Martin Loibl (politician, 1869)

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Martin Loibl

Martin Loibl (born August 28, 1869 in Neuötting ; † January 14, 1933 in Berlin ) was a German politician of the Bavarian People's Party (BVP).

Live and act

Loibl attended elementary school and a grammar school in Munich . After graduating from high school, he joined the Bavarian Army to pursue an officer career. He graduated from the Munich War School and served in the 15th Infantry Regiment in Neuburg an der Donau . He later left the military to take over his father's malt house . Loibl eventually sold them. Instead he founded the Grießmayerische Buchdruckerei (also known as Buch und Kunsthandlungsgesellschaft GmbH). The most important publication of the publishing house was the Neuburg advertisement sheet .

Loibl was politically active in the Catholic Center Party . From 1905 to 1918 he was a member of the Bavarian Chamber of Deputies . In addition, in the years before the First World War, Loibl held positions as deputy chairman of the trade committee in Neuburg, as chairman of the committee of the Neuburg local health insurance fund and as chairman of the small pension association as well as the home and royal association.

From 1914 to 1918 Loibl took part in the First World War as a reserve officer . He was wounded twice at the beginning of the war and was awarded both classes of the Iron Cross and the Order of Military Merit with Swords. At the end of the war he was a major in the Landwehr. During the war Loibl was also on the board of the council of municipal representatives in Neuburg .

After the collapse of the Empire and the establishment of the Weimar Republic , Loibl moved from the center to the Bavarian People's Party (BVP). For this he belonged for almost nine years, from 1924 to 1933, to the Reichstag in Berlin as a member of constituency 24 (Upper Bavaria-Swabia). Loibl belonged to the patriotic federation Bund Bayern und Reich, founded in 1921 . As a member of parliament, Loibl also emerged as a board member of the Kyffhäuserbund of war invalids and survivors. Furthermore, he was a member of the city council of the immediate city of Neuburg an der Donau during these years.

family

His son Martin Loibl (1898–1951) continued to run the Grießmayerische Buchdruckerei.

Fonts

  • Festival newspaper for the 200th anniversary of the former Royal Bavarian 15th Infantry Regiment King Friedrich August of Saxony in the garrison town of Neuburg a. D. on the 5th, 6th and 6th August 7, 1922. 1922.

Web links

Commons : Martin Loibl (BVP)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Bavarian Main State Archives IV ; z. B. Ranking 9444, image 72 at ancestry.com, accessed December 26, 2019