Philipp Heintz

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Philipp Heintz (around 1885)

Philipp Heintz (born November 9, 1809 in Zweibrücken , † November 3, 1893 in Frankenthal ) was a Palatinate lawyer and city councilor. In 1849 he was a left-wing liberal Bavarian member of the Bavarian state parliament for a few months.

Life

Heintz was the son of a butcher and attended grammar school in Zweibrücken. He then studied and obtained his doctorate in law . He was then a legal candidate in Zweibrücken and, after the state bankruptcy, has been practicing as a lawyer in Frankenthal since February 1st. During the March Revolution in 1848, Heintz founded the Frankenthaler Section of the Palatinate People's Association with the doctor Julius Bettinger and the lawyer Georg Jacob Stockinger . They demanded “a complete reorganization of the social and political situation in the circle of bourgeois life.” When the candidates were nominated for the Frankfurt National Assembly , Heintz was elected as the second substitute behind Adolph Boyé in Frankenthal . The opposing candidate, Stockinger, fell through in his hometown and in Kirchheimbolanden , while Carl Spatz was electoral candidate and member of parliament . In the Palatinate People's Association he was a member of the Frankenthal district committee until April 1849.

Philipp Heintz became the first Frankenthal constituency representative in the Chamber of Deputies of the Bavarian State Parliament in 1849 . This was elected for the first time on December 7, 1848 under the new electoral law and met on January 15, 1849. Heintz was a member of the V. Committee on Complaints . The 19 MPs from the Rhine Palatinate were considered to be representatives of the “radical left”. After the failed Palatinate uprising , the 13th Bavarian State Parliament was dissolved on June 10, 1849 by King Maximilian II .

In the same year Heintz justified the uprising movement "because [it] arose from the people's sense of justice". He later received the honorary title of Councilor of Justice and worked in Frankenthal as a city councilor.

There is no close relationship with Philipp Casimir Heintz and the Bavarian Minister of Justice from 1848 .

literature

  • Rudolf H. Böttcher: The family ties of the Palatinate Revolution 1848/1849. A contribution to the social history of a bourgeois revolution. Special issue of the Association for Palatinate-Rhenish Family Studies. Volume 14. Issue 6. Ludwigshafen am Rhein 1999.

Web links

Footnotes

  1. ^ Karsten Ruppert : The Palatinate members of the Bavarian state parliament. In: Hans Fenske , Joachim Kermann, Karl Scherer: The Palatinate and the Revolution 1848/49 , Volume 1, Kaiserslautern 2000. P. 234.
  2. ^ Liberals and Democrats in Frankenthal . In: Böttcher: Familienbande .
  3. ^ The substitute candidates: lawyers, civil servants, doctors, pastors and a teacher. In: Böttcher: Familienbande .
  4. Corresponding to today's regional court district
  5. ^ Karsten Ruppert: The Palatinate members of the Bavarian state parliament. P. 234. [Ph. However, Heintz was never president of the second chamber.]
  6. voting district / constituency: Speyer -Frankenthal
  7. HdBG: 13th Landtag: 1849 (7th electoral period 1848–1849) . (accessed on January 6, 2019)
  8. ^ The substitute candidates: lawyers, civil servants, doctors, pastors and a teacher. In: Böttcher: Familienbande .