Wilm von Stein-Liebenstein

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Friedrich Wilm Carl Rudolf Adalbert Freiherr von Stein-Liebenstein (born July 6, 1869 in Stendal , † July 21, 1954 in Wiesbaden ) was a German judge and politician ( DNVP ).

Life

Wilm came from the noble family Stein-Liebenstein zu Barchfeld . He was a son of the Prussian Lieutenant General Ferdinand von Stein-Liebenstein zu Barchfeld (1832-1912) and his wife Frida, born von Lucke (1841-1930).

Stein attended grammar schools in Münster , Metz and Posen and then studied law and political science in Marburg, Paris and Berlin. He completed his studies with a doctorate to become a Dr. jur. from. In 1890 he became a court trainee and in 1895 a court assessor. In 1900 he became a local judge at the Birstein District Court and in 1906 at the Frankfurt am Main District Court . In 1908 he was appointed district judge at the Limburg district court and promoted to district judge in 1910. From 1914 he was a district court advisor at the Wiesbaden District Court, where he became President of the District Court in 1931. After the National Socialists seized power in 1933, he was appointed District Court Director there and retired in 1934.

From 1921 to 1933 he was a member of the provincial parliament of the province of Hessen-Nassau (first for the DNVP, then for the black-white-red battle front ). From May 1921 to June 26, 1930, and again from April to its dissolution on June 10, 1933, he was a deputy member of the Prussian State Council . From June 23, 1930 to April 1930 he was a full member of the State Council. In the State Council he was deputy secretary from February 4, 1931 to April 1933, and from January 18, 1933 assessor on the board of the State Council.

He was the owner of Fideikommiss in Barchfeld and in the Weimar Republic was a member of the liquidation office for family estates in Frankfurt am Main.

literature