SBV Nordalbingia Leipzig
coat of arms | ||
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State : | Baden-Württemberg | |
University locations: | Pforzheim , Karlsruhe , Bretten , Bruchsal | |
Establishment date: | June 29, 1870 | |
Association: | Schwarzburgbund (SB) | |
SB internal abbreviation: | (No) | |
Status: | adjourned | |
Color : |
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Scale length : | not striking | |
Motto : | Firm and loyal! | |
Website: | www.nordalbingia.de |
The Schwarzburg connection Nordalbingia was a non-striking student connection in Leipzig . It is currently postponed .
history
The association was founded on June 29, 1870 primarily by Protestant theologians in Leipzig as the Christian-German student association Nordalbingia , which belonged to the Christian student association Uttenruthia Erlangen and the SBV Tuiskonia Halle . In 1871, Nordalbingia was included in the existing cartel between Uttenruthia and Tuiskonia. In 1885, a four-way alliance was initially formed between Uttenruthia-Erlangen, Tuiskonia-Halle, Nordalbingia-Leipzig and Sedinia-Greifswald, and a little later she founded the Schwarzburg alliance with Uttenruthia Erlangen, Tuiskonia Halle and Sedinia Greifswald at Whitsun 1887 . After the dissolution of the Leipzig Free Student Union in 1911, Nordalbingia was instrumental in founding the “ General Student Committee ”. Up until 1935, Nordalbingia grew considerably and in 1919 provided “obstetrics” to the Rauenstein connection in Dresden .
In 1935 the association was adjourned and dissolved. After the war, the old gentlemen's association was re-established in 1951.
It was not until 2000 that an attempt was made to re-establish the organization and accept female students as members in the Mittelbaden area ( Pforzheim , Karlsruhe , Bretten , Bruchsal ), which was abandoned at the end of 2004. At the moment there is still a Philistine Association that meets in Karlsruhe for a regulars' table.
Nordalbingia was a suburb of the Schwarzburgbund in 1889, 1901 and 1923 .
In 2012, Nordalbingia had 16 members who joined the association between 1987 and 2006. None of these members studied in Leipzig.
Color and motto
The Nordalbingia has the colors blue-gold-black with golden percussion . Her motto is "Firm and faithful".
Known members
- Heinrich Behm (1853–1930), Lutheran theologian and regional bishop of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
- Hans-Joachim Elster (1908–2001), professor of biology, limnologist
- Albert Gümbel (1866–1931), archivist
- Wilhelm Heitmüller (1869–1926), Protestant theologian
- Willy Möbius (1879–1964), physicist
- Christian Reimpell (1858–1926), Lutheran theologian and senior pastor at Lübeck Cathedral
- Wilhelm Reinhard (1860–1922), General Superintendent in Pomerania, President of the People's Day of the Free City of Danzig (1920/21)
- Hermann Schäfer (1892–1966), politician (DDP, FDP, FVP, DP), Vice President of the German Bundestag, Federal Minister for Special Tasks, signatory of the Basic Law
- Friedrich Veit (1861–1948), Protestant theologian
Honorary members
- Adolf von Harnack (1851–1930), Royal Prussian Real Privy Councilor, Protestant theologian and church historian, science organizer in Prussia
- Christoph Ernst Luthardt (1823–1902), theologian and professor of dogmatics and exegesis in Marburg
literature
- 10-year history of the Christian student union “Nordalbingia” in Leipzig. Leipzig 1882.
- Obituary for Wilhelm Reinhard. In: Die Schwarzburg 1/1923, p. 1 f.
- Deaths: Adolf von Harnack. In: the Schwarzburgbund 7/1930, p. 15 f.
- Obituary for Heinrich Behm. In: the Schwarzburgbund 7/1930, p. 329 f.
- 100 years of northern Albingia. In: die schwarzburg No. 2, 1970, pp. 44-47.
- Günter W. Zwanzig, Ernst WM Sievers: History of the Schwarzburgbund. Volume I: From the foundation to 1933 , Schwarzburg 2010, ISBN 978-3-939413-17-2 .
- Michael Doeberl , Alfred Bienengräber (Ed.): The academic Germany. Volume 2: The German universities and their academic citizens . CA Weller, Berlin 1931. p. 933.
Individual evidence
- ^ EH Eberhard: Handbook of the student liaison system. Leipzig, 1924/25, p. 90.
- ↑ Peter Krause : O old lad glory. The students and their customs. 5th edition. Graz, Vienna, Cologne 1997, p. 115.