Paul von Goldberger

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Paul von Goldberger
Freiburg FC German Champion 1907.jpg
von Goldberger (3rd from right) and teammate
of Freiburg FC, champion from 1907
Personnel
Surname Paul Philipp Herbert Goldberger de Buda
birthday January 14, 1881
place of birth ViennaAustria-Hungary
date of death 1941 or after
position Defense / goal
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1898-1900 First Vienna FC 63 (?)
1900-1901 Műegyetemi Football Club
1901-1905 BTuFC Britannia 1892
1905-1906 BSC Old Boys Basel 21 (?)
1906-1907 Freiburg FC
1907-1910 33 FC Budapest
1910-1911 Frankfurt Kickers 5 (1)
1911-1912 Frankfurt FV 18 (5)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1908 Hungary 1 (0)
1 Only league games are given.

Paul von Goldberger (born January 14, 1881 in Vienna ; † March 26, 1942 in the Litzmannstadt ghetto ), also called "Gilly", was an Austro-Hungarian football player .

Career

societies

Goldberger belonged from 1898 to 1900 the First Vienna FC on, with whom he the in the years 1899 and 1900 Challenge Cup , won a tendered by the First Vienna FC 1897 competition for football clubs in the kuk -Monarchie.

After passing high school in 1899, he played the 1900/01 season for Műegyetemi Football Club . When he started studying chemistry in 1901 at the Königlich Technische Hochschule zu Berlin in Charlottenburg , he played from then and now as a goalkeeper - until 1905 - for the BTuFC Britannia 1892 for the championships organized by the Association of Berlin Ball Game Clubs . In 1903 and 1904 he won the Berlin championship with his club. When he moved to the University of Basel , where he received his doctorate in 1908 with studies on N-bromphtalimide , he joined the BSC Old Boys Basel , for which he played the 1905/06 season in Serie A Zentral .

At the end of the 1906/07 season he emerged from the Gau Oberrhein as a champion with Freiburg FC and also won the subsequent final round of the southern district championship under the umbrella organization of the Association of South German Football Associations , as well as the final round of the southern German championship .

After he had already reached the final of the German championship in 1904 with BTuFC Britannia 1892 , which was not played on the day of the appointment due to the DFB's disregard of the statutes (all final round games were canceled), he moved with Freiburg FC on 19 May 1907 again in the final. After victories over SC Schlesien Breslau and VfB Leipzig in the quarter and semi-finals , he and his club won the German championship with a 3-1 victory over BTuFC Viktoria 89 , the only one of Freiburg FC to this day.

Returned to Budapest, he played for the local second division club 33 FC Budapest , where he contributed at the end of the 1909/10 season to promotion to the Nemzeti Bajnokság , the top division in Hungarian football.

Arrived in Frankfurt am Main in February 1911 , he was first used in five point games in the second half of the season for the Frankfurter Kickers , in which he scored a goal. With the merger with the Frankfurt FC Victoria 1899 - in the same year - it was now used for the Frankfurt FV . For this he only played the 1911/12 season in the northern district , in one of four districts under the umbrella organization of the Association of South German Football Associations. With 18 point games in which he scored five goals, he contributed to winning the North District Championship in 1912, the first that a Frankfurt club could win. At the end of the season, he finally ended his football career.

National team

On April 5, 1908, he played his only international match for the Hungarian national team in Budapest in a 5-2 victory over the Bohemian national team .

successes

Others

In the course of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise , his family was ennobled in 1867 and from then on called themselves Buday-Goldberger or Goldberger de Buda

Following his football career, he worked, among other things, as a sports journalist. In the 1920s he returned to Vienna again. On April 21, 1941, he was deported by the National Socialists to the Litzmannstadt ghetto ; from then on his trace is lost.

literature

  • Matthias Hörstmann (ed.): Lost heroes. From Gottfried Fuchs to Walther Bensemann - The expulsion of Jews from German football after 1933 (= 11 friends, special issue # 148/1, 2014), 11 Freunde Verlag, Berlin 2014.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ancestry.com: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; Washington DC; The Elders of the Jews in the Lódz Ghetto, 1939-1944; Recording group: RG-15.083M; Item number: 9; Archive role: 203
  2. Vienna and its Jewish history accessed on February 11, 2020
  3. Remembrance day in German football: "Gilly" - a master of fine technology on eintracht-frankfurt-museum.de (author: Ulrich Matheja)
  4. cf. Leo Schidrowitz, History of Football in Austria , Vienna 1951, page 38