Wilhelm Wibel

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Wilhelm Wibel , also Wiebel (born July 27, 1800 in Eutin , † March 3, 1864 in Oldenburg (Oldb) ) was a German lawyer and member of the state parliament.

Life

Wilhelm Wibel was a son of the Oldenburg government director in the Principality of Lübeck Ludwig Conrad Leopold Wibel (1768–1831). The advocate and member of the state parliament Ernst Wibel (1802–1863) was his brother. The two brothers were differentiated in official publications as Wibel I (Wilhelm) and Wibel II (Ernst). His sister Maria Amalia Anna (1798–1833) married the Oldenburg Higher Government Councilor Ernst Hellwag (1780–1862).

From 1818 he studied law at the Universities of Heidelberg and Göttingen . In November 1820 there was almost a pistol duel with Heinrich Heine in Göttingen . Weevil was then in January 1821 relegated , while Heine the Consilium abeundi received. The university court punished the cartel carrier Wibels, Count Ernst zu Rantzau , with a prison sentence . After his exams, Wibel joined the Oldenburg judicial service as a law firm professor. Until 1848 he was appointed Hofrat, a member of the Grand Ducal Justice Chancellery in Oldenburg and a member of the legal examination committee. In 1837, based on the files , he worked on the murder case of the Danish ambassador Rudolf Anton Ludwig von Qualen, which has not yet been resolved, in two volumes. In the course of the revolution of 1848/1849 he resigned from the civil service and worked as a senior court attorney.

In the years 1848 to 1854, 1857 and from 1860 to 1861 Wibel belonged to the Oldenburg State Parliament for constituency XV . He was considered the leader of the democratic party in Oldenburg .

Following a suggestion by Rudolph Dulon , on April 27, 1850, the eleven-member electoral committee made up of the Senate and Citizenship of the Hanseatic City of Bremen nominated Wibel with six to five votes for a judge's position at the Higher Appeal Court of the four Free Cities in Lübeck , for which Bremen regularly received the right to present, whereby the Citizenship members of the committee overruled members of the Senate. Wibel was regarded as an excellent lawyer with astuteness and great manpower, who, as a member of the regional synod and the municipal council, was supported by the best references. The defeated Bremen Senate managed to convince the Senates of Hamburg and Lübeck not to agree to Wibel's appointment with references to his allegedly broken private and financial circumstances . In his place the Senate appointed the Meiningen State Councilor Hermann Friedrich Brandis .

Fonts

  • Actual presentation of the facts raised by the investigation into the murder of the Royal Danish Minister Chamberlain von Qualen zu Eutin, as well as the judgments and grounds for decision of the Juristenfacultät Göttingen and the Grand Ducal Oldenburg Higher Appeal Court in Oldenburg: ..., two volumes, Hofbuchdrucker Struve, Eutin 1837

literature

  • Albrecht Eckhardt: From the bourgeois revolution to the National Socialist takeover of power - The Oldenburg State Parliament and its members 1848-1933. 1996, p. 111

Individual evidence

  1. See, for example, Staats-Handbuch des Großhergtum Oldenburg 1851, p. 53f
  2. After the entry on the father Wibel (Wiebel), Ludwig Conrad Leopold In: Hans Friedl u. a. (Ed.): Biographical manual for the history of the state of Oldenburg . Edited on behalf of the Oldenburg landscape. Isensee, Oldenburg 1992, ISBN 3-89442-135-5 , p. 789 ( online ).
  3. ^ Heinrich Heine: Correspondence 1815-1856. Secular Edition Volume 20, p. 26
  4. Jan Christoph Hauschild u. Michael Werner, "The purpose of life is life itself". Heinrich Heine. Eine Biographie , Cologne 1997, p. 65
  5. ^ Protocols of the university court proceedings printed in Die Spinnstube , Sunday supplement of the Göttinger Zeitung No. 47 of November 29, 1925; also reproduced in Hans-Heinrich Himme: Key contributions to the history of Georgia Augusta in Göttingen , Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen and Zurich 1987, Fig. 140
  6. ^ Hermann Entholt: The Bremen Revolution of 1848. Bremen: Schünemann 1951, p. 72
  7. ^ See negotiations of the first regional synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Duchy of Oldenburg 1850 ( digitized version ), p. 1
  8. Werner Biebusch: revolution and coup: constitutional struggles in Bremen from 1848 to 1854. Bremen: Schünemann 1973, p 113
  9. Michael Kotulla: German Constitutional Law 1806-1918: A collection of documents and introductions. Volume 4: Bremen, Heidelberg: Springer 2015 ISBN 9783540295051 , p. 202