VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Mainz

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VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania

coat of arms Circle
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Basic data
University location: Mainz
University / s: Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
Founding: June 26, 1946
Corporation association : Cartell Association , since 1950
Association number: 94
Abbreviation: H-RM!
Color status : colored
Colours:
Fox colors:
Type of Confederation: Men's association
Religion / Denomination: Catholic
Position to the scale : not striking
Motto: neminem time - neminem laede!
Website: www.h-rm.de

The VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Mainz in the CV is a Catholic, color-bearing , non-striking student union in Mainz . It was founded in 1946 and has been a member of the Cartell Association of German Catholic Student Associations (CV) since then .

history

Prehistory in Giessen

At the State University in Giessen , already on December 10th, 1882, six Giessen students, mostly from Rheinhessen, decided to found a "Free Hasso-Rhenania Association". Six days later, Hasso-Rhenania celebrated a fraternization party with the neighboring CV connection VKDSt Rhenania Marburg .

Coat of arms of Hasso-Rhenania Giessen

The official founding of Hasso-Rhenania Gießen finally took place on January 18 of the following year after the necessary documents had been submitted to the rector of the university. On February 1, 1883, Jean Ledroit, who came from Mainz, was the first Fux to be received. On June 16, 1883, it was included in the CV as in 1888 Philistines living in Mainz had founded the 'Hasso-Rhenanen-Philistine Club', which was renamed in the winter semester of 1927/28 to the "Mainz Circle Gießener Hasso-Rhenanen" .

In order to avoid the forced dissolution, she dissolved her Aktivitas on May 30, 1936 and sold her fraternity house. On the same day, the former Philistine Sanitary Councilor Georg Schollmayer set up a traditional room as the “Museum Hasso-Rhenaniae” in Mainz. Because of the Himmler decree of June 20, 1938 , which brought about the final ban on Catholic corporations, the Philistine also ended its existence. Four days later, the Gestapo confiscated the bondage.

Founding history

When the re-establishment of the Mainz University became apparent in 1946, Schollmayer obtained the consent of the remaining 50 old gentlemen of Hasso-Rhenania in order to re-establish the dissolved connection in Mainz. Thus, on June 26, 1946, a “Hasso-Rhenanen group” was illegally founded with the intention of continuing the tradition of the Giessen Hasso-Rhenania in Mainz. This date is therefore considered the official founding date of Mainz Hasso-Rhenania. However, no batches have yet been elected , just so-called 'chairmen'. On February 5, 1947, the members of the Hasso Rhenanen group founded the 'St. Martinus Bund 'as part of the Catholic student community. However, this was reported as a disguised illegal corporation to the French military government in the same year and for this reason it was dissolved again. Nonetheless, the Hasso-Rhenanen group continued to enjoy a large number of visitors, so that it was possible, under the leadership of Paul Nagel, to found the "CV group Rheno-Palatia", which in 1948 the tradition of the CV connection KDStV Rheno-Palatia Breslau took over. In the summer semester of 1948, Georg Schollmayer, with the approval of the rectorate of the university, under the direction of Prelate August Reatz, applied to the French military government in writing, formulated in four copies in German and French, for the admission of Catholic corporations to the University of Mainz . No oral concerns were raised at this point. For the first time, batches were chosen: Wilfried Müller, who later became president of the Social Court, became the first senior . Georg Schollmayer, in his capacity as Philistine Senior of the VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Mainz and the VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Gießen, carried out the first nineteen boys, since the reconstituted VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Gießen was not allowed to have any active liaison members outside of Gießen. On the first post-war Catholic day in the same year, the Allies issue a general permit for Catholic corporations. The Bishop of Mainz, Albert Stohr , took over the protectorate of the first corporation admitted to the University of Mainz and received the Hasso-Rhenaniae ribbon.

Double existence of the Hasso-Rhenaniae

Without knowing about this Mainz Hasso-Rhenania - contact was very difficult due to the different occupation zones - the Hasso-Rhenania was also re-established in Giessen on January 28, 1948. On June 27, 1948, both activities agreed on a relationship as sister associations with the same color and coat of arms as well as the same rights and duties. Since both connections received strong growth, the two activities agreed on April 7, 1950 in Bingen am Rhein to separate into two independent connections, with the current names "VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Gießen" and "VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Mainz".

Finally, at the foundation convention on June 24, 1950, it was decided to turn the Mainz tape and add an "M" to the Mainz circle. Shortly afterwards, the 64th Cartel Assembly took place in Mainz, which decided to re-establish the CV and to accept Hasso-Rhenania Mainz as a full member. This took place after she had committed to become an independent corporation with its own activitas and philistine, independent of Gießen. However, the date of inclusion is dated back to June 26, 1946 by resolution. Since then, the two connections Hasso-Rhenania Gießen and Hasso-Rhenania Mainz have been in a sister relationship; their members have voting rights at the convents of the respective sister connection. The Hasso-Rhenania from Mainz is to be understood as a subsidiary, as its connection operation is completely independent of the Hasso-Rhenania from Gießen. As an expression of this solidarity, the two senior citizens have been wearing the boys' band of their sister connections since February 1968 as a seniority band .

Establishment of the subsidiary and support for a re-establishment

In May 1949, the Hasso-Rhenaniae boys' convention sent six boys and one fox to found the subsidiary Rhenania Mainz, which later became KDSt.V. following complaints from the VKDSt Rhenania Marburg . Rhenania-Moguntia renamed to Mainz. At the same time, Hasso-Rhenania supported the re-establishment of the KD St. V. Burgundia Munich in Mainz by providing seven founding boys. In the winter semester of 1957/58, the KD St. V. Burgundia (Munich) Mainz returned to Munich .

Principles and motto

  • Religio - commitment to the Catholic faith
  • Scientia - striving for success in individual studies and interdisciplinary education
  • Amicitia - promoting lifelong friendship

A special feature is that the VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Mainz, unlike other CV connections, does not use the “Patria” principle. This principle was dispensed with when the company was founded, as it was feared, especially after the recent National Socialism, that the French occupying power might misunderstand this principle and take it as a reason to speak out against a foundation. With the principle of “Patria”, the CV-connections and their members are committed to a special voluntary commitment in the sense of a constitutional patriotism according to the free democratic basic order. Since its foundation, Hasso-Rhenania Mainz has set itself the goal of instructing its members to develop humanistic character and Christian values ​​and to accompany them for a lifetime. Accordingly, it expects its members to be committed to family, work and science for the benefit of society and to promote peaceful social coexistence.

The motto of the association is therefore “neminem time - neminem laede!” (“Don't fear anyone - don't harm anyone!”).

Color and coat of arms

The lad colors of the compound are red-white-yellow. The fox colors are red-yellow. The colors red-white-yellow stand for Mainz or Rheinhessen (red-white) and for Catholicism (yellow-white). Another - more modern - interpretation assigns one of the three principles to the respective colors. Red stands for “Amicitia”, white for “Scientia” and yellow for “Religio”. Each band has a silver percussion. The head color is a red cap worn as the occipital color.

The coat of arms of the VKDSt Hasso-Rhenania Mainz contains the red cross on a yellow background in the upper left field, below the brown book of science on a white background, above right the white Rhine in green floodplains, below a grapevine and the Mainz double wheel on a red background. In the middle is the circle on a red-white-yellow shield.

public perception

In addition to participating with charged persons in Kommersen, church services and especially the traditional Corpus Christi procession in Mainz, Hasso-Rhenania also gives public lectures by renowned personalities such as the former auxiliary bishop and current bishop of the diocese of Erfurt Ulrich Neymeyr or Philipp Freiherr von Boeselager . A critical reader of the AStAs and the Antifa-AG of the University of Mainz on Mainz student associations and the student magazine STUZ dealt with Hasso-Rhenania.

Known members

See also

literature

  • Hasso-Rhenania Mainz , in: Siegfried Schieweck-Mauk: Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections , pp. 388–392.
  • Thomas Bach (Ed.): 50 years since the re-establishment in 1948, 115 years since the establishment in 1883. Association of Catholic German students Hasso-Rhenania Gießen in the CV. Giessen 1998.
  • Wilhelm Jung: Festschrift CV-Philistine Circle Moguntia: 1885–1960 , Mainz 1960.
  • Kerstin Netz: Aurea Moguntia. The corporations of the CV in Mainz (Mainzer kleine Schriften zur Volkskunde, Volume 13), Mainz 2011.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Cf. Art. Hasso-Rhenania Gießen, in: Siegfried Schieweck-Mauk: Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections, Würzburg 1997, pp. 380–388, here p. 380.
  2. a b Paul Gerhardt Gladen : Gaudeamus igitur: The student societies past and present. Callwey, Munich 1986, ISBN 3-7667-0811-2 , p. 212.
  3. Cf. Art. Hasso-Rhenania Gießen, in: Siegfried Schieweck-Mauk: Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections, Würzburg 1997, pp. 380–388, here p. 381.
  4. See ibid. P. 385
  5. On the history of the Mainz CV circle during the years of National Socialist rule, cf. Kestin network, Aurea Moguntia. The corporations of the CV in Mainz (Mainzer kleine Schriften zur Volkskunde, Volume 13), Mainz 2011, pp. 57–59 and Wilhelm Jung, Festschrift CV-Philistine Circle Moguntia: 1885–1960, Mainz 1960, pp. 27f.
  6. See ibid. P. 75
  7. Cf. Art. Hasso-Rhenania Mainz, in: Siegfried Schieweck-Mauk: Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections, Würzburg 1997, pp. 388–392, here p. 389 and Wilhelm Jung, Festschrift CV-Philistine Circle Moguntia: 1885 -1960, Mainz 1960, pp. 27-33.
  8. Cf. Kerstin Netz / Nikolaus Poppitz, new and re-establishment after the war, in: Festschrift for the 100th foundation festival of the CV connection Rheno-Palatia Breslau to Mainz (1900–2000), ed. from the CV connection Rheno-Palatia Breslau to Mainz, Mainz 2000, pp. 72–79, here pp. 73–75, and Netz, Aurea Moguntia, pp. 59–65.
  9. See Helmut Mathy, Reality surpasses the vision. Conversation with Karl Holzamer about the early days of Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz 1996, p. 47; see. Gerhard Mayer, Moguntia is the banner. A historiographical study of the student associations of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Wiesbaden 1994, p. 14; see. Kerstin Netz, Aurea Moguntia, p. 67.
  10. See Art. Hasso-Rhenania Mainz, p. 389, in: Siegfried Schieweck-Mauk, Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections, Würzburg 1997, pp. 388–392.
  11. Ten years of Hasso-Rhenania - Festschrift for the 10th Hasso-Rhenania Foundation Festival Mainz, Mainz 1956, p. 17
  12. See Kerstin Netz, Aurea Moguntia, p. 67.
  13. Ibid., P. 79.
  14. ^ Heinrich Rhein (Ed.): 100 years Hasso-Rhenania Giessen in CV Mainz 1983, p. 93 .
  15. Cf. Art. Hasso-Rhenania Mainz, in: Siegfried Schieweck-Mauk, Lexicon of CV and ÖCV connections, Würzburg 1997, pp. 388–392, here p. 391.
  16. See ibid., P. 390
  17. rule times again. A reader on student connections in Mainz ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  18. Siriana Mouangué, Susan Noll: Vitamin V ( Memento of the original from September 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , STUZ February 2008, p. 12 ff., Accessed on July 31, 2015 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.stuz.de

Coordinates: 50 ° 0 ′ 30.2 "  N , 8 ° 14 ′ 45.9"  E