Paul Uterhart

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Ludwig Christian Heinrich Paul Uterhart , also Paul Ludwig Christian Heinrich Uterhart (born January 3, 1823 in Parchim , † September 14, 1874 in Rostock ) was a German lawyer and politician .

Life

Paul Uterhart was a younger son of the medical councilor Carl Uterhart and the Parchim tin caster and senator's daughter Christine (Maria Elisabeth), née. Hoffmann (1796-1825). He attended the Friedrich-Franz-Gymnasium Parchim and passed the Abitur at Michaelis 1842. Paul Uterhart then studied law at the universities of Heidelberg , Berlin and Rostock .

After his exams he worked as a lawyer in Rostock from 1850 , where he was granted citizenship in July 1850 . At the beginning of May 1853 he was arrested and indicted in the so-called Rostock high treason trial with Julius and Moritz Wiggers , Karl Türk and Christian Wilbrandt , among others . He spent his pre- trial and criminal detention in the Bützow-Dreibergen prison . On May 26, 1857, the Grand Duke released him and most of the others convicted of high treason (with the exception of Moritz Wiggers and Friedrich Dornblüth , who remained in custody until October 1857) the remainder of the sentence on the occasion of the inauguration of Schwerin Palace , and he came free.

Uterhart returned to Rostock after his pardon and worked as a lawyer again. In Rostock, the council and citizenship elected him on May 8, 1861, as a legal scholar senator . After he was denied the intended management of the police office by the grand ducal ministry due to his political past, he took over the management of the city court and in 1864 went to the city high court as a deputy . At the same time, Uterhart was director of the Rostock district from 1865 to 1872. He also worked at the criminal court and the marriage court.

In 1874 he died of complications from typhoid fever .

literature

  • Helge Dvorak: Biographical Lexicon of the German Burschenschaft. Volume I: Politicians. Volume 6: T-Z. Winter, Heidelberg 2005, ISBN 3-8253-5063-0 , p. 101.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The Parchim School of Scholars. 1864, p. 29
  2. ^ Entry 1846 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  3. The student who joined the Burgkeller fraternity in Jena in 1841 was not - as Dvorak thinks - but his older brother Carl (Ludwig Wilhelm) Uterhart (* 1819), who had passed the Abitur in Parchim at Easter 1841 ( Die Gelehreenschule zu Parchim. 1864, p. 29 ), had also studied law and first went to Jena. He died as a student in Rostock (see his entry in the Rostock matriculation portal ). Paul's entry in the Rostock matriculation portal (under Visited universities ) does not know anything about a previous stay in Jena. When Carl Uterhart became a fraternity there in 1841, Paul was still on his way to graduation in Parchim.
  4. Julius Wiggers: Forty-four months of pre-trial detention. A contribution to the history of the Rostock high treason trial. Berlin 1861 ( digitized version ), p. 239