Max Predöhl

Max Predöhl

Max Predöhl in Hamburg senator's ornate, 1905
First Mayor of Hamburg and
President of the Hamburg Senate
In office
1 January 1910  31 December 1911
Preceded by Johann Heinrich Burchard
Succeeded by Johann Heinrich Burchard
In office
1 January 1914  31 December 1914
Preceded by Carl August Schröder
Succeeded by Werner von Melle
In office
1 January 1917  31 December 1917
Preceded by Carl August Schröder
Succeeded by Werner von Melle
Second Mayor of Hamburg
In office
13 September 1912  31 December 1913
Preceded by Carl August Schröder
Succeeded by Werner von Melle
In office
1 January 1916  31 December 1916
Preceded by Carl August Schröder
Succeeded by Werner von Melle
Personal details
Born 29 March 1854
Hamburg
Died 11 March 1923
Hamburg
Nationality Germany German
Political party Nonpartisan
Alma mater Leipzig
Religion Lutheranism

Max Garlieb August Predöhl (29 March 1854 in Hamburg 11 March 1923 in Hamburg) was a Hamburg lawyer and politician. He served as Senator and First Mayor of Hamburg (head of state and head of government).

The son of a Hamburg merchant, he obtained a doctorate in law in Leipzig in 1876, and worked as a barrister until 1893. He was also co-editor of the Handelsgerichtszeitung.[1]

On 26 June 1893, the Hamburg Parliament elected him to the life-long seat in the Senate vacated with the death of Otto Wilhelm Mönckeberg, and 1910–1911, 1914 and 1917, he served as First Mayor and President of the Senate. He was also Second Mayor in 1913 and 1916.

His political career ended in 1919, following the constitutional changes that abolished the legal privileges of the grand burghers.[2] Predöhl with the complete Senate of Hamburg, since 18 November 1918 as administration acting only, resigned on 27 March 1919. The Hamburg Parliament did not elect Predöhl into the next senate, unlike seven of his fellow senators.

He was married to Clara Amsinck, and his mother-in-law was a member of the Gossler family; both families were among the most prominent in Hamburg. His wife's family connections greatly advanced his social position.[3][4]

He was the father of the economist Andreas Predöhl, who became Rector of the University of Kiel.

Notes

  1. Gerrit Schmidt: Hamburger Anwaltschaft.
  2. Buehl: Aus der Alten Ratsstube, S 44.
  3. Predöhl, Andreas, Das Ende der Weltwirtschaftskrise, Reinbek, 1962
  4. Richard J. Evans, Death in Hamburg, 1987

References

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