Max Maurenbrecher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Max Maurenbrecher (17 July 187430 April 1930) was a German politician and pastor from Königsberg. He served as a pastor in the German evangelical church until 1907. From 1909 to 1916 he preached for the free religious congregations in Nuremberg and Mannheim. In 1917 he rejoined the evangelical church and became a minister in Dresden.

Originally a member of the Christian Social Party, he left that party in 1898 and became one of the founders of Friedrich Naumann's National-Social Association, a party that sought to challenge the Social Democrats by addressing class inequity from a Protestant, non-Marxist perspective; the party succeeded in winning only one seat in the Reichstag, in 1903, before dissolving. Maurenbrecher then became a member of that party's rival, the Social Democratic Party. He left the SPD in 1916 in a dispute over increasing the military budget, joined the conservative German Fatherland Party in 1917, and finally joined the German National People's Party after the war.

Maurenbrecher was a great admirer of Friedrich Nietzsche, and his thinking was heavily influenced by that author.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

Languages