Rudolf Bender

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Rudolf Bender (born March 18, 1860 in Denklingen , † after 1941) was a German architect , Prussian construction officer and local politician .

Life

Rudolf Bender graduated from the Friedrich-Wilhelm- Realgymnasium in Cologne at Easter 1878 . He then studied architecture at the Stuttgart Polytechnic , where he became a member of the Corps Teutonia . For the winter semester of 1879/1880 he moved to the Technical University (Berlin-) Charlottenburg .

After completing his studies and passing the first state examination, he entered the Prussian civil service in 1885 as a government building supervisor ( trainee lawyer in the public building administration) at the ministerial building commission in Berlin. In 1889, after passing the second state examination, he was appointed government builder ( assessor ) and initially worked outside the budget at the ministerial building commission in Berlin, the district governments in Münster and Arnsberg, the Berlin police headquarters and the directorate of III. Army Corps employed in Berlin. In 1898 he got a regular job in the construction department of the Prussian War Ministry. From 1902 to 1915 he was head of the Military Construction Office in Berlin VIII. During the First World War , from 1915 to 1918 he was director of building and construction in the staff of the Commander-in-Chief East, head of all structural engineering in the occupied area of ​​Upper East. After handling official business in the first half of 1919, from 1920 until his retirement in 1930 he was senior government building officer at the Brandenburg state tax office in Berlin.

Local politics

Since 1902 Bender was city ​​councilor of Spandau and from 1920 district councilor of Berlin-Spandau . From 1912 to 1918 he was a member of the Greater Berlin Association . From 1920 to 1933 he was a city councilor for Greater Berlin . From December 15, 1921 to January 1930 and from March 8, 1932 to April 1933, he was a deputy member of the Prussian State Council .

Awards

literature

  • Joachim Lilla : The Prussian State Council 1921–1933. A biographical manual. With a documentation of the State Councilors appointed in the “Third Reich” (= manuals on the history of parliamentarism and political parties. Volume 13). Droste, Düsseldorf 2005, ISBN 3-7700-5271-4 , p. 11.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Address list of the Weinheimer SC. Darmstadt 1928, p. 291.
  2. Zentralblatt der Bauverwaltung , Volume 29, 1909, No. 37 (of May 8, 1909), p. 249.