Max Zillibiller

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Max Zillibiller (born December 7, 1896 in Aschau im Chiemgau , † November 17, 1970 in Hindelang ) was a Bavarian politician .

Life

Max Zillibiller, son of a commercial councilor, attended grammar school in Ettal up to eighth grade and then took part in the First World War as a war volunteer from 1914 to 1918 . He then studied law in Munich, where he was a member of the AStA and, in 1919, the revolutionary university council. In 1921 he had to give up this course because of political activity. Peter Zimmermann quotes Theodor Haubach (1896–1945) in his dissertation . A political biography Zillibiller's diary notes about working with young people from the proletariat, for whom the student wanted to give them “the chance to enjoy the beauties of nature, art and literature” .

Zillibiller became a farmer and bought a farm in Upper Bavaria. After his father died in the 1920s, he took over his business in Hindelang, which consisted of a cheese factory and a wholesale business with agricultural products.

Max Zillibiller's political career took off after the end of the Second World War . At that time, the French occupying power appointed him as mayor in Hindelang, as he was not politically charged. In addition, he became a member of the CSU since 1946 and became a member of the state constituent assembly and then of the first Bavarian state parliament after the war. He then belonged to the state parliament for four legislative periods. Max Zillibiller was a member from 1951 and from 1955 to 1965 Chairman of the Broadcasting Council of the Bavarian Radio, and he was supervisory board of the social economy work Sonthofen and member of the County Council of the county Sonthofen.

On April 21, 1954, Zillibiller was among those members of the state parliament who temporarily canceled a speech by Moša Pijade on Bayerischer Rundfunk from the program after a leaflet portrayed him as a hater of the Catholic Church.

In 1959, Zillibiller rejected the Bavarian Order of Merit . He justified this by pointing out that he had voted against the Order's law in the state parliament.

In 1966 Zillibiller was made an honorary citizen of the Hindelang market.

Individual evidence

  1. DNB 965589862/34 , p. 100 with note 3
  2. http://www.hdbg.de/ Wiederaufbau/parlamente/ index.php
  3. ^ Chronicle of the ARD | Former chairman of the BR Broadcasting Council has passed away. Retrieved September 21, 2018 .
  4. ^ Pilate posture . In: Der Spiegel . No. 18 , 1954 ( online ).
  5. MAX ZILLIBILLER . In: Der Spiegel . No. 29 , 1959 ( online ).
  6. Bad Hindelang personalities ( Memento from November 27, 2011 in the Internet Archive )