Reinhard Neubert

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Reinhard Neubert

Reinhard Neubert (born February 25, 1896 in Riga ; † 1945 ) was a German lawyer and politician ( NSDAP ).

Live and act

After attending the Reichsdeutsche Schule in Riga, the son of a businessman switched to the Mommsen-Gymnasium in Charlottenburg. He then studied - with interruptions due to his participation in the First World War from 1915 to 1918 - law and political science as well as history. 1922 doctorate he attended the University of Breslau for Dr. jur. In 1919/20 he was with the Protective Regiment Greater Berlin of the Guard Cavalry Rifle Corps . In 1921 he passed the first state examination and in 1924 the second. From 1921 to 1924 he worked as a consultant at the main investigation office of the Reich customs administration. In 1925 he worked as a legal advisor at Zuckerkredit AG and was temporarily employed until 1928 as an assistant at the state tax office in Brandenburg. From 1924 he worked as a lawyer and from 1933 as a notary. In this function he advised the NSDAP since 1927. From 1932 to May 1, 1940, Neubert headed the Gaurechtsamt in Gau Berlin . From 1933 Neubert sat on the board of the Berlin Bar Association and was President of the Reich Bar Association until the end of the Nazi regime . He was also a Prussian State Councilor. From 1934 he sat before the court of honor of the Reich Bar Association as President.

In 1933 he was elected city councilor in Berlin . However, his election to the German Reichstag on November 12, 1933 failed because of one of the lowest places on the list. It was not until March 29, 1936 that he entered the National Socialist Reichstag for the Berlin-West constituency.

At the end of January 1939, Neubert was promoted to the judiciary and worked as head of the Reich Main Office. From 1933 Neubert belonged to the National Socialist Academy for German Law Hans Franks and was an honorary member of the National Socialist People's Welfare .

Neubert died with the rank of major in the reserve towards the end of the Second World War .

literature

  • Reinhard Neubert with Hans Pfundtner : The new German imperial law. Supplementary collection of the law in force since the Enabling Act, with explanations. In 19 loose-leaf files, published with the assistance of Franz Albrecht Medicus , Ministerialrat in the Reich Ministry of the Interior. Industrieverlag Spaeth & Linde, Berlin 1933 to 1942.
  • Erich Stockhorst: 5000 people. Who was what in the 3rd Reich . Arndt, Kiel 2000, ISBN 3-88741-116-1 (unchanged reprint of the first edition from 1967).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Yearbook of the Academy for German Law, 1st year 1933/34. Edited by Hans Frank. (Munich, Berlin, Leipzig: Schweitzer Verlag), p. 256
  2. Horst Mühleisen: Patriots in the resistance. Carl-Hans Graf Hardenberg's experience report. In: Institut für Zeitgeschichte München (Ed.): Quarterly issues for contemporary history , 41st year, issue 3/1993 ( PDF ).