Anton Lori . Once and Now, Volume 5 (1960), pp. 32-41.
  • Max Richter: Helvetia and Old Helvetia - New Helvetia and Landsmannschaft Helvetia, all in Munich [1848–1854] . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 16 (1971), pp. 145-146.
  • Gerhard Saul: Courage before royal crowns. Lola Montez and the Munich Corps . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 19 (1974), pp. 98-103.
  • Gerhard Saul: Landshuter Corps 150 years in Munich. 1472 Ingolstadt - 1800 Landshut - 1826 Munich . Einst und Jetzt , Volume 22 (1977), pp. 179-189.
  • Herbert Scherer : 125 years of the Technical University of Munich - The students' initiative to found a technical university in Munich . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 39 (1994), pp. 231-247.
  • Herbert Scherer: A German Senior Citizens' Convention. Idea and reality between 1934 and 1954 . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 42 (1997), pp. 49-61. Online version (PDF file; 57 kB)
  • Herbert Scherer: How Weinheimer SC gained a foothold in Munich in 1905 . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 44 (1999), pp. 233-237.
  • Josef Schmidt: The Landsmannschaften in Landshut 1806 to 1814 . Once and Now, Volume 18 (1973), pp. 67-97.
  • Rainer Schmidt: The Ministerial-Kommissariat Landshut / Munich 1818-1834 . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 44 (1999), pp. 167-180.
  • Franz Trölß: Contribution to the history of the Münchner SC . Once and Now 34 (1989):
  1. The Münchner SC from 1944 , pp. 9–15. GoogleBooks .
  2. The Resurrection of the Corps Suevia after the Second World War (1945 to March 1949) , pp. 16–29. GoogleBooks
  3. The becoming of the new Münchner SC (1948–1951) , pp. 30–37. GoogleBooks .
  • Max Weigl: Commemorative book of the Corps Bavaria at the University of Munich for the celebration of its jubilee in Landshut in 1867 . Munich 1868.

Web links

Commons : MSC (Corps)  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Remarks

  1. Wolfgang Gottwald (corpsarchive.de)
  2. ↑ Corps boys: Carl Abend, Buchel, Donauer, Faber, Peter Fermier, Emil Fuchs, Ludwig Groß, Karl Hartmann, Karl Hausmann, Friedrich Keyser, Friedrich Kleinkopf, Philipp Kurländer, August Leo, Lichtenberger, Emmerich von Moers, Ernst Machwirth II, Konrad Portscheller, Christian Schaefer, Ludwig Graf von Voltolini-Valtellina, Daniel Weltz, Martin Wittenmayr . The four Renoncen Wilhelm Bertram , Heinrich Foltz , Wilhelm Jänisch and Friedrich Siebert became Swabians.
  3. The previous version of November 25, 1864 is in the archives of Bavaria and Franconia.
  4. Adolf Julius Fillibeck on corpsarchive.de
  5. Werner Ranz (corpsarchive.de)
  6. For the Kösener SC in Munich the order of reception in it applies. In contrast, in the Munich SC (Kösener, Weinheimer and Free Corps Donaria) founded in 1951, the foundation date (Kutz Makariae) applies.
  7. Dear happy vagabonds, their hair disheveled by the wind, / as dogged demonstrators with fists raised to fight. / Do not destroy and mock, aggressive and arrogant, / /: but shape and reconcile, creative and tolerant! : /
  8. Bavaria also reports 4 renonces.
  9. In the addendum of August 8, 1847, 14 Palatinate were deleted - from which the Lolamannia initially consisted exclusively.

Individual evidence

  1. Herbert Scherer : The first years of the Polytechnisches SC in Munich (1868-1870) . Once and Now, Volume 12 (1967), pp. 69-76.
  2. Mrs. Trölß (1989)
  3. ^ Corps of the Munich Senior Citizens' Convention. Munich Seniors Convent, accessed on December 21, 2018 .
  4. Goebel, Frankengeschichte, p. 108.
  5. ^ Academic monthly books II, p. 40 f.
  6. a b A. Beckenbauer, Landshut University (1992)
  7. a b c d F. Kurz, Bavaria history (1910)
  8. ^ A b c d e Karl Viernstein : Karl Joseph Anton Mittermaier as a student and teacher at the University of Landshut . Munich 1931.
  9. a b J. Schmidt (1973)
  10. a b c d e f Wilhelm Riedner : The centenary of the Corps Palatia Munich from June 20 to 24, 1913 . Munich 1913
  11. a b c d e f g H. Herzog (2003)
  12. Wording in Riedner p. 28 f.
  13. a b c d e Kuhnt, Palatinate History (1987)
  14. a b Wehner 1918, p. 89.
  15. ^ Max Richter: Helvetia Munich 1829–1831 . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 14 (1969), pp. 98-108 [109]
  16. ^ Constitution of the Society of Suevia [1827]. Einst und Jetzt, special issue 1988, pp. 134-137.
  17. ^ Rüdiger Kutz: Alemannia (III) Munich. July 30, 1847– February 10, 1848 . Once and Now, Volume 26 (1981), pp. 57-82 ("Lolamannia")
  18. Your farewell letter in full with Herzog 2003
  19. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n M Inn 45824
  20. HStA M Inn 45824 Bl. 5
  21. ^ Original at Bavaria and Franconia
  22. HStA M Inn 45824 p. 20
  23. HStA M Inn 45824 p. 22
  24. HStA M Inn 45824 p. 28
  25. HStA M Inn 45824 pp. 8-11
  26. HStA M Inn 45824 p. 13
  27. M Inn 45822
  28. HstA M Inn 45 824 pp. 39/40
  29. ^ SC protocol, in the Makaria archive
  30. Bavaria's royal years
  31. Rüdiger Kutz: The Munich Student Freicorps (March 6, 1848 to May 16, 1849) . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 31 (1986), pp. 15-46.
  32. General Bavarian Chronicle or History Yearbooks. Volume 7, page 136 f. GoogleBooks
  33. a b RC of Makaria
  34. a b c d in the archives of Bavaria and Franconia
  35. a b c d e SC notification in the Institute for University Studies
  36. Rolf-Joachim Baum: The battle at the Schenckenturm in 1857 - SC-Hatz Munich against Würzburg, shown according to old SC protocols . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 29 (1984), pp. 85-94.
  37. a b CC protocols of Makaria
  38. Munich Senior Citizens' Convention: In memory of the Kaiser-Commers of the Munich SC and the inactives of the Aschaffenburger SC [11. March 1887] . GoogleBooks
  39. ^ Academic monthly books
  40. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 104, 1289 quotation; "Ernst Frhr. Schirndinger from Schirnding
    • Straubing October 2, 1879
    cand iur near Würzburg in the Gutenberg Forest caused by lightning 10.5. 1904 "
  41. Raimund Gerster: Festival book and commemorative edition of the old and young German corps students united in the HKSCV for the centenary of the German liberation struggle in 1813 at the Regensburg-Kelheim Liberation Hall , May 31 to June 2, 1913, Regensburger Corpsphilisterverband
  42. Hamm Selbachpark (PDF; 156 kB)
  43. ^ "Battle of Pelkum", April 1, 1920. In: Internet portal Westfälische Geschichte , (accessed November 20, 2015).
  44. Makarenlexikon
  45. oKC protocol, p. 24
  46. Paul Gerhardt Gladen : History of corp student associations . Deutsche Corpszeitung 1973, issues 5 and 6
  47. ^ A b Mathias Rösch: The Munich NSDAP 1925–1933: An investigation into the internal structure of the NSDAP in the Weimar Republic . Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG, 2002, ISBN 3-486-70651-9 ( books.google.com ).
  48. a b Fr. Trölß (1989)
  49. ^ A b Herbert Scherer: A German Senior Citizens' Convention. Idea and reality between 1934 and 1954 . Einst und Jetzt 42 (1997), pp. 49–61, digitized version ( memento of the original from October 14, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF file; 57 kB) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.cisaria.de
  50. H. Scherer (1997)
  51. Adolf Julius Fillibeck: Before 40 years. Memorandum of the chairman of the Philistine Committee of Suevia Munich [from 1951] . Einst und Jetzt, Volume 36 (1991), pp. 213-228.
  52. ^ Vitruvia
  53. ^ Normannia-Vandalia
  54. Donaria
  55. YouTube
  56. ^ 125 years of the Association of Old Corps Students. Anniversary celebrations in Munich . Corps Magazin 1/2013, p. 13.
  57. a b M Inn 45825