Fritz Maxin
Fritz Maxin | |
---|---|
Reichstag | |
In office 1921–1924 | |
Constituency | East Prussia |
Personal details | |
Born | Wichrowitz, East Prussia, Imperial Germany | July 17, 1885
Died | March 5, 1960 74) Stade, Western Germany | (aged
Political party | DNVP |
Religion | Lutheran |
Fritz Wilhelm Maxin (17 July 1885 – 5 March 1960) was a German politician and lay prayer.
Biography
Maxin was born into a peasant family in the Masurian village of Wichrowitz (today Wichrowiec, Poland), where he visited school and worked on his family's farm. He married in 1913 and became engaged as a lay preacher of the gromadki-movement in the East Prussian Lutheran Prayer Community (Ostpreußischer Lutherischer Gebetsverein).[1]
After World War I he joined the Deutschnationale Volkspartei (DNVP) and was elected as deputy of the Constituency 1 (East Prussia) to the Weimar German Reichstag. Maxin was a member of the Reichstag in 1921 till 1924 and became the Chairman of the Wichrowitz commune and member of the district parliament of Neidenburg.[2]
After the Nazis took over power in Germany in 1933, his citizens involvement was prohibited and Maxin joined the oppositional old-Prussian Confessing Church in 1934. He became a member of the Brethren Council of Confessing Church and organized Lutheran youth camps and Church services on his farm, which caused permanent supervision by the Gestapo. [1][2][3]
In 1945 Maxin fled to Western Germany, where he died in Stade in 1960.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Andreas Kossert: Masuren. Ostpreussens vergessener Süden, 2001, p. 336.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Martin Jend, Helmut Kowalewski, Marc Patrik Plessa (Hg.): Festschrift für Bernhard Maxin zum 80. Geburtstag. Schriften der Genealogischen Arbeitsgemeinschaft Neidenburg und Ortelsburg Nr. 18, Seeheim-Malchen, 2008
- ↑ Hugo Linck: Der Kirchenkampf in Ostpreussen, 1933 bis 1945: Geschichte und Dokumentation. 1968, S. 139