Wernigeroder Hunting Corporations Senior Citizens' Convention
Surname | Wernigeroder Hunting Corporations Senior Citizens' Convention |
abbreviation | WJSC |
principle | Self-education of its members |
Represented in | Germany |
founding | June 2, 1927 in Wernigerode |
Member connections | 13 active |
Number of members | about 1000 |
Type of member | Men's leagues |
Religious orientation | Religiously unbound |
Position to the scale | Optionally hitting |
Color status | Colored |
Members magazine | WJSC sheets |
Presidency Senate | Georg Count von Kerssenbrock |
President (2017/2018) | Student hunting association St. Hubertus in Cologne |
Antitrust agreement | No cartel agreement |
Website | [1] |
The Wernigeroder Jagdkorporationen Senioren-Convent (WJSC) is an umbrella organization of hunting student associations in Germany and Austria. He is a member of the Convent of German Academic Associations .
history
The beginnings
The first hunting-oriented student associations were formed in Germany in 1920, and they soon came up with the idea of merging into an umbrella organization. The first hunting association, Jagdcorps Masovia zu Berlin , and the Academic Hunting Association Borussia merged on January 30, 1922 to form the "Kartell Akademischer Jagdvereine", which was expanded on June 26, 1924 to include the Hubertia Halle Hunting Corps. It was founded a year earlier due to the knowledge of the founding of Masovia Berlin. Negotiations were also held with the Hubertia Leipzig hunting corps, founded in 1922, but no agreement could be reached with them. At the Kartell-Convent on 26./27. In July 1924 the name was changed to "Kartell Akademischer Jagdverbindungen". The Hubertia Breslau Hunting Corps, which was formed in 1925 from a hunters 'regulars' table through the Hubertia Academic Schützenschaft, was accepted into the cartel as the fourth league. Borussia Hannover resigned in the same year due to the cartel's turning towards compulsory censorship.
Wernigeroder Jagdcorps Senior Citizens' Convention
On July 2nd and 3rd, 1927 the cartel met for the first time in the at the invitation of the then President of the General German Hunting Protection Association (ADJV), the forerunner of today's German Hunting Association , Christian-Ernst Fürst zu Stolberg-Wernigerode ( Jagdcorps Masovia zu Berlin ) City of Wernigerode , which has been the namesake and conference venue of the association ever since. At that time, the cartel was renamed the "Wernigeroder Jagdcorps Senioren-Convent", while largely retaining the statutes and association symbols. At the same time, the compulsory censorship principle was made binding for the association and the application for inclusion in the Allgemeine Deutsche Waffenring was made. Association shooting has been taking place every year since 1929 .
This was followed in 1928 by the hunting corps Saxo-Franconia Tharandt and the hunting corps Hubertia zu Leipzig. The hunting corps Saxo-Silesia Dresden, founded in 1929 out of the WJSC, was accepted as the sixth hunting corps at the association conference. Shortly before the suspension, the Rugo-Suevia Bonn hunting corps was accepted into the association as a trial member.
Through its members from the ranks of the ADJV Christian-Ernst zu Stolberg-Wernigerode, Alfons Prinz zu Isenburg (both Masovia Berlin) and Victor III. Prince von Corvey, Prince zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst (Hubertia Breslau), the WJSC took a significant part in shaping the hunt in the Weimar Republic . In the Third Reich, the WJSC suspended on May 13, 1934 at the house of Masovia Berlin and continued to exist until 1939 as the "Green Ring - Working Group on Hunting Corporations" with most of the hunting corps. The Berliner Altherren Verband, which those from Halle and Dresden joined until 1938, met in Wernigerode during the war. Only 57 of the 292 members survived the war, just under 20%.
Wernigeroder Hunting Corporations Senior Citizens' Convention
The Second World War hit the WJSC not only through the death of many members of the association, but also through the loss of its association home, Wernigerode. In addition, with the exception of Berlin, all of the former university locations where the association was represented were now located in the Soviet-occupied part of Germany or in Poland, where corporations of any kind were prohibited.
Therefore, new locations had to be found where new hunting corporations could arise. This happened with the substantial help of members of the hunting corps' association. Walter Schultze al. Wolfsangel from the Hubertia Halle Hunting Corps wrote an appeal in all the hunting magazines, which helped the surviving members of the association to meet again for the first time. This took place on January 20, 1951 in Hanover as “1. Jagdcorps reunion ”takes place. This gave the impetus to re-establish the WJSC. Burchardi (Hubertia Halle) initiated a hunter regulars table at the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn , from which the Hubertia Bonn and Halle zu Bonn hunting association developed in 1951 as the first post-war establishment.
In order to revive the idea of hunting students at association level, the Masovia Hunting Corps met with the Hunting Association Hubertia Bonn and Halle zu Bonn and the Academic Hunting Association Hermann Löns zu Münster for the first time in 1955 in Hanover . In 1956 the WJSC was officially restituted. Since the member federations were no longer hunting corps with the exception of Berlin and the new foundations were not mandatory federations, the name was changed to Wernigeroder Jagdkorporationen Senioren-Convent. From now on, the association meetings took place at the location of the respective presiding association. From 1963 Spangenberg Castle became the location of the annual conference, and it was not possible to return to Wernigerode until 1990. A revival was also possible at the former university locations in Leipzig and Tharandt .
Goals and direction
- Protection of the native nature
- Compliance with the principles of German hunting justice
- The maintenance of hunting customs
- Preserving student customs
The WJSC hunting associations are religiously and politically neutral, as well as unbound and are committed to the nature conservation and ethical guidelines of hunting justice . The WJSC gives its members free access to both academic fencing and the mensur .
Association symbols
The WJSC banner shows the association's coat of arms on the front with Wernigerode Castle as the place of foundation, and on the back a golden, discarded roebuck pole. This roebuck pole is also worn by the members of the individual associations on the Revere as an association symbol. The association anthem is "The hunter's call has united us here" and is sung to the melody of the student song "Drei Klänge sinds".
Member corporations
Current members
- Hunting Corps Masovia in Berlin
- Hunting corps Hubertia in Leipzig
- Hunting connection Hubertia Bonn and Halle zu Bonn
- Academic hunting association Hermann Löns zu Münster
- Academic hunting association Hubertia Aachen
- Student hunting association Hubertus Cologne
- Academic hunting association Hubertia Ruhr to Bochum
- Academic Hunters Association St. Eustachius zu Würzburg
- Academic hunting association Huberto Holsatia in Kiel
- Academic Hunting Corporation Nimrod in Paderborn
- Forest Academic Hunting Corporation Cervidia zu Tharandt
Former members of the old WJSC
- Akad. Hunting Club Borussia Hannover (expired)
- Jagdcorps Saxo-Frankonia Tharandt (merged into FAJC Cervidia zu Tharandt)
- Hunting Corps Hubertia Halle (traditional contract with JV Hubertia Bonn and Halle zu Bonn)
- Jagdcorps Hubertia Breslau (traditional contract with JV Hubertia Göttingen)
- Jagdcorps Saxo-Silesia Dresden (traditional contract with JC Masovia Berlin)
- Jagdcorps Rugo-Suevia Bonn (expired)
former members
- Hunting connection Huberto-Brunonia Braunschweig (merged into FAJC Cervidia zu Tharandt)
- Hunting Association Hubertia Göttingen (resigned)
- Academic Hunters Association Silvania Vienna (resigned)
- Academic Hunting Association Hubertus Düsseldorf (excluded)
- Jagdcorps Artemis Munich (resigned)
- Academic Hunting Corporation Brandenburgia Eberswalde (resigned)
- Student Hunters Association Bergisch Land zu Wuppertal (expired)
Known members
- Anton Arland , Hubertia Hunting Corps in Leipzig
- Fritz Bley , Masovia Hunting Corps in Berlin
- Felix von Bressensdorf , Hubertia Hunting Corps in Leipzig
- Jochen Borchert , Academic Hunting Association Hubertia Ruhr zu Bochum
- Ernst von Eschwege , Masovia Hunting Corps in Berlin
- Constantin Heereman von Zuydtwyck , Academic Hunting Association Hermann Löns zu Münster
- Franz Heske , Jagdcorps Saxo-Fankonia Tharandt
- Franz Jaffé, German architect, Jagdcorps Masovia zu Berlin
- Egon von Kapherr , Jagdcorps Hubertia Halle
- Adolf Friedrich zu Mecklenburg , Jagdcorps Masovia zu Berlin
- Heinrich zu Mecklenburg , Jagdcorps Masovia zu Berlin
- Hugo Miehe , Masovia Hunting Corps in Berlin
- Kurt Opitz , Masovia Hunting Corps in Berlin
- Hermann Pohle , German zoologist, Jagdcorps Masovia zu Berlin
- Otto Rasch , Hubertia Hunting Corps in Leipzig
- Rudolf Stammler , Hubertia Hunting Corps in Leipzig
- Christian Ernst Prince of Stolberg-Wernigerode , Masovia Hunting Corps in Berlin
- Botho zu Stolberg-Wernigerode , Jagdcorps Masovia zu Berlin
- Victor III. Prince von Corvey, Prince of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst , Hunting Corps Hubertia Breslau
See also
literature
- Bernhard Grün, Christoph Vogel: The Fuxenstunde . Manual of Corporation Studentism. Bad Buchau 2014, pp. 197-198, ISBN 978-3-925171-92-5 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ W. Schulze: What are hunting corps? in: Deutsche Jäger-Zeitung vol. 88 p. 465
- ↑ Herbert Schwengler: The Corps history of the Jagdcorps Masovia Berlin 1920-1945, p. 3
- ↑ Communications from the Cartel of Academic Hunting Associations 1924, No. p. 1
- ^ W. Schulze: What are hunting corps? in: Deutsche Jäger-Zeitung vol. 88 p. 466
- ↑ Herbert Schwengler: The corps history of the hunting corps Masovia Berlin 1920-1945, p. 6
- ↑ 87th Association Conference of the WJSC in Wernigerode . In: Wernigeröder Official Journal. 17 (5) of May 30, 2009, p. 13
- ↑ Wernigeroder Zeitung, June 3, 1929
- ↑ Reinhold Petersen: The honorary members of the old hunting corps pp. 2–8 in: WJSC-Blätter 24, 1987
- ^ Announcements of the "Green Ring" No. 1, 1934 p. 2
- ↑ Peter Krause : O old lad glory. The students and their customs. 5th edition. Graz, Vienna, Cologne 1997, p. 178.
- ↑ Die Pirsch 13/90, p. 4.