Paul Blumberger

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Paul Blumberger (born June 24, 1879 in Düsseldorf ; † January 30, 1946 in special camp No. 1 Mühlberg / Elbe ) was a German judge .

Family grave with memorial inscription on the Melaten in Cologne. Cemetery (hall 78)

Life

He was the son of a secret councilor. His denomination was Catholic. In 1900 he passed the first state examination with “good”, the second in 1905 with “good” and became an assessor in the same year. In 1908 he became a district judge at the Cologne Regional Court , and in 1920 he became a councilor at the Cologne Regional Court . In 1930 he became an assistant judge at the Reichsgericht and three months later a Reich Judge. Paul Blumberger was appointed President of the Senate on April 1, 1942. With the collapse of the National Socialist German Reich , he was arrested on August 25, 1945 in Leipzig with 39 judges from the Imperial Court and initially imprisoned in the Leipzig court prison without trial. Later he was transferred to special camp No. 1 Mühlberg / Elbe . He died there on January 30, 1946.

Memberships

Honors

literature

  • Friedrich Karl Kaul : History of the Reichsgericht , Volume IV (1933-1945), East Berlin 1971.
  • Kathrin Nahmmacher: The jurisprudence of the Reichsgericht and the Hamburg courts on the grounds for divorce under § 55 of the EheG 1938 in the years 1938 to 1945 , (European university publications: series 2, jurisprudence; volume 2604) Frankfurt am Main 1999, p. 91f.

Individual evidence

  1. August Schäfer "The great dying in the Reichsgericht", in: Deutsche Richterzeitung 1957, page 249, 250.
  2. List of the dead in the Mühlberg special camp, Lfd. No. 429
  3. Marius Hetzel: The challenge of racial mixed marriage in the years 1933–1939 Tübingen 1997, p. 100.