Richard Bremer

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Richard Gerhard Bremer (born January 8, 1900 in Oldenburg , † October 1, 1971 in Baden-Baden ) was a German agricultural journalist .

Life

Richard Bremer was born in Oldenburg in 1900. After his school days he took part in the last months of the war in the First World War as a soldier in the Oldenburg House Regiment before he went to Göttingen at the end of 1918 to study German , history and newspaper studies. There he became active in the Holzminda fraternity . After doing his doctorate in Erlangen with Robert Gradmann , he worked for several years as advertising manager at the Edeka Association before moving to the Dresdner Nachrichten as chief editor . After the end of the Second World War , he went to Uelzen with his wife and five children , where he soon became editor-in- chief of the Allgemeine Zeitung . In this newspaper he wrote under the pseudonym Heini Osimal .

From there he was appointed head of the press office of the German Farmers' Association, where he stayed until his retirement in 1966. For years he was a leading figure among agricultural journalists. After leaving the German Farmers' Association, he published as a permanent employee in agricultural science journals.

The Italian government has honored his brilliant travel reports and films about Apulia and Calabria by awarding him a high order.

He died in 1971 during an agricultural conference in Baden-Baden.

Publications (selection)

  • The rural settlement types of the Duchy of Oldenburg. Dissertation University of Erlangen 1923. Dresden 1933.
  • Knight's Cross bearer Captain Hans-Joachim Künzel. Dresden 1945.
  • Knight's Cross bearer Oberleutnant Max Johne. Dresden 1945.
  • Why referendums in Oldenburg? Oldenburg 1949.
  • Brands Helgen. The history of a shipyard recorded on its centenary. Uelzen 1950.
  • Dictionary of Agricultural Policy. Hamburg, Berlin 1959. (as editor)

literature

  • Karl-August Franke (Ed.): Alte-Herren-Zeitung of the fraternity Holzminda Göttingen. Born 1971, Letter, pp. 59–60.

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.raetzlingen.de/html/der_dichter.html
  2. Gert hail pasture: literature on the German-language press. Volume 16, Munich 2007, p. 176.