- Andreas Joseph Hofmann
Andreas Joseph Hofmann (
July 14 ,1752 -September 6 ,1849 cite news |first=Jörg |last=Schweigard |title=Ein Leben für die Republik |url=http://www.zeit.de/2002/22/200222_a-hofman_xml |work=Die Zeit |publisher= |id=ISSN|0044-2070 |pages= |page= |date=22/2002 |accessdate=2007-01-17 |language=German |quote= ] ) was a German philosopher and revolutionary active in theRepublic of Mainz . As Chairman of the Rhenish-German National Convention, the earliest parliament in Germany based on the principle ofpopular sovereignty , he proclaimed the firstrepublic an state in Germany, the "Rhenish-German Free State", onMarch 18 ,1793 . A strong supporter of theFrench Revolution , he argued for an accession of all German territory west of theRhine toFrance and served in the administration of the departmentMont-Tonnerre under theFrench Directory and theFrench Consulate .Early life
Hofmann was born in
Zell am Main nearWürzburg as son of a surgeon [cite book |last=Schweigard |first=Jörg |title=Die Liebe zur Freiheit ruft uns an den Rhein |year=2005 |publisher=Casimir Katz Verlag |location=Gernsbach |isbn=3-925825-89-4|pages=p. 147|language=German] . After the early death of his parents, he was educated by his uncle Franz Xaver Fahrmann, professor ofmoral theology at theUniversity of Würzburg . After a year at aJesuit seminary, Hofmann studied law at theUniversity of Mainz and at the University of Würzburg. [Schweigard, "Die Liebe zur Freiheit", p. 146]Revolutionary in Mainz
After some years at the
Reichshofrat inVienna , Hofmann was forced to leave due to his critical publications and returned to Mainz in 1784, where he was hired at the University during the progressive reforms by ElectorFriedrich Karl von Erthal . He taughtHistory of Philosophy until 1791, when he became chair ofnatural justice . Hofmann was a liberal and progressive thinker (for instance, he supported the use of German instead ofLatin in University lectures and in churchcite book |last=May |first=Georg |editor= |others= |title=Das Recht des Gottesdienstes in der Diözese Mainz zur Zeit von BischofJoseph Ludwig Colmar (1802-1818) |year=1987 |publisher=John Benjamins |language=German |isbn=9060322894 |pages=pp. 517-518] ). However, he became disillusioned with the pace of the reforms in Mainz [cite book |last=Rowe |first=Michael |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=From Reich to State: The Rhineland in the Revolutionary Age, 1780-1830 |year=2003 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location= |isbn=0521824435 |pages=p. 61 ] and welcomed theFrench Revolution from the start. As he declared his support openly in his lectures, he was soon spied on by the Mainz authorities. [Schweigard, "Die Liebe zur Freiheit", p. 148] However, before the investigation of his activities had progressed beyond the questioning of his students, the archbishop and his court fled from the advancing French troops under General Custine, who arrived in Mainz onOctober 21 ,1792 .cite book |last=Blanning |first=T. C. W. |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Reform and Revolution in Mainz 1743-1803 |year=1974 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=London |isbn=0521204186 |pages=p. 275]Two days later, Hofmann helped found the Mainz
Jacobin club and became one of its most active members. A popular and powerful orator, he criticised both the old regime of the Elector and the French military government in his speeches, which were especially supported by the more radical students. [Schweigard, "Die Liebe zur Freiheit", p. 254] Hofmann lectured in the rural areas of the French occupied territory,cite encyclopedia | last = Leser | first = Emanuel | encyclopedia =Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie | title = Hofmann, Andreas Joseph | url = http://mdz.bib-bvb.de/digbib/lexika/adb/images/adb012/@ebt-link?target=idmatch(entityref,adb0120627) | accessdate = 2007-01-17 | volume = 12 | pages = pp. 625-626 de icon] calling for support of the general elections in February and March 1793 which he helped organize. [Schweigard, "Die Liebe zur Freiheit", p. 151] He was elected into the Rhenish-German National Convention as a representative of Mainz and became its president. OnMarch 18 ,1793 , Hofmann declared theRhenish-German Free State from the balcony of the Deutschhaus.French government official
When the republic ended after the
Siege of Mainz , Hofmann was able to leave the city with the retreating French troops and went into exile inParis , where he headed a society of exiled Mainz republicans, the "Societé des Refugiés Mayençais". [Schweigard, "Die Liebe zur Freiheit", p. 151] After a short period in the military, he was sent to London on a military espionage mission. However, he was recognized and reported to the authorities by his former studentKlemens Wenzel von Metternich . After his flight and subsequent return toParis , he was made chief of the "bureau des étrangers" by theFrench Directory . In his 1795 essay "Sur les nouvelles limites de la republique française", he argued for theRhine as natural Eastern border of France. When the incorporation of areas west of the Rhine into France had become a reality with theTreaty of Campo Formio , Hofmann became part of the government of the new "département"Mont-Tonnerre and worked as its superior tax officer from 1797-1803. [Schweigard, "Die Liebe zur Freiheit", p. 153]After Napoleon's defeat and the return of Mainz to German control, Hofmann moved to his wife's estates in Winkel, where he spent the rest of his life until his death in September 1849.
Works
*"Der Aristokraten-Katechismus. Ein wunderschönes Büchlein", Mainz 1792
References
Persondata
NAME=Hofmann, Andreas Joseph
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=German philosopher and revolutionary
DATE OF BIRTH=July 14 ,1752
PLACE OF BIRTH=Zell am Main , nearWürzburg ,Germany
DATE OF DEATH=September 6 ,1849
PLACE OF DEATH=Winkel
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