- Franz Matt
Franz Matt (September 9, 1860 in
Offenbach an der Queich ,Palatinate ,Germany – August 4, 1929 inMunich ) was a Germanlawyer andpolitician who belonged to theBavarian People's Party (BVP). Following the revolution, he substantially defined and put throughBavaria n cultural and educational policy.Life
Franz Matt studied
law at theLudwig Maximilian University of Munich and at theUniversity of Leipzig . In Munich, he became a member of the Catholic fraternity, "Katholische Deutsche Studentenverbindung Aenania München", in the "Cartellverband der katholischen deutschen Studentenverbindungen " (or "Cartellverband", CV). Later, he also became a member of the fraternity, "Katholische Deutsche Studentenverbindung Markomannia Würzburg" in the CV. After he received his doctorate degree, he held several offices in the Bavarian civil service. As the Ministerial Director of the Interior Ministry for Cultural and School Affairs ("Ministerialdirektor des Staatsministeriums des Inneren für Kultur- und Schulangelegenheiten"), he experienced the overthrow of the Bavarian monarchy. Cooperation with the new Minister of Education and the Arts ("Kultusminister") of the Bavarian Republic,Johannes Hoffmann (SPD), appointed byKurt Eisner , appeared to be extremely difficult, since Franz Matt rejected Hoffman's school reforms.As a result, Matt became involved in the newly-founded Bavarian People's Party ("Bayerische Volkspartei" or BVP) and in 1920, after the resignation of Johannes Hoffmann as Prime Minister, he was named Minister of Education and the Arts by the new Prime Minister,
Gustav Ritter von Kahr (no party affiliation).In the period following, Franz Matt pursued a comprehensive course correction with regard to school policies and reformed the entire system of higher education in Bavaria. He developed the Bavarian policies regarding the arts and created the prerequisites for a revision of the relations between the state and the church. The
concordat with theHoly See from 1923, as well as the treaties with the established Evangelical churches in the state of Bavaria can be substantially traced back even today to the determined policies of Matt.During the
Beer Hall Putsch of November 9, 1923, Franz Matt was the only member of the Bavarian State cabinet not present. At the time of the putsch, he was having dinner with Cardinal Michael von Faulhaber, the Archbishop ofMunich and the Papal Nuncio, Monsignor Eugenio Pacelli, the future popePius XII . When informed of the coup, he organized a government-in-exile atRegensburg and called on the police, military, and other public servants to support the government, which effectively doomed the prospects of the putschists.Matt was engaged in the Catholic lay movement. He was honored with numerous awards and several honorary doctorates.
Literature
* Lydia Schmidt: "Kultusminister Franz Matt (1920-1926): Schul-, Kirchen- und Kunstpolitik in Bayern nach dem Umbruch von 1918 (Schriftenreihe zur bayerischen Landesgeschichte)", CH Beck 2000, ISBN 3406107079
External links
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* [http://www.gonschior.de/weimar/Bayern/Ueberblick_Reg.html State governments of Bavaria 1918-1933 ("in German")]
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