Philipp Heimann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philipp Heimann (born May 8, 1881 in Berlin ; † October 10, 1962 in Rheydt ) was a German administrative lawyer and judge.

Life

Heimann's father was the general director of Berlin-Cologne Fire Insurance . Heimann attended the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Gymnasium (Berlin) and the Gymnasium Kreuzgasse in Cologne. At Easter 1900 he graduated from high school. He began to study law at the Philipps University of Marburg and was active in the Corps Teutonia Marburg in 1900 . As an inactive he moved to the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn . He passed the first state examination on 12 April 1904 and came as a court clerk at the District Court Eitorf and the Bonn District Court . In 1907 he switched from the administration of justice to internal administration and in February 1907 came to the government in Cologne as a government trainee . On April 23, 1910 he was Regierungsassessor the county Karthaus . In January 1914 he moved to the Zellerfeld district and in July 1914 to the government in Aachen . As a volunteer , he went to the First World War in 1914 . Dismissed in 1917 as Rittmeister of the Reserve , he was appointed to the government council on May 3, 1917 and to the provisional district administrator in the Monschau district on November 15, 1917 . He was definitively appointed on October 18, 1918. From January 28, 1920 he was acting as a substitute for the district administration in the Cologne district . The final appointment followed on October 8th. After five days in temporary retirement, he was transferred to the High Presidium of the Rhine Province on July 20, 1933 . On October 26, 1933, he was appointed to the Prussian Higher Administrative Court. After the attack on Poland began in September 1939, he was in charge of the Katowice district . After nine years at the OVG, he came to the Reich Administrative Court as a Reich judge on August 26, 1942 . From January 5, 1943, he again ran the business for the district administrator of Katowice who was in the field. Without having been an imperial judge, he was in February 1945, with 63 years in the retirement staggered. Heimann was born in 1919 with Käthe. Kreutzberg (1894–1991) from Rheydt married. When he died in 1962 at the age of 81, he left behind two sons and a daughter.

Burial place of the Heimann family

The family grave is located in the Melaten cemetery in Cologne (hall 59).

Honors

literature

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Horst Romeyk: The state and municipal administrative officials of the Rhine Province 1816–1945 . Droste Verlag , Düsseldorf 1994.
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 102/874.
  3. a b c Blue Book of the Corps Teutonia zu Marburg 1825 to 2000 , ed. from the Marburger Teutonen Association. Marburg 2000, p. 207.