Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention
Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention | |
---|---|
founding | April 7, 1863 in Frankfurt am Main |
Members |
60 Weinheimer Corps at 24 university locations (2020) |
Principles |
Subsidiarity color scale |
Motto | Jemer was ready! |
Old Masters Association | Weinheim Association of Old Corps Students (WVAC) |
Antitrust agreement | with the Kösener Seniors Convents Association ( KSCV ) |
Association body | CORPS - Das Magazin (four issues per year) |
Office | Office of the WVAC Taubenbergweg 9 69469 Weinheim |
Homepage | www.die-corps.de |
The Weinheim Seniors Convent (WSC) is the umbrella organization for corps at technical colleges and universities. The WSC currently has 60 corps at 24 German university locations. The corps in the WSC wear color and stand by the scale. The WSC and its member corps advocate the principle of tolerance. Membership is not tied to a specific nationality, skin color or denomination. Only males are accepted. Around 1,600 students and around 8,000 working academics call themselves Weinheimer Corps students.
structure
The WSC is an association of individual corps as direct members of the umbrella organization. These are grouped together in local senior citizens' conventions at the university town level , which must consist of at least two corps. At university locations with only one corps, this has to join the SC of a neighboring university location. Corps of geographically close, neighboring university locations such as Freiberg and Dresden can also form a joint SC. The following senior citizens' conventions exist in the WSC:
- SC zu Karlsruhe with Franconia , Saxonia , Alemannia and Friso-Cheruskia
- SC zu Hannover with Saxonia , Slesvico-Holsatia , Hannovera , Hannoverania , Normannia , Baltica-Borussia Danzig zu Bielefeld , Agronomia Hallensis zu Göttingen , Frisia zu Göttingen, Alemannia-Thuringia zu Magdeburg , Alemannia zu Kiel , Irminsul zu Hamburg, Rhenania zu Hamburg and Cheruscia at Lüneburg
- SC zu Stuttgart with Teutonia , Rhenania , Stauffia , Bavaria and Germania zu Hohenheim
- SC zu Braunschweig with Rhenania ZAB , Teutonia-Hercynia , Marchia , Frisia and Corps Berlin zu Berlin
- SC to Darmstadt with Hassia , Rhenania , Franconia , Obotritia , Chattia , Hermunduria Leipzig to Mannheim and Heidelberg , Rheno-Nicaria to Mannheim and Heidelberg, Thuringia to Heidelberg, Franconia Berlin to Kaiserslautern
- SC zu Aachen with Marko-Guestphalia , Delta , Montania , Saxo-Montania , Palaeo-Teutonia , Saxonia-Berlin and Franconia Fribergensis
- SC zu Clausthal with Hercynia , Montania and Borussia
- SC zu Munich with Cisaria , Vitruvia , Germania , Normannia-Vandalia , Suevo-Guestphalia , Saxo-Thuringia , Alemannia , Pomerania-Silesia zu Bayreuth (the Weinheimer Corps are together with the Kösener Corps in the Münchner SC)
- SC zu Cologne with Silingia Breslau and Franco-Guestphalia
- Saxon SC with Saxo-Borussia zu Freiberg , Teutonia to Dresden , Old Saxony to Dresden and Marchia to Greifswald
With these structures, the WSC differs from the Kösener Seniors Convents Association (KSCV), which is an association of local SC. In the KSCV, individual corps can also form an SC at a university location. Because of these different structures, the local SCs have a less important role in the WSC than in the KSCV.
management
The WSC is led by the annually changing suburb. The WSC's SCs take turns performing this task in a fixed order. An on-site corps is then elected within the SC, which takes over the management of the WSC and provides at least the first on-site spokesperson. This is supported by the 2nd and 3rd on-site speakers and the strip conductor as well as by the committees of the WSC and the old men’s association WVAC (see below).
The main tasks of the suburb are the representation of the WSC externally and the management of the association internally. The on-site speakers are required to visit as many SCs as possible during their year in office and to hold the association conference. The organization of fencing seminars, the collection of statistics about the association as well as the bundling of the university policy interests of the SC and the Corps of the WSC are among the tasks of the suburb.
The statutes of the association and the corps belonging to it exclude a general political mandate , so that neither the association, nor the senior citizens ' convention , nor the individual corps comment on political questions in the non-university area. Like the KSCV, the WSC only conducts very cautious public relations work. This is essentially limited to self-presentation for the purpose of recruiting young talent.
history
In the history of many Weinheim Corps, mergers, relocations and renaming play a major role.
From the foundation to the First World War
The association was founded in Frankfurt am Main on April 7, 1863 by ten corps at the TH Karlsruhe ( Franconia , Bavaria , Saxonia , Alemannia ), the TH Hannover ( Saxonia , Teutonia ), TH Stuttgart ( Teutonia , Rhenania ) and the ETH Zurich ( Rhenania ZAB , Helvetia ) as a “General Seniors Convent” (ASC). The name Weinheimer ASC or Weinheimer SC first appeared in 1867. It has been used exclusively since 1875. Weinheim has been the association's meeting place since 1864 . Since then, the annual meeting of the WSC and its sub-organizations has been held here every year on the Ascension weekend. Dissatisfaction with the organization and the desire for an association of the corps alone at the technical universities led to a temporary dissolution of the WSC in 1883. In the following year 1884, however, the association was renewed by the corps at the universities of Stuttgart, Hanover and Braunschweig. The Senior Citizens' Convention in Freiberg and the SC in Clausthal were only resumed in 1902 and 1905. With the accession of the Polytechnic SC at the Technical University of Munich (1912), the SC zu Breslau (WSC) (1920) and the Danzig Senior Citizens' Convention , the collection of the corps at the technical universities in what was then Reich territory was completed. The WSC had become the lobbyist for all corps at these universities and the mining academies.
Weimar Republic
In order to be able to act on a broader basis on the question of the impunity of the scale, the WSC joined the Allgemeine Deutscher Waffenring (ADW) in 1920 . This should bundle the interests of the established connections in a suitable manner. Under the national and greater German impression of the First World War , the General German SC Association was created in 1921 , a special purpose association of the KSCV and WSC. The management switched between Berlin and Munich. A central theme was the efforts of the Rudolstadt Seniors' Convention to expand from veterinary to technical universities. Since the Rudolstadt Treaty of 7./8. October 1922 did not change anything, it was resolved again.
Nazi era
In April 1933, the WSC submitted in a Potsdam confession to the leader of the German liberation struggle and expressed its determination to join “in lockstep with the German nation”. At the 1933 Weinheim conference, the WSC's active and senior gentlemen's association called for a connection with the KSCV. The idea generator was supposedly the spinning room , the old-man-senior-convent Hanover. Under pressure from the DC circuit , the Corps were all associations in the struggle against the National Socialist German Students' League . At the same time, the RSC tried - for decades in the struggle for "academic" recognition - to expand with all its might. Such intentions were alien to the WSC. As agreed in the 1921 agreement, he wanted to limit himself to technical colleges and mining academies .
“While the KSCV kept its identity, the WSC became the catch basin for the Rudolstädter SC and individual corps of the Naumburger SC. Since the general assembly of the WSC had already largely got rid of its rights in 1933, the association was a matter for the association leaders. "
Decided by these (National Socialist) association leaders on March 25, 1934, the association was an "amalgamation of the climbers", namely the corps at the (non-university) technical , veterinary and agricultural colleges and universities of applied sciences . Their spearhead was Hans Heinrich Lammers , a member of the Miltenberger Ring . The incorporation of the 27 Rudolstadt Corps brought the WSC and its senior convents major problems (some of which were not solved until the 1950s). The appearance of Rudolstadt's individual corps at universities also brought conflicts with the KSCV.
It passed
- pure Weinheimer SC in Karlsruhe, Stuttgart, Braunschweig, Freiberg, Aachen, Danzig and Clausthal
- SC with WSC and RSC corps in Dresden, Berlin, Munich and Breslau
- Weinheimer SC with assigned corps in Hanover, Darmstadt and Berlin
- Rudolstädter SC in Bonn, Halle and Leipzig (each with three corps).
“Now there was a Kösener-Weinheim togetherness not only in Berlin and Munich, but also in Bonn, Cologne (where the Guestphalia belonging to the Bonner SC was located), Halle, Leipzig, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Marburg and Breslau. Although the Central and East German university locations Halle, Leipzig and Breslau ceased to be corps locations after the end of the war, the WSC acquired corps at the Kösener seats in Kiel, Heidelberg and Göttingen as the legacy of the dissolution of 1934/35. The situation was chaotic until 1953 because individual SCs exercised SC rights during the re-establishment and could thus have corps renounced. "
Finally, the temporary end for the WSC came in the winter semester 1935/36: at an extraordinary meeting of the WSC on October 20, 1935, the resolution of the WSC was resolved. Many corps continued to exist as comradeships in the NSDStB, but from the point of view of the time it was no longer possible to live with students in the future. Because of a formal error in the compulsory dissolution, the WSC was bought again from 1936 to 1938; However, since most of the corps had already been dissolved or were in the process of being dissolved, the work during this "gallows period" was very limited. In 1940 the liquidation of the WVAC was completed.
From World War II to today
In the post-war period in Germany , the WVAC declared its compulsory dissolution from 1938 null and void. As a result, the WSC was revived in 1949 as the umbrella organization of the German corps, especially at technical universities. The first association meeting of the old men’s association WVAC after the Second World War took place from May 18 to 21, 1950. After an initially sought union with the KSCV had failed, the WSC was reconstituted in Weinheim on May 23, 1952. Only at the local level was it possible in one case to promote the unification of the two associations on a permanent basis. In Munich, the Munich Senior Citizens' Convention was formed with 11 corps from the KSCV, 7 corps from the WSC and one corps not belonging to any association. A WSC corps from Munich ( Rheno-Palatia ) had converted from the WSC to the KSCV in anticipation of an imminent Germany-wide unification. Rheno-Palatia is therefore the only Kösener corps whose coat of arms is attached to the gate of the guard castle. The WSC has been linked to the Kösener Seniors Convents Association of Corps at the universities by a cartel agreement since 1955 . As early as 1921 there was a special purpose association with the KSCV. Under the name of the Allgemeine Deutscher SC-Verband, there was cooperation in questions of university policy and in questions of student attitudes towards the corps. In general, there were discussions in many corps after the Second World War about maintaining or abolishing the fencing of lengths. Some saw it as an educational and selection tool worth preserving, others saw it as an outdated relic of a bygone era. Discussions deepened in many corps in the 1960s and resulted in numerous associations, including corps, abolishing fencing. This led to the departure of the Corps Bavaria Karlsruhe , one of the founding corps of the WSC, in 1965 . Despite some disputes - also within the corps themselves - the vast majority of the corps stuck to the scale principle. After the so-called reunification , WSC corps were re-established at four university locations (Dresden, Freiberg, Magdeburg and Greifswald) in the new federal states. The Corps Saxo-Borussia Freiberg was the first WSC corps to be restituted in the new federal states after reunification . In October 2017, together with the bodies of the Kösener Seniors Convents Association, an application was made for inclusion in the nationwide directory of intangible cultural heritage .
Internal association policy
District politics like the Kösener Corps is rather unusual in the WSC.
Friendship cartels
- The Blue Cartel , the largest cartel in the WSC, consisting of the Corps Saxo-Thuringia Munich, the Corps Hannoverania Hanover, the Corps Altsachsen Dresden and the Corps Berlin . The cartel emerged from previous RSC corps on April 24, 1874.
- The five-man federation , consisting of the original engineering federations the Corps Franconia Karlsruhe , Rhenania ZAB in Braunschweig, Stauffia Stuttgart , Slesvico-Holsatia Hanover and Saxonia-Berlin in Aachen. It was founded on June 2, 1897.
- The four -league , consisting of the original engineering associations, the Corps Palaeo-Teutonia Aachen , Montania Clausthal , Teutonia Dresden and Teutonia Stuttgart.
- The Saxen cartel is an iron cartel . It consists of the original engineering federations, the Corps Saxonia Hanover and Saxonia Karlsruhe, as well as the suspended Corps Saxonia Danzig . It was founded on February 11, 1857.
- The Green Cartel , consisting of the former RSC-Corps Franconia Berlin zu Kaiserslautern, Normannia Hanover and the Suevo-Guestphalia Munich , has existed since 1878. The Corps in the Green Cartel consider themselves "one corps at three university locations".
- The White Cartel , consisting of the former RSC Corps Irminsul , Marchia Greifswald (since 1993) and Franco-Guestphalia.
Five-member
The Fünferbund is the largest association of corps within the WSC and therefore has a special position within the umbrella organization. At the meetings held on the occasion of the WSC conference after the Wachenburg was built between 1913 and 1930, the five-member union had its place on the central panel of the ballroom. The Fünferbund stipulated, among other things, which corps members of the Fünferbundcorps had to associate with when they changed university. The last revised list in 1929 established the following corps: Dresden - Teutonia, Freiberg - Saxo-Borussia, Aachen - Montania, Danzig - Borussia, Clausthal - Borussia, Breslau - Montania, Darmstadt - Rhenania and until 1954 Munich - Rheno-Palatia. After 1980 the traffic lists were no longer drawn up. In the castle tavern of the Wachenburg, since its inauguration in 1909, the five-member corner has been located to the right of the entrance, which serves as a meeting point for members of the Union and is decorated with their color. The five-man union includes Corps Franconia Karlsruhe, Rhenania ZAB in Braunschweig, Stauffia Stuttgart, Slesvico-Holsatia Hanover and Saxonia-Berlin in Aachen.
On March 12, 1863, 26 days before the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention was founded, Franconia Karlsruhe and Rhenania Zurich, now based in Braunschweig, entered into a cartel that has lasted uninterrupted to the present day. By concluding a friendship agreement between Franconia and Rhenania, which had meanwhile been relocated to Aachen, on the one hand, and Stauffia Stuttgart and Slesvico-Holsatia on the other, the Fourth Alliance was founded on July 4, 1874. In the friendship agreement, it was agreed to proceed jointly in questions of the WSC, to support each other in emergencies by handing over corps boys, corps lists (lists of corps members), CC reports (reports about personnel changes in the corps such as admissions, dismissals, appointments) and important ones Communicate resolutions to the local senior citizens' convention. In the summer semester of 1892, the Alliance of Four concluded an interview with Saxonia-Berlin after the corps of the Berlin Seniors' Convent - the corps of the Technical University of Charlottenburg - had become full members of the WSC on January 1, 1892. On June 2, 1897 the League of Four was dissolved and on the same day the League of Five, consisting of the corps of the dissolved Four League and Saxonia-Berlin, was re-established. Following the admission of members of the Free Corps Saxonia by the Corps Saxonia-Berlin on May 10, 1930, which some corps viewed as a violation of the principle of not expanding the five-member union, the five-member union initially ceased to exist, while the cartel between Rhenania and Franconia continued. In 1964, an employment contract was signed by all five corps of the former five-man union and in 1980 the five-man union was re-established by signing a new friendship agreement.
Weinheim conference at the Wachenburg
Wachenburg
From 1907 to 1928 the WSC built its own conference and meeting place in Weinheim according to plans by the architect Arthur Wienkoop Saxoniae Karlsruhe . The Wachenburg , a modern hilltop castle above Weinheim, should also be a structural symbol of equality with the KSCV. The inauguration of the Wachenburg took place at the 50th foundation festival of the association in 1913. The memorial, an essential part of the castle, was inaugurated in 1928 and expanded in 1963. It commemorates the thousands of Weinheim corps students who lost their lives in the field in the wars of 1866 and 1870/71 as well as the two world wars. The castle and the associated site have been owned by the old gentlemen's association WVAC since 1964.
Weinheim conference
The highest body of the WSC is the Ordinary Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention (oWSC), which traditionally takes place on the Friday after Ascension Day and on which every corps has a seat and vote. The motions submitted to this convent will be prepared for the last time on the occasion of the council of elders taking place the day before and discussed with the applicants prior to discussion and coordination. The Association of Old Men (WVAC) also meets for its general assembly on Friday.
On Saturday morning, the Weinheim Corps students commemorate the dead members of the association at the Wachenburg memorial with a ceremonial memorial service. In the subsequent ceremony in the ballroom of the Wachenburg, corps students from the two umbrella organizations KSCV and WSC, who knew how to combine outstanding academic achievements with great dedication to their respective federation, were awarded the Klinggräff Medal of the Stifterverein Alter Corpsstudenten eV.
Affiliated Organizations
Weinheim Association of Old Corps Students
The old men of the Weinheim Corps are organized in the Weinheimer Verband Alter Corpsstudenten eV (WVAC) . At the beginning the WSC was a pure association of active corps, for the first time from 1877 old men were invited to the association meetings in Weinheim. The WVAC was only founded on March 26, 1903, on a decisive initiative by Aute Bode , at that time under the name Weinheimer Altherren-Verband (WAHV); the name was changed in 1928. The WVAC is led by a board that is re-elected every two years. In contrast to the suburb of the WSC, there is no fixed order of the local WVAC, rather there is a free composition of a board team, which is up for election at the WVAC general meeting.
Chairperson
- Aute Bode Saxoniae Hanover, 1903–1914
- Emil Hartmann Alemanniae Hannover (now Alemannia-Thuringia), 1914–1918
- Paul Anschütz Franconiae Freiberg (now Franconia Fribergensis), 1920–1923
- Jean Liebrich Vitruviae, 1923–1930
- Fritz Koll Ostfaliae, 1931–1935
- Rudolf Schünemann Teutoniae Stuttgart, October 20, 1935
- Carl Blumenthal Alemanniae Hannover et Thuringiae, 1935–1939
- Kurt Weizsaecker Alemanniae Karlsruhe, 1949–1951
- Ernst-Ludwig Simon Hassiae, 1951–1952
- Kurt Weizsäcker Alemanniae Karlsruhe, 1952–1954
- Harald Wittmann Franconiae Karlsruhe, 1954–1956
- Fritz Wintgen Marko-Guestphaliae et Borussiae Danzig (now Baltica-Borussia), 1956–1957
- Ernst Willms Saxoniae Hanover, 1957–1960
- Eduard Gautsch Teutonia-Hercyniae, 1960
- Walter Vogel Germaniae Munich, 1960–1962
- Ernst Lutz Guestphaliae Munich (now Suevo-Guestphalia), 1962–1964
- Hermann Protzen Saxo-Montaniae, 1964–1968
- Theodor Hammerich Pomerania-Silesiae, 1968–1972
- Gustav Glunz Hannoverae, 1972–1980
- Kurt-Heinz Geitner Frisiae, 1980–1982
- Karl-Heinz Herberger Rheno-Nicariae, 1982–1984
- Günter Schaaff Slesvico-Holsatiae, 1984–1985
- Manfred Mach Rheno-Guestphaliae (now Corps Berlin), 1985–1987
- Hans-Joachim Rudolph Pomerania-Silesiae, 1987–1989
- Jürgen Michels Alemanniae Munich, 1989–1991
- Johann Peter Blank Saxoniae Karlsruhe et Saxoniae Hanover, 1991–1993
- Karl-Heinrich Harre Borussiae et Baltica-Borussiae, 1993–1995
- Rudolf Wohlleben Alemanniae Karlsruhe, 1995–1997
- Dieter Schmoeckel Teutoniae Berlin (now Corps Berlin) et Rhenaniae Stuttgart, 1997–2000
- Burkhard Meister Hannoverae, 2001-2002
- Wulf Thommel Vitruviae, 2003-2004
- Burkhard Meister Hannoverae, 2005-2006
- Frieder Löhrer Saxo-Montaniae et Saxo-Borussiae, 2007–2009
- Klaus DeParade Teutonia-Hercyniae et Alemannia-Thuringiae, 2010-2011
- Marcel Hattendorf Rheno-Nicariae, 2012–2013
- Christian Possienke Saxoniae Hanover, 2014–2015
- Alexander Junge Pomerania-Silesiae et Alemannia-Thuringiae, 2016–2017
- Thomas Heglmeier Alemanniae Munich, 2018–2021
Honors
The WVAC awards the Wachenburg medal and the honor plate for special commitment to the association.
Archive and association journals of the WSC
The WSC association archive, founded in 1930, is located in the Institute for Higher Education at the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg .
From 1895 to 1921 the WSC published the Corpsstudentischen monthly papers as an association magazine. In 1922 they were renamed WSC Messages . From 1932 to 1935 the old title was reverted to before the dissolution of the WSC also meant the end of the association magazine.
In 1953 Die Wachenburg was created , which after merging with the Deutsche Corpszeitung (DCZ), the magazine of the KSCV, was published initially under the title Der Corpsstudent and since 2000 under the name CORPS - the magazine . It is published quarterly in Bad Kösen (ISSN 1615-8180).
Once and Now , the yearbook of the Society for Corps Student History Research , appears annually and is available in bookshops.
Foundation Association of Old Corps Students
The Stifterverein Alter Corpsstudenten is a registered and non-profit association based in Würzburg. The senior gentlemen's association of the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention joined the association in 1991. It supports young corps students who have achieved exceptional study results and have demonstrated above-average social commitment. The Donors' Association for Old Corps students has been awarding the Klinggräff Medal since 1987 . The medal was awarded in Würzburg until 1993, and since 1994 it has been awarded alternately at the meetings of the Kösener Senioren-Convents-Verband (in Bad Kösen on the Rudelsburg ) and the Weinheimer Senioren-Convent (in Weinheim on the Wachenburg ). Since the founding of the Stifterverein, 130 award winners have been awarded the medal (as of the end of 2012).
The medal and a current endowment of € 4,000 are awarded to young corps students who make their way through
- exemplary corps activity,
- outstanding academic performance and
- committed service to the common good
excelled.
Association for corps student historical research
The Association for Corporate Student History Research is an academic history association dedicated to university and student history. The focus is on the history of student associations in Central Europe. With almost 1,300 members (June 2017) it is one of the largest associations of its kind. With two members of the Corps Cisaria , the WSC is represented in the management of the Association for Corps Student History Research.
Relationships with other associations
The WSC is a co-founder of the Andernach working group of the mensurist associations (AGA), which was established in 1951 . Since 1955, he has also been linked by a cartel agreement with the Kösener Seniors Convents Association (KSCV), to which the corps at the traditional universities belong. This contract enables corps students from both associations to become members of corps of both associations. From the 1950s the WSC was involved in university politics and in the Convent of German Corporations Associations (CDK). After a scandal at the ceremony of the corporations in 1998 in the Paulskirche in Frankfurt , the WSC left the CDK in 1999. In the opinion of the two corps associations KSCV and WSC, the German fraternity had too great a negative influence on the event. The corps therefore decided to no longer cooperate with fraternities. This was expressly justified by the fact that there are too close personal and ideal connections to right-wing extremist and nationalist ideas in the ranks of the fraternities. Only with the Coburg Convent (CC) as the third obligatory association do the so-called "three-association talks" still take place at the local level, in which the respective issues are clarified. Any further collaboration with the CC is currently not considered. For some years now, mutual visits have been taking place with representatives of the American fraternity Tau Kappa Epsilon . Their organization differs significantly from the German system. Nevertheless, there are many things in common, especially when it comes to the point of honor and questions of political and religious tolerance.
Well-known Weinheim Corps students
Inventors and Pioneers
sorted alphabetically
Heinrich Beckurts Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig • Bodo von Borries Saxonia Karlsruhe • Wilhelm Breithaupt Saxonia Karlsruhe • Heinrich Büssing Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig • Alexander Cassinone Saxonia Karlsruhe • Otto Colberg Thuringia Dresden • Wilhelm Cornelius Franconia Darmstadt • Gottlieb Daimler Stauffia Stuttgart • Max von Duttenhofer Teutonia Stuttgart • Arthur Eichengrün Montania Aachen • Rudolf Erdmenger Vitruvia Munich • Guido Fischer Cheruscia Berlin • Ernst Grahn Slesvico-Holsatia • Hugo Henkel Stauffia Stuttgart • Emile Hiertz Montania Aachen • Roland Irmann Marko-Guestphalia Aachen • Hugo Junkers Delta Aachen • Ernst Körting Obotritia Darmstadt • Friedrich August Köttig Montania Freiberg • Heinrich Gottlieb Kühn Montania Freiberg • Gustav Lachmann Hassia Darmstadt • Ferdinand von Lochow Agronomia Hallensis zu Göttingen • Julius Lott Saxonia Karlsruhe • Hinrich Magens Ostfalia Hanover • Fritz Marguerre Marko-Guestphalia Aachen • Waldemar Petersen Rhenania Darmstadt • Ludwig Reiner Germania Hohenheim • Paul Reisser Stauffia Stuttgart • Friedrich Rösch Stauffia Stuttgart • Fritz Rothe Montania Aachen • Wilhelm Ruhl Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Paul Scheunemann Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Rudolf Schmick Cheruskia Karlsruhe • Alfred Schmidt Marchia Braunschweig • Hugo Schoellkopf Stauffia Stuttgart • Jacob Frederick Schoellkopf junior Stauffia Stuttgart • Otto Schott Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig • Otto Siemen Marchia Braunschweig • Hermann Sinnhuber Albingia Dresden zu Aachen • Kurt Stapelfeldt Irminsul Hamburg • Georg Stauber Rheno-Palatia Munich • Adalbert Stengler Vitruvia Munich • Emil Striebeck Franconia Karlsruhe, Rhenania Braunschweig • Franz Trinks Alemannia Hanover • Hermann Vering Slesvico-Holsatia
Business leader
sorted alphabetically
Walter Alberts Saxo-Borussia Freiberg • Alfred Ammelburg Cisaria Munich • Karl Eugen Becker Rhenania Stuttgart • Friedrich Bishop Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Georg Blanchart Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Carl-Friedrich Böninger Alemannia Karlsruhe • Hugo Borbeck Friso-Cheruskia Karlsruhe • Walter Borbet Franconia Karlsruhe, Borussia Clausthal • Robert Brenner Montania Aachen • Horst Brunnemann Franconia Freiberg • Alfred Colsman Rheno-Guestphalia Berlin • Carl Coninx Rheno-Guestphalia Berlin • Klaus DeParade Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig, Alemannia-Thuringia in Magdeburg • Georg Du Bois Teutonia Freiberg • Hermann Eichmeyer Montania Clausthal • Kurt Erdmann Rosenthal Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen, Rhenania Braunschweig, Franconia Karlsruhe • Wilhelm Esser Montania Breslau • Karl Eymann Germania Munich • Adalbert Flaccus Saxo-Borussia Freiberg, Montania Freiberg • Karl Foerster Saxonia Karlsruhe • Josef Follmann Saxo-Borussia Freiberg • Hermann Franz Franconia Karlsruhe • Fritz Gajewski Mark omannia Bonn • Hermann Gehl Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Karl Theodor Geilenkirchen Montania Aachen • Julius Geyer Rheno-Palatia Munich • Hans Gissel Marko-Guestphalia Aachen • Adolf Görz Saxo-Borussia Freiberg, Teutonia Freiberg • Bernhard Grau Montania Aachen • Georg Gregersen de Saàg Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Julius Grillo Montania Clausthal • Karl Grosse Bavaria Karlsruhe • Jürgen Großmann Montania Clausthal, Hasso-Borussia (KSCV) • Carl Hagemann Hanover Hanover • Friedrich Georg Hamann Marchia Braunschweig • Fritz Harney Montania Clausthal • Dietmar Harting Suevo-Guestphalia Munich , Normannia Hannover • Wilhelm Heinrich Hannovera Hannover • Franz Hellberg Montania Clausthal • Ernst Heller Frisia Karlsruhe • Balthasar Herberz Rhenania Braunschweig, Montania Freiberg • Emil Holz Stauffia Stuttgart • Hans Honsel Montania Aachen • Robert Hopfelt Rhenania Darmstadt • Kurt Howaldt Bavaria Karlsruhe • Johann Hubert Inden Rheno Guestphalia Berlin • Carl Jaeger Borussia Clausthal, Mont ania Clausthal • Peter Jühling Franconia Darmstadt • Arnold Jung Montania Aachen • Bernhard Kapp Stauffia Stuttgart • Peter Kehl Saxonia-Berlin zu Aachen, Rhenania Braunschweig • Walter Keidel Germania Hohenheim • Helmut Kilpper Germania Hohenheim • Fritz Kintzlé Montania Aachen • Jochen Friedrich Kirchhoff Hercynia Clausthal • Jacob Klein Bavaria Karlsruhe • Adolf Klinkenberg Montania Aachen • Heinrich Klostermann Alemannia Karlsruhe • Carl Emanuel Knorr Teutonia Stuttgart • Carl Knott Germania Munich • Julius Kohl Vitruvia Munich • Eberhard von Kuenheim Teutonia Stuttgart • Christian Kuhlemann Saxonia Hanover • Christian Kühn Franconia Freiberg • Carl Kühne Saxonia -Berlin zu Aachen, Pomerania-Silesia Bayreuth • Roland Lacher Cisaria Munich • Wilhelm Lax Teutonia Dresden • Wulf Dietrich Liestmann Hercynia Clausthal • Gottlieb Matthias Lippart Cisaria Munich • Hans Ludewig Old Saxony Dresden • Eckardt Lufft Bavaria Stuttgart • Klaus Mangold Suevo-Guestphalia Munich • Gustav Marti n Franconia Karlsruhe, Montania Aachen • Fritz Medicus Germania Munich • Siegfried Meurer Altsachsen Dresden • Gustav Möllenberg Montania Aachen • Klaus Nürnberg Montania Aachen • Gustav Poel Montania Aachen • Julius Pohlig jun. Cheruskia Karlsruhe • Franz Pollmann Cisaria Munich • Carl Proebst Alemannia Munich • Ferdinand Raab Montania Clausthal • Karl Raabe Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Hans Albert Rooschüz Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Reinhard Röpke Stauffia Stuttgart • Fritz Rothe Montania Aachen • Friedrich Schaarschmidt Vitruvia Munich • Theodor Schapp Berolina Berlin • Hans-Jürgen Schinzler Vitruvia Munich • Gerhard Schloemer Montania Aachen • Alfred Schmidt Marchia Braunschweig • Jürgen Schneider Hassia Darmstadt • Wolf-Dieter Schneider Marko-Guestphalia Aachen, Cheruscia Berlin • Max Schoeller Bavaria Karlsruhe • Karl Schuh Hercynia Clausthal • Adolf Eugen Schulte Hannovera Hanover • Gabriel Ritter von Sedlmayr Germania Munich • Hermann Sinnhuber Albingia Dresden to Aachen • Hermann Spamer Teutonia Gießen (KSCV), Franconia Freiberg, Tauriscia Leoben • Joseph Spohr Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Friedrich Springorum Montania Aachen • Fritz Springorum Montania Aachen • Wilhelm Stein Hannovera Hannover, Ber olina Berlin • Gustav Weinholz Hercynia Clausthal • Otto Friedrich Weinlig Alemannia Hanover, Teutonia-Hercynia Braunschweig • Heinrich Weiss Frisia Braunschweig, Saxo-Thuringia Munich • Gustav Wesemann Hanover Hanover • Wilhelm Zaeringer Saxonia Karlsruhe • Carl Zimmerer Altsachsen Dresden
Architects
sorted alphabetically
Arnold Bachofen Rhenania Braunschweig, Helvetia Zurich • Hermann Billing Cheruskia Karlsruhe • Alfred Friedrich Bluntschli Frisia Karlsruhe • Fritz August Breuhaus de Groot Stauffia Stuttgart • Theodor Brune Franconia Karlsruhe, Rhenania Braunschweig • Ernst Bühring Saxonia Hanover • Gustav von Cube Macaro-Visurgia Hanover • August Dinklage Slesvico-Holsatia • Carl Eduard Dippell Slesvico-Holsatia • Karl Siegfried Döhring Berolina Berlin • Martin Dülfer Macaro-Visurgia Hanover • Josef Durm Bavaria Karlsruhe • Hans Erlwein Germania Munich • August Esenwein Stauffia Stuttgart • August Exter Rheno-Palatia Munich • Carl-Friedrich Fischer Slesvico-Holsatia • Richard Fischer Ostfalia Hanover • Léon Fulpius Rhenania Braunschweig • Arthur Hugo Göpfert Franco-Marcomannia Dresden • Julius Groeschel Vitruvia Munich • Reinhold Guleke Baltica Danzig • Wilhelm Hauer's Slesvico-Holsatia • Adolf Helbling Franconia Karlsruhe, Vandalia Karlsruhe • Johann Mathias von Holsatia Frisia Karlsruhe, Baltica Danzig • Moritz von Horstig Saxonia Karlsruhe • Friedrich Jenner Guestphalia Berlin, Saxonia-Berlin • Hugo Keuerleber Rhenania Stuttgart • Arthur Kickton Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Hermann Klette Old Saxony Dresden • Karl Kröck Normannia-Vandalia Munich • Friedrich Larouette Vitruvia Munich • Georg Lasius Saxonia Hanover • Robert Leibnitz Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Alexander von Lersner Bavaria Karlsruhe • Eduard Linse Teutonia Braunschweig • William Lossow Thuringia Dresden • Fritz Lotz Rhenania Braunschweig, Helvetia Zurich • Friedrich Löwel Vitruvia Munich • Wilhelm Lüer Saxonia Hanover • Ludwig Marckert Germania Munich • Paul Meissner Pomerania-Silesia Bayreuth • Emil Rudolf Mewes Franconia Karlsruhe • Eugen Michel Pomerania-Silesia Bayreuth • Wilhelm Neveling Berolina Berlin • Arnold Nöldeke Macaro-Visurgia Hanover • Johannes Otzen Slesvico-Holsatia • Ludwig Paffendorf Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen, Stauffia Stuttgart • Arthur Pfeifer Saxonia Karlsruhe • Stephan Prager Hassia D armstadt • Robert Raschka Rhenania Braunschweig • Adolf Rauchheld Pomerania-Silesia Bayreuth • Simon Theodor Rauecker Cisaria Munich • Robert von Reinhardt Rhenania Stuttgart • Aribert Rödel Rheno-Palatia Munich • Otto Ruprecht Hannovera Hanover • Walter Sartorius Bavaria Stuttgart • Richard Schachner Cisaria Munich • Hermann Schaedtler Saxonia Hanover • Leonhard Schaufelberger Rhenania Braunschweig • Otto Scheib Suevia Munich (KSCV), Friso-Luneburgia • Hugo Schlösser Teutonia Stuttgart • Paul Schondorf Rhenania Braunschweig • Werner Schuch Slesvico-Holsatia • Eckhard Schulze-Fielitz Marko-Guestphalia Aachen • Carl Schumann Stauffia Stuttgart • Gabriel von Seidl Germania Munich • Manfred Semper Rhenania Braunschweig • Carl Sieben Delta Aachen • Wilhelm Sophonias Bäumer Stauffia Stuttgart • Karl Spatz Vitruvia Munich • Konrad von Steiger Stauffia Stuttgart, Franconia Karlsruhe • Emil Thormählen Ostfalia Hanover • Fritz Torno Neo-Franconia Breslau, Normannia Hanover • Heinrich Wagner Stauffia Stuttgart • Ludwig Wagner-Speyer Rheno-Palatia Munich • Ferdinand Wallbrecht Saxonia Hanover • Eduard Wendebourg Hanover Hanover • Arthur Wienkoop Saxonia Karlsruhe • Paul Wiesert Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Albert Winkler Slesvico-Holsatia • Wilhelm Wittmann Vitruvia Munich • Otto Wöhlecke Slesvico -Holsatia • Franz Zwick Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen
Rectors and presidents of universities
Technical universities and mining academies
sorted alphabetically by university location
- RWTH Aachen ( TU9 ) - Wilhelm Borchers Marko-Guestphalia Aachen • Ernst Friedrich Dürre Montania Aachen EM • Paul Gast Saxonia-Berlin zu Aachen • Otto Gruber Friso-Cheruskia Karlsruhe • August Hirsch Delta Aachen • Friedrich Klockmann Hercynia Clausthal • August Schwemann Teutonia Freiberg, Montania Clausthal
- Technical University of Berlin ( TU9 ) - Rudolf Drawe Pomerania-Silesia Bayreuth, Berolina Berlin, Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Hermann Immanuel Rietschel Old Saxony Dresden
- Technical University of Braunschweig - Wilhelm Schlink Chattia Darmstadt
- Clausthal University of Technology (Bergakademie) - Lothar Birckenbach Montania Clausthal • Johannes Galli Montania Freiberg • Walter Knissel Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen • Otto Rellensmann Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen
- Technical University of Gdansk - August Wagener Delta Aachen, Borussia Gdansk
- Technical University Darmstadt ( TU9 ) - Enno Heidebroek Altsachsen Dresden • Wilhelm Schlink Chattia Darmstadt • Arthur Wienkoop Saxonia Karlsruhe
- Technical University of Dresden ( TU9 ) - Hans Görges Altsachsen Dresden • Enno Heidebroek Altsachsen Dresden • Adolph Nägel Thuringia Dresden
- Technical University Bergakademie Freiberg - Ernst Diepschlag Marko-Guestphalia Aachen • Theodor Erhard Saxo-Borussia Freiberg • Friedrich Kolbeck Franconia Freiberg • Karl-Friedrich Lüdemann Saxo-Borussia Freiberg, Montania Freiberg • Theodor Richter Saxo-Borussia Freiberg • Clemens Winkler Franconia Freiberg
- Leibniz University Hannover ( TU9 ) - Albert Frank (engineer) Obotritia Darmstadt • Franz Frese Hannovera Hannover
- Technical University of Ilmenau - Georg Schmidt Hannovera Hannover
- Karlsruhe Institute of Technology ( TU9 ) - Otto Haxel Cisaria Munich
- Technical University of Munich ( TU9 ) - Herbert Kupfer Germania Munich
- University of Stuttgart ( TU9 ) - Alexander Gutbier Teutonia Dresden • Jakob Johann von Weyrauch Helvetia Zurich, Tigurinia Zurich (KSCV)
Universities and other equivalent universities
sorted by university location
- University of Athens - Anastasios Christomanos Saxonia Karlsruhe
- Handelshochschule Berlin - Heinrich Nicklisch Hermunduria Leipzig to Mannheim, Hansea Mannheim-Heidelberg
- Agricultural University Berlin ( today HU Berlin ) - Christian August Vogler Free Saxonia Berlin
- University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover - Horst Frerking Normannia Hannover • Bernard Malkmus Normannia Hannover • Alfred Trautmann Albingia Dresden to Aachen, Saxo-Thuringia Munich, Hannoverania Hannover
- University of Göttingen - Emil Woermann Agronomia Hallensis in Göttingen
- University of Greifswald - Max Bleibtreu Corps Marchia Greifswald
- University of Hohenheim - Adolf Münzinger Germania Hohenheim • George Turner Frisia Göttingen
- University of Jena - Alexander Gutbier Teutonia Dresden
- Leipzig Graduate School of Management - Balduin Penndorf Hermunduria Leipzig zu Mannheim
- University of Rostock - Franz Honcamp Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen, Stauffia Stuttgart
- University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna - Gustav Hempel Saxo-Borussia Freiberg
- University of Zurich - Eduard Osenbrüggen Baltica Zurich, Baltica Danzig
Winner of major science awards
- Rudolf Eucken (1846–1926) Frisia Göttingen - He was a philosopher and received the 1908 Nobel Prize for Literature .
- Hugo Junkers (1859–1935) Turnerschaft Rhenania Berlin (CC), Delta Aachen - He was professor of thermodynamics, aircraft designer and in 1930 received the Werner-von-Siemens-Ring
- Bodo von Borries (1905–1956) Saxonia Karlsruhe - He was co-inventor of the electron microscope and in 1941 received the silver Leibniz Medal of the Prussian Academy of Sciences
- Siegfried Meurer (1908–1997) Altsachsen Dresden - He was an engineer for internal combustion engines, developer of the MAN - M-engine and received the Werner-von-Siemens-Ring in 1968
Politicians at higher, upper and middle levels
Adolf Bargmann Friso-Luneburgia • Hermann Berg Vitruvia Munich • Adolf Bethe Friso-Luneburgia • Ernst Blankenhorn Franconia Karlsruhe • Dietrich Christian von Buttel Frisia Göttingen • Julius Dorpmüller Delta Aachen • Walter Drechsel Alemannia-Thuringia zu Magdeburg • Anton Fehr Suevo-Guestphalia Munich • Antônio Francisco de Paula Souza Rhenania Braunschweig, Franconia Karlsruhe • Richard von Friesen Montania Freiberg • John C. Funch Germania Hohenheim • Oscar Funcke Teutonia Freiberg • Heinrich Georg Ehrentraut Bremensia Göttingen, Frisia Göttingen • Ludwig Gerstein Montania Aachen • Walther Groz Bavaria Stuttgart • Klaus Hänsch Silingia Wroclaw to Cologne • Adolf Wilhelm Hillingh Frisia Göttingen • Rudolf Hobohm Alemannia Hanover • Eugen Jäger Germania Munich • Rudolf Kindt Hassia Darmstadt • Steffen Kotré Cheruscia Berlin • Karl-Heinz Lesnau Cheruscia Berlin, Irminsul Hamburg • Walter Lippe Franconia Freiberg, Hercynia Clausthal • Eduard Meyer Holsatia Berlin • Friedrich Wilhelm M öhring Bremensia Göttingen, Frisia Göttingen • Emil Möhrlin Franconia Karlsruhe • Karl Müller-Franken Alemannia Munich, Free Saxonia Berlin • Bernd Niehaus Quesada Franco-Guestphalia Cologne, Irminsul Hamburg • Franz Obermayr Alemannia Vienna (KSCV), Frankonia Brünn (KSCV), Germania Munich • Gerhard Oncken Rhenania Heidelberg (KSCV), Friso-Luneburgia • Helmut Prassler Germania Hohenheim • Robert Primavesi Thuringia Dresden • Klaus Scheufelen Obotritia Darmstadt • Franz Seldte Teutonia Hercynia Braunschweig • Oskar Stübinger Markomannia Bonn • Frank Sürmann Thuringia Heidelberg • Yamamoto Teijiro Germania Hohenheim • Ferdinand Wallbrecht Saxonia Hanover • Max Wartemann Irminsul Hamburg • Alexandros Zannas Stauffia Stuttgart
Generals and admirals of an armed force
sorted alphabetically
Georg Bock von Wülfingen Albingia Dresden zu Aachen • Karl von Brug Cisaria Munich • Eduard Ey-Steineck Montania Clausthal • Eugen Fahrländer Helvetia Zurich • Hans Frey Stauffia Stuttgart • Heinrich Göringer Vitruvia Munich • Karl Harlander Vitruvia Munich • Walter Hertel Rhenania Stuttgart • Paul von Hindenburg Montania Freiberg • William Kobbé Franconia Freiberg • Rudolf Kunz Rhenania Stuttgart • August von Mackensen Agronomia Hallensis zu Göttingen • Theodor Melior Hassia Darmstadt • Richard Rothe-Roth Germania Munich • Albert Schuchardt Vitruvia Munich • Oskar Schwartz Slesvico-Holsatia • Karl Wilhelm Specht Albingia Dresden Aachen • Dieter Wellershoff Marko Guestphalia Aachen
See also
- List of corps students in the Reichstag of the German Empire
- List of corporate members of the Bundestag
- List of incorporated members of the Reichstag (Weimar Republic)
- List of incorporated members of the Reichstag (1933–1945)
- List of Corps students in the Leopoldina
literature
- Hans Schüler: Weinheimer SC Chronik , Darmstadt 1927
- Michael Doeberl , Otto Scheel , Wilhelm Schlink , Hans Sperl , Eduard Spranger , Hans Bitter and Paul Frank (eds.): The German universities and their academic citizens , in: Das Akademische Deutschland , Vol. 2. CA Weller Verlag, Berlin 1931, Pp. 277-286
- Adolf Julius Fillibeck: 40 years ago. Memorandum of the chairman of the Philistine Committee of Suevia Munich [from 1951] . Once and Now, Yearbook of the Association for Corporate Student History Research, Vol. 36 (1991), pp. 213-228.
- Paulgerhard Gladen : The Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention and the associations that have merged into it, in: The German-speaking corporations associations , 3rd updated and expanded edition. WJK-Verlag, Hilden 2008. ISBN 978-3-933892-28-7 , pp. 51-77.
- Board of the WVAC (ed.): The customs of the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention. Weinheim without date
- 100 years of Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention. Festschrift for the centenary of the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention , Bochum 1963.
- Wernerrautel: The reconstitution of the Weinheimer SC after the National Socialist prohibition period. In: then and now . 37, 1992, pp. 203-210.
- Herbert Scherer : The WSC Corps in the Prohibited Period (1933–1945). In: then and now. 5, 1960, pp. 82-93.
- Herbert Scherer: The reintroduction of the determination gauge. The WSC as a weapons student association after 1945. In: once and now. 42 (1997), pp. 111-119.
- Herbert Scherer: A German Senior Citizens' Convention. Idea and reality between 1934 and 1954. In: Einst und Jetzt. 42, 1997, pp. 49-61, ( cisaria.de PDF; 57 kB).
- Herbert Scherer: Re-establishment in conflict. The restitution process of student corporations after the Second World War using the example of Weinheimer SC. In: then and now. 43, 1998, pp. 135-151.
- Horst-Ulrich Textor: The Weinheimer SC during the Weimar Republic. In: then and now. Yearbook of the Association for Corporate Student History Research. Volume 51, 2006, pp. 219-234.
- Rudolf Wohlleben : The Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention and the Sixty-Eight. In: then and now. 55, 2010, pp. 417-445. ISBN 978-3-87707-781-8 .
Web links
- Official website of the Kösener and Weinheimer Corps students
- Publications on the Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention in the catalog of the German National Library
- Search for Weinheim Senior Citizens' Convention in the German Digital Library
- Katja Syri: Weinheim: Senior Citizens' Convention celebrates its 150th anniversary. In: RNF Life ( Rhein-Neckar Fernsehen ) from May 10, 2013
- Rüdiger Soldt: Corps students. Duty and cosmopolitan. The students of the “Weinheim Senior Citizens Convention” celebrate 100 years of Wachenburg - but also the large number of foxes. In: faz.net ( Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung ) of May 13, 2013
Individual evidence
- ^ Weinheim Seniors Convent (ed.): Weinheim Seniors Convent Comment (WSCC) . Weinheim an der Bergstrasse June 2017, p. 18, §36 (1) .
- ↑ Quotation in: Michael Grüttner : Students in the Third Reich . Paderborn 1995, p. 293.
- ↑ a b H. Scherer
- ↑ CORPS - Magazin, issue 4/2017, p. 11. Retrieved on January 4, 2018 .
- ↑ see relationship agreement # cartel relationship
- ^ Corps Irminsul. In: www.irminsul.de. Retrieved November 10, 2015 .
- ^ Carl Weigandt: History of the Corps Saxonia-Berlin to Aachen 1867-1967. Aachen 1968.
- ↑ Bernd-A. Kahe: Corps Franconia Karlsruhe 1839–1989, a chronicle. Karlsruhe 1989.
- ↑ a b Joachim Grub: Contributions to the history of the Corps Saxonia-Berlin in Aachen 1967-1992. Aachen 1993.
- ↑ Aute Bode (VfcG) .
- ↑ Kurt Weizsäcker (VfcG) .
- ↑ Gustav Glunz (VfcG) .
- ^ CORPS - the magazine ( Memento from April 21, 2009 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Membership | Association for corps student historical research (VfcG). Retrieved May 3, 2017 .
- ^ Stifterverein Alter Corpsstudenten eV | Achievement deserves recognition. Retrieved May 3, 2017 .
- ^ Website of the Association for Corps Student History Research .
- ^ Community for German Student History : Paulskirche: Corps scheren aus
- ^ Jörn Berkefeld: WSC «Corps Berlin. Retrieved May 3, 2017 .
- ↑ The Teke - The Magazine of Tau Kappa Epsilon Summer 2003 (PDF; 2.8 MB)
- ↑ AJ Fillibeck (corpsarchive.de)