Wilhelm Bohnhardt

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Heinrich Wilhelm Bohnhardt (born April 1, 1808 in Bliederstedt ; † June 19, 1863 there ) was a member of the state parliament of the Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen .

Wilhelm Bohnhardt was the son of the cantor and school teacher Johann Friedrich Christoph Bohnhardt and his wife Marie Sophie Seebach. Thilo Apel, who was of Evangelical Lutheran faith, remained unmarried. He lived as a coach in Bliederstedt.

During the March Revolution, Wilhelm Bohnhardt was considered a “remarkable” speaker at the people's assembly on July 12, 1848 in Oberspier . He was the spokesman for the democratic movements and one of the bearers of the petition of the people's assembly near Greußen (7,000 participants) on September 24, 1848, on which, among other things, the direct election of members of the state parliament was demanded. From September 26, 1849 to June 30, 1850 and from November 28, 1853 to December 31, 1855, he was a member of the Schwarzburg-Sondershäuser Landtag. He represented the constituency A 3 ( Großenehrich ) from 1849-1850 and constituency AW II 2 (general elections 2, Greußen-Land) from 1853-1855. His deputy in the seat of parliament was Carl Schicke in 1849/50 .

literature

  • Jochen Lengemann : Landtag and regional representation of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen 1843–1923. Biographical handbook (= Parliaments in Thuringia 1809–1952. Vol. 3). G. Fischer, Jena et al. 1998, ISBN 3-437-35368-3 , pp. 155-156.