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March 20 in German History

March 20, 1239

Death of Hermann von Salza in Salerno, Italy (born in Thüringen, Germany ca. 1170). Salza was the Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights who led them in their crusade in Hungary and the crusade against the pagan Prussians. The Prussian crusade would lead to the establishment of Prussia as a German, Christian theocracy under the control of the Teutonic Knights and eventually as a German state.

March 20, 1568

Death of Albert in Tapiau, East Prussia (born in Ansbach, Germany). Albert was the last grand master of the Teutonic Knights. He was named grand master in 1510 and thus lord of East Prussia. In 1523 Martin Luther advised Albert to dissolve the Teutonic Order and to create in East Prussia into a hereditary dukedom. The Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V demanded the restoration of the Teutonic Order, but Albert resisted. He founded the University of Königsberg in 1544.

March 20, 1770

Birth of Friedrich Hölderlin in Lauffen, Germany. “Eins zu sein mit allem, was lebt, in seliger Selbstvergessenheit wiederzukehren ins All der Natur, das ist der Gedanken und Freuden, das ist die heilige Bergeshöh, der Ort der ewigen Ruhe.” Hölderlin studied at the theological seminary at the University of Tübingen and qualified for ordination as a Lutheran pastor, but was more drawn to Greek antiquity than to the ministry. He was befriended by Friedrich Schiller in 1793 and was much influenced by that great poet and thinker. Although Hölderlin is now recognized as one of the great German poets, he was little recognized in his own times. He earned a limited income through tutoring and during the later decades of his life suffered from insanity. Major works by Hölderlin include Hyperion (Vol. 1:1797, Vol. 2: 1799), and the fragment Der Tod des Empedokles. He wrote many individual poems including “Die Eichbäume”, “An den Äther”, “An die Parzen”, “Hyperions Schicksalslied” and “An die Deutschen”.

March 20, 1818

Birth of Johann Forkel in Göttingen, Germany. Forkel was the first biographer of Johann Sebastian Bach Über Johann Sebastian Bachs Leben, Kunst und Kunstwerke (1802).

March 20, 1828

Birth of Friedrich Karl in Berlin. Friedrich Karl was a Prussian prince, the nephew of Kaiser Wilhelm I. Friedrich Karl was trained as a soldier and rose to the rank of field marshal. During the Franco-Prussian War he commanded the 2nd Army who captured the cities of Metz and Orleans and disrupted the French Army of the Loire.

March 20, 1848

The Bavarian king, Ludwig I, abdicates. He is replaced by his son, Maximilian II.

March 20, 1870

Birth of Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck in Saarlouis, Germany. Von Lettow-Vorbeck commanded the German forces defending Germany’s African colonies. (Germany had colonies in Africa until the end of World War I but they were taken away by the treaty of Versailles.) He returned to Germany in 1919. When Hitler rose to power, von Lettow-Vorbeck tried unsuccessfully to organize a conservative opposition.

March 20, 1904

Birth of Walther M. Elsasser (1904-1991) in Mannheim, Germany. Elsasser was a physicist who studied at the University of Göttingen. He then taught at the universities at Frankfurt and Paris before immigrating to the U. S. and taking a position at the California Institute of Technology. Elsasser formulated the dynamo model of the earth’s structure to explain the earth’s magnetic field. Books by Elsasser include The Physical Foundation of Biology (1958), Atom and Organism (1966) and The Chief Abstractions of Biology (1975).

March 20, 1931

Death of Hermann Müller in Berlin, Germany. Müller was a member of the SPD who served twice as chancellor during the Weimar Republic. He was able to negotiate the Young Plan which somewhat reduced the reparations demanded by the Versailles Treaty. He resigned as chancellor in 1930, unable to deal with the disastrous effects of the depression.

March 20, 1944

Birth of Erwin Neher in Landsberg, Germany. Neher is a German biophysicist who won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1991 for research into basic cell function and the invention of the patch-clamp (a method of detecting small electrical currents passing through cell membranes.) Neher studied at the Technical University of Munich, the University of Wisconsin and the Max Planck Institute in Munich. Neher became the director of the Max Planck Institute–Göttingen in 1983.

March 20, 1948

The Soviet representative to the four power administrative council of Germany, Marshal Sokolowski) walks out of the council. This was the last meeting of the council.

March 20, 1949

The Junge Pioniere (Young Pioneers) is founded as a communist organization for children in Eastern Germany. The first President is Margot Feist.

March 20, 1956

Death of Wilhelm Miklas in Vienna, Austria. Miklas was the President of the Austrian Republic from 1928-1938. He resigned his office in 1938 when Austria united with Germany.

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