Martin Richter (administrative lawyer)

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Martin Richter , complete Amadeus Heinrich Karl Martin Richter (born November 30, 1869 in Glogau , Province of Silesia , † March 19, 1930 in Hanover ) was a German administrative lawyer, most recently President of the Hanover Monastery Chamber .

Life

Martin Richter was the son of the evangelical division pastor and later field provost Maximilian Richter . He first attended the Maria-Magdalena-Gymnasium in Breslau , then after the transfer of his father to Berlin the Sophien-Gymnasium in Berlin up to the Abitur in 1888, and studied law at the universities of Tübingen, Leipzig and Berlin. In 1892 he was in Leipzig with a dissertation on The obligation of the insured to Dr. jur. PhD.

Richter entered the Prussian administrative service and initially completed his legal clerkship in Merseburg . In 1896 he became a government assessor. From June 1897 he worked in the Prussian Ministry of Spiritual, Educational and Medical Affairs. It was his job to work closely with his father on a memorandum on military pastoral care in Prussia . It was available in 1898 and 100 copies were printed for official use only .

After a brief activity in the district office for the Duchy of Lauenburg in Ratzeburg , he returned in 1899 as an assistant to the Ministry of Culture. Here, as in his next assignment as a specialist in the war ministry , he worked out a new service order for the military church system of both denominations: the Protestant and Catholic military church service order of October 17, 1902 and the Protestant naval church order of March 28, 1903.

This was followed by a change to the Wroclaw district government with responsibility for the church and school system. In 1904 he was promoted to the government council .

In 1907 he temporarily left the public service to work as General Director of Prince Friedrich zu Solms-Baruth (1853–1920) in Baruth / Mark .

On January 1, 1910, he returned to the Prussian Ministry of Culture as a consultant in the university department. In 1911 he was promoted to the secret government council and lecturing council. He was responsible for the universities of Berlin, Greifswald, Kiel, Königsberg and the Berlin Charité . In August 1914 he was drafted as captain of the reserve and battery chief of the 1st Guard Reserve Field Artillery Regiment. He took part in several skirmishes and was wounded as early as December 1914.

In 1915, the Prussian Ministry of Culture was released from military service. In the same year he was promoted to the Secret Upper Government Council. Even after the end of the war he remained active in the Ministry of Science, Art and Education. In 1921 he was appointed President of the Hanover Monastery Chamber.

He was married to the daughter Walther Brecht's Editha and thus brother-in-law of Arnold Brecht .

Honors

Works

  • The insured's duty to notify. Diss. Leipzig 1892
  • The development and current organization of military pastoral care in Prussia. Historical-critical memorandum. Reprint of the Berlin 1899 edition with an introduction by Arnold Vogt (= Bibliotheca Rerum Militarium, sources and representations on military science and military history: LII) Osnabrück 1991 ISBN 3-7648-1792-5 ( full text )
  • Protestant military church service regulations (EMD). Text edition with the implementation regulations of the War Ministry and with notes. Berlin 1903

literature

  • The Prussian ministers of culture and their officials in the first century of the ministry. JG Cotta, 1918, p. 120

Individual evidence

  1. ^ CV according to Arnold Vogt (ed.): Martin Richter; The development and current organization of military pastoral care in Prussia. Historical-critical memorandum. Reprint of the Berlin 1899 edition with an introduction by Arnold Vogt (= Bibliotheca Rerum Militarium, sources and representations on military science and military history: LII) Osnabrück 1991 ISBN 3-7648-1792-5 ( full text )
  2. Cf. Arnold Brecht: Up Close: Memoirs of Life 1884-1927. DVA 1966, p. 471
  3. Orders and their order according to the manual on the Royal Prussian Court and State. 1918, p. 115