Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang

Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang

Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang (1818 - 1890), a social reformer, was one of the founders of the Austrian Christian Social Party, and the founder of the Austrian Christian Social Movement. He was born in Legnica, Poland, moved to Berlin in the 1850s, and to Austria in 1864. In 1875, he became editor of the Catholic newspaper "The Native Country." This newspaper was very influential, helping to establish the 40-hour work week and national health insurance for workers. As a social reformer, he was a precursor of the Austrian authoritarian state of the 1930s; he was quoted in the regime's propaganda by its leader, chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss.

Vogelsang was the initiator of a great and successful Christian people’s movement in Austria an in some neighboring countries. Since some former friends of the anti-Semitic people’s movement of Carl Schoenerer (for example the famous Karl Lueger) joined Vogelsang, some authors call Vogelsang an Anti-Semite, too. But Vogelsang said as well that Christians not only should pray to God, but do good works for the poor so as to be God's people on the side of the Jews, His first chosen and forever beloved people.

Some of Vogelsang's pronouncedly disfavourable remarks about Jews in general were included by his admirer, the austrian fascist and later European federalist Eugen Kogon, in a volume entitled "Katholisch-konservatives Erbgut" which called for the establishment of a catholic Third Reich and was edited by the Benedictine abbot of Maria Laach, Ildefons Herwegen, in 1934, to be distributed to a large share of catholic households in Germany, Austria and Switzerland by the Herder publishing house. This choice of texts was certainly biased and could not be taken as representative of Vogelsang's thought.

While many of the people who gathered into Vogelsang's movement and some successors like Anton Orel staid being anti-Semitic, an important group of followers like Karl Lugmayer, Irene Harand, Pater Cyrill Fischer, Ernst Karl Winter (Sociologist and Vice-mayor of Vienna, 1938 emigrated to USA), Alfred Missong and Hildegard Burjan, correctly understood the aim of the thought of Vogelsang. They, like some other Christians, strained to help the poor and to establish new social laws, but they also tried to change people's minds and to help persecuted Jews, before and during Nazi period

(See: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_von_Vogelsang)


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang — Karl von Vogelsang Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang (* 3. September 1818 in Liegnitz (heute Legnica, Polen), Schlesien; † 8. November 1890 in Wien) war ein katholischer Publizist, Politiker und …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Karl von Vogelsang — Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang (* 3. September 1818 in Liegnitz (heute Legnica, Polen), Schlesien; † 8. November 1890 in Wien) war ein katholischer Publizist, Politiker und Sozialreformer …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Vogelsang, Karl, Freiherr (baron) von — ▪ German Roman Catholic social reformer born Sept. 3, 1818, Liegnitz, Ger. [now Legnica, Pol.] died Nov. 8, 1890, Vienna       Roman Catholic social reformer whose writings helped shape the ideas and actions of the Austrian Christian Social Party …   Universalium

  • Vogelsang — may refer to:*Vogelsang, Brandenburg, a municipality in the Oder Spree district, Brandenburg, Germany *Karl Freiherr von Vogelsang, Social reformer *Ordensburg Vogelsang, former national socialist elite school …   Wikipedia

  • Vogelsang — Vogelsang,   Karl Freiherr von, katholischer Sozialpolitiker, * Liegnitz 3. 9. 1818, ✝ Wien 8. 11. 1890; verkehrte in Berlin mit E. W. von Ketteler, in München mit dem Kreis um J. J. Görres, konvertierte unter dem Eindruck dieser Bekanntschaften… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Liste der Straßennamen von Wien/Margareten — Straßen in Wien I. Innere Stadt | II. Leopoldstadt | III. Landstraße | IV. Wieden | V. Margareten | VI. Mariahilf | VII. N …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Liste der Gouverneure von Luxemburg — 1354 wird die Grafschaft Luxemburg von Kaiser Karl IV. zum Herzogtum erhoben. Erster Herzog wird Wenzel I.. Mit dem Tod Kaiser Sigismunds 1437 stirbt die Hauptlinie des Hauses Luxemburg aus, womit die Vorherrschaft im Reich endet. Im Jahr 1441… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Max von Hausen — Freiherr von Hausen Max Clemens Lothar Freiherr von Hausen (* 17. Dezember 1846 in Dresden; † 19. April 1922 ebenda) war Generaloberst der 3. Armee im Ersten Weltkrieg sowie Kriegsminister und Ministerpräsident des Königreiches Sachsen. Leben Als …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Massaker von Bad Wiessee — Als Röhm Putsch bezeichnete die Propaganda der Nationalsozialisten die Ereignisse um die Ermordung von Ernst Röhm, dem Stabschef der SA, im Juni / Juli 1934. Ermordet wurden außer SA Funktionären auch Gegner des Nationalsozialismus wie der… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Eduard von Taaffe — Eduard Graf Taaffe Eduard Graf Taaffe (* 24. Februar 1833 in Wien; † 29. November 1895 in Ellischau, Böhmen) war österreichischer Staatsmann, konservativer Sozialreformer sowie Landespräsident in Salzburg, Oberösterreich und Tirol. Seine Familie… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”