Maria Friedemann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maria Friedemann (née Fritzle; born May 22, 1912 in Stuttgart ; † May 31, 1999 there ) was a German lawyer and politician ( CDU ). She was a member of the state parliament of Württemberg-Baden from 1946 to 1949.

Life

Maria Friedemann was born as the oldest of seven siblings. Her father Wilhelm Fritzle was a lawyer and notary. She attended the Königin-Katharina-Stift in Stuttgart, where she passed her Abitur in 1931. She studied law in Tübingen and Munich . In 1931 she became a member of the Catholic student union Hohenberg , which was banned in 1937. In 1933 she interrupted her studies and worked as a secretary in her father's law office. In 1941, against her parents' wishes, she resumed her studies in Tübingen and passed her first state examination in law in 1942. In 1943 she completed her doctorate with a thesis on claims for damages by those obliged to provide assistance. In 1945 she passed her state examination in law and initially worked in the war damage office and in the personnel office of the city of Stuttgart, from October 1945 as a local court advisor in the Ministry of Justice in Stuttgart.

In 1947 she married Bruno Friedemann, with whom she had three children. Her husband died in 1978.

From 1947 to 1965 she worked as a lawyer and in her husband's company.

Political activity

In 1945 Maria Friedemann joined the CDU and in 1946 was a member of the Constituent Assembly of Württemberg-Baden. In 1946 she became a member of the state parliament of Württemberg-Baden, but had to resign in 1949 for health reasons. In the state parliament she dealt intensively with constitutional and religious issues.

She was chairwoman of the CDU women's group in North Württemberg and in this role tried to attract more women to politics. Within the party she campaigned in 1956 for more women to be nominated as candidates for the state election.

Works

  • Maria Fritzle: Peace and Justice through the Liberation Law ? New Politics Stuttgart Series , Issue 4 (1946?)

literature

  • Ina Hochreuther: Women in Parliament. Southwest German parliamentarians from 1919 to today , Stuttgart 2002, ISBN 3-923476-15-9 , p. 111.

Web links