Rudolf von Bitter the Younger

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Rudolf von Bitter jun.

Rudolf von Bitter (born January 8, 1846 in Merseburg , † January 4, 1914 in Charlottenburg ) was a German judge, ministerial official and member of parliament in Prussia.

Life

He was the son of Rudolf v. Bitter d. Ä. , the president of the royal Prussian maritime trade , and his wife Anna geb. Nauen (1819-1885). As King of Prussia, Wilhelm I raised his father Rudolf and all his descendants to the Prussian nobility on March 5, 1880 .

Bitter studied law and political science at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin (1862–1866), the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn and the University of Lausanne . From 1865 he was a member of the Corps Palatia Bonn and Marchia Berlin . He was a soldier in the Franco-German War . In 1872 he switched to administrative service after taking his exams. In 1873 he came to the government in Poznan as a government assessor and to the high presidium of the province of Poznan . In 1875 he was appointed district administrator of the Waldenburg district. From 1879 to 1888 he sat in the Prussian House of Representatives . He was a member of the free conservative faction . In 1882, Bitter moved from the District Office in Waldenburg as a walker. Government councilor and lecturing council in the Prussian Ministry of the Interior. From 1888 he was President of the Government of Opole . In 1898 he returned to the Ministry of the Interior as a ministerial director .

In 1899, Bitter became President of the Province of Poznan and Deputy Chairman of the Settlement Commission . In 1902 it became an Act. Council appointed. From 1903 he was also a member of the supervisory board of Henckel von Donnersmarck-Hüttenwerke . In 1905 he became President of the Central Administration for National Debt and in 1907 President of the Higher Administrative Court . In 1909 he was a member of the Immediatkommission for administrative reform. He was also crown syndic . From 1910 he belonged to the Prussian manor house . Bitter was also deputy president of the German Colonial Society . Bitter was also the editor and first editor of the concise dictionary of the Prussian administration.

After his exams on October 5, 1872 in Berlin, Bitter married Marie Hegel (born May 21, 1848 in Berlin; † November 27, 1925 in Hirschberg , Lower Silesia ), the niece of the historian Karl von Hegel (1813-1901) and daughter of the lawyer Immanuel Hegel (1814-1891), Consistorial President of the Province of Brandenburg and son of the philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (see: Family Hegel ), and Friederike von Flottwell.

Fonts

  • The municipal constitution laws for the Rhine Province with the new administrative laws , Verlag Heymann, Berlin 1887; Supplementary volume to the series: The new Prussian administrative laws by M. von Brauchitsch (Ed.)
  • Short dictionary of the Prussian administration , Rossberg'sche Verlags-Buchhandlung, 1st edition, Leipzig 1906

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Brockhaus' Konversations-Lexikon , FA Brockhaus Verlag, Leipzig 1901, page 20
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 14 , 323; 5 , 388
  3. ^ Thomas Gey: The Prussian Administration of the District of Bromberg 1871-1920 , page 19, Verlag Grote, 1976, ISBN 3774563659 or ISBN 9783774563650 ( excerpt )
  4. Bernhard Mann (edit.): Biographical manual for the Prussian House of Representatives. 1867-1918 . Collaboration with Martin Doerry , Cornelia Rauh and Thomas Kühne . Düsseldorf: Droste Verlag, 1988, p. 69 (handbooks on the history of parliamentarism and political parties: vol. 3)