Walther Buresch

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Walther Buresch (born July 25, 1860 in Hanover , † November 22, 1928 in Meran ) was a German administrative lawyer in the province of Posen .

Life

Buresch was a son of the Royal Hanoverian Railway Director and later Grand Duke. Oldenburg Railway President Ernst Buresch . He attended school in Oldenburg (Oldenburg) , the monastery school in Ilfeld and finally the grammar school Antonianum Vechta , where he passed his school leaving examination in 1882 . From 1882 to 1886 he studied law at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel , the Universität Leipzig and the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Berlin . In 1882 he became a member of the Corps Holsatia . In the meantime he served as a one-year volunteer in the infantry regiment "Duke of Holstein" (Holsteinisches) No. 85 in Kiel, where he was captain of the reserve .

After the trainee exam in Kiel (1886) received his doctorate he in June 1886 at the University of Jena to Dr. iur. Then he was a trainee lawyer in Eckernförde and Kiel . In the three emperor's year he moved from the administration of justice to the internal administration of the Kingdom of Prussia . As a government trainee he came to the government in Gumbinnen . After the Grand State Examination at the Court of Appeal (1891) he was a government assessor in Labiau and Königsberg i. Pr. 1893/94 he was on leave for a trip around the world. After five years in Magdeburg, he became district administrator in the Filehne district (1899) and the Hohensalza district (1902). In July 1904 he acquired a manor near Ostrowo and sat in the provincial parliament (Prussia) . During the First World War , after the civil administration was established, he became the Imperial Civil Commissar at the Upper East for several counties in the occupied Russian-Polish area, and later the district chief for the Nieszawa and Włocławek counties . In 1917 he became a go. Councilor appointed. In June 1917 he was again district administrator in Hohensalza. After the territory was ceded, the Poles removed him from office. Having lost his good fortune and made available under civil service law , he moved to Merano in 1921 , where he died at the age of 68.

Honors

References and comments

  1. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 81 , 437
  2. During the First World War, German district chiefs (that is the official name) administered the occupied Polish districts, usually several together. They were part of the General Government of Warsaw . Nieszawa and Włocławek were part of the Wartheland from 1939 to 1945 , namely as the district of Nessau (later the district of Hermannsbad ) and the district of Leslau (Rolf Jehke).

literature

  • Kurt Rendtorff, Friedrich Prüser, Thomas Otto Achelis : The members of the Holsatia . 3rd part: 1848–1895, o.