Paul Gottburgsen

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Paul Ludwig Gottburgsen

Paul Ludwig Gottburgsen (born January 18, 1832 in Husum ; † August 26, 1903 in Flensburg ) was a German lawyer , mayor , member of the German Reichstag and district judge .

Life

Paul Ludwig Gottburgsen was born in 1832 as the son of the farmer Andreas Hansen Gottburgsen and his wife Ellin Gottburgsen, née Jensen . Gottburgsen visited the Hermann-Tast School in Husum and studied at the University of Kiel , the Ruprecht-Karls-University of Heidelberg and the University of Copenhagen from 1851 to 1856 law . From 1856 to 1858 he was in the administrative and judicial service in preparation. Between 1858 and 1864 he was a lawyer in Itzehoe and Rendsburg . After the German-Danish War , he initially expressed himself in a pro-Danish way. Only after signing an application to join Prussia was he appointed mayor of Aabenraa in 1864, which he remained until 1867. Between 1867 and 1879 he was a member of the district court and since then the regional court of Flensburg . In 1884 he was elected to the Reichstag for the first time and, after the election was declared invalid on January 13, 1886, was re-elected on March 29, 1886. He subsequently exercised this mandate for the constituency of the province of Schleswig-Holstein 2 Aabenraa , Flensburg and the National Liberal Party until 1890 . Gottburgsen was an Evangelical Lutheran, married from 1861 to the daughter of a merchant originally from Tönning and had four children with her. In his speeches in the German Reichstag he commented on the Reich budget, on the administration of the Reichsheer and the barracks in Hadersleben as well as on a draft law at the request of Junggreen , concerning the administrative and judicial language in certain parts of the country.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Fritz Specht, Paul Schwabe: The Reichstag elections from 1867 to 1903. Statistics of the Reichstag elections together with the programs of the parties and a list of the elected representatives. 2nd Edition. Carl Heymann Verlag, Berlin 1904, p. 108.
  2. ^ Negotiations of the German Reichstag. Retrieved June 28, 2020 .

Web links