Gustav Trunk

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Gustav Trunk (July 24, 1871 in Waldprechtsweier - April 23, 1936 in Karlsruhe) was a three-time President of Baden. He was a lawyer by occupation and was a member of the German Centre Party.

In 1897, Gustav Trunk married Emma Eppel in Baden-Baden. He studied law in Berlin and Heidelberg, graduating in 1900. Heavily influenced by his model, Franz Xavier Lenders, Trunk joined the Centre Party.


[edit] Early political career and First Term (1920-21)

He served on the city council of Karlsruhe from 1911 until 1919. Upon the creation of the Republic of Baden, he was appointed Minister for Food, a position in which he served until 1919, when he became Minister for Justice. On August 14, 1920, the Centre party defeated the SDP in the Baden elections and Trunk became State President, succeeding the centre-leftist Anton Geiss. By 1921, however, the left wing regained much of its popularity, and Trunk's party was defeated by the left-wing liberal DDP.


[edit] External links


Political offices
Preceded by
Anton Geiss
State President of Baden
1920–1921
Succeeded by
Hermann Hummel
Preceded by
Willy Hellpach
State President of Baden
1925–1926
Succeeded by
Heinrich Köhler
Preceded by
Heinrich Köhler
State President of Baden
1927
Succeeded by
Adam Remmele



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