Rothenburg Association of Black Associations

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The Rothenburg Association of Black Associations (RVSV) was an umbrella organization of non-colored student associations , which represented the principle of unconditional satisfaction and fought stick gauges.

The association was founded in 1919. Its forerunners were the Münden Representative Convent (MVC) at technical universities, founded in 1903, and the Rothenburg First Convent (REC) at universities, founded in 1908, which was called the Black Association until 1911 .

The black principle was understood in the rejection of external badges such as ribbon and cap ( color ). The colors were only used in the coat of arms and in the flag, but beer and wine tips and black batch wicks were also common. There was a certain resemblance to the Miltenberger ring whose member compounds are also the black principle had and scales challenged.

From 1922 the first signs of secession began to appear, when some member associations decided to introduce color-wearing and left the association. This tendency continued until the final dissolution of the RVSV in 1933.

Composition of the RVSV

The following student associations belonged to the RVSV:

  1. Askania Berlin (1923 move to the German Landsmannschaft (DL))
  2. Fridericiana Berlin (1922 resignation, 1923 merger with the Armed Forces Burgundia Berlin in the German Armed Forces (DW))
  3. Normannia Bonn (left in 1930 and merged with the Guestphalia fraternity, today fraternity of the North Germans and Lower Saxony, free of any association)
  4. Rothenburg Danzig (in 1925 part of it spun off as Corps Cheruskia Danzig , 1933 entry into Miltenberger Ring (MR), today Academic Association Palato-Sinapia, free of association)
  5. Gotia Freiburg (1922 change to the representative convent (VC), today the Gotia-Zaringia gymnastics club in the Coburg convent (CC))
  6. Black Forest Freiburg (1934 merger with Albingia Freiburg in the MR, today connection Albingia-Schwarzwald-Zaringia in the MR)
  7. Thuringia Halle (1925 change as corps to the Naumburg Seniors' Convent , 1933 change as gymnastics to the representative convent (VC), postponed in 1976 as Saxo-Thuringia-Marchia-Vandalia et Hasso-Nassovia in Giessen)
  8. Natural Science Association Jena (left in 1926 and joined the Academic Gymnastics Association (ATB) in 1929 )
  9. Cheruskia Karlsruhe (1925 change as Corps to the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention (WSC), today Corps Friso-Cheruskia Karlsruhe)
  10. Fidelitas Karlsruhe (1927 change to DL, today Landsmannschaft Cimbria-Fidelitas in the CC)
  11. Palatia Karlsruhe (1933 change to MR, today Academic Association Palato-Sinapia, free of association)
  12. Sinapia Karlsruhe (1933 change to MR, today Academic Association Palato-Sinapia, free of association)
  13. Albertia Königsberg (joined the ATB in 1933, today ATV Albertia Göttingen)
  14. Fridericiana Leipzig (1924 change to the VC, today gymnastics in the CC in Mannheim)
  15. Nibelungia Marburg (1922 move to DL)
  16. Apollo Munich (1933 change to the Deutsche Burschenschaft (DB), today Franco-Bavaria fraternity, free of association)
  17. Babenbergia Munich (1933 change to DB and merger with Hylesia, today fraternity Franco-Bavaria, free of association)
  18. Hylesia Munich (1933 merger with Babenbergia, today Franco-Bavaria fraternity, free of association)
  19. Polytechnic Club Munich (1933 change to DB, today fraternity Franco-Bavaria, free of association)
  20. Gaudeamus Stuttgart (1933 change to DB, today Academic Association Gaudeamus, free of association)
  21. Germania Stuttgart (1929 change to DL, today Academic Association Germania, free of association)
  22. Lichtenstein Tübingen (joined the DL in 1934, today Lichtenstein Academic Association, free of association)
  23. Adelphia Würzburg (1933 move to DB, today Adelphia fraternity, free of association)

literature

  • Michael Doeberl u. a. (Ed.): Academic Germany . Volume 2. Weller, Berlin 1931.
  • Theodor Jeremias: Extinct corporation associations. III. Result: The Rothenburg Association of Black Striking Associations (RVSV) 1919–1933. In: Einst und Jetzt 12 (1967), pp. 153–157.