Max Nitzsche

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Max Nitzsche (born June 30, 1915 in Kiel ) is a German journalist and doctor of philosophy.

Life

Max Nitzsche was born on June 30, 1915, the son of Max and Olga Nitzsche. He first attended grammar school in Kiel and was then a student at Vitzthum grammar school in Dresden. Nitzsche studied philosophy, education and recent history. He began his studies at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel , u. a. with Ferdinand Weinhandl , Johannes Wittmann and Otto Höfler , and graduated from the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich , where his professors included Karl Alexander von Müller , Hans Grunsky and Georg Burckhardt. Nitzsche received his doctorate in 1940 under Grunsky with the dissertation " Federal and State " on the Bündische Jugend und Männerbünde, including explicitly the George Circle .

From 1953 to 1961 Max Nitzsche headed the Bonn editorial team for the “ Rheinische Post ” . In this function he belonged to an exclusive circle of correspondents who took part in the confidential "tea talks" of Federal Chancellor Konrad Adenauer in the Palais Schaumburg in 1959 . State Secretary Hans Globke , government spokesman Felix von Eckardt and the journalists Hugo Grüssen, Ludwig von Danwitz, Alfred Rapp , Georg Schröder , Max Schulze-Vorberg and Robert Strobel also took part in these small-group discussions at the express request of Adenauer .

Publications

  • Federal and state. Nature and forms of the covenant ideology . Konrad Triltsch, Würzburg, 1942.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. idn = 361958943. In: Catalog of the German National Library . Retrieved May 20, 2020 .