Friedrich Mahling – Wikipedia

before-content-x4

Friedrich August Mahling (Born February 14, 1865 in Frankfurt am Main, † May 18, 1933 in Berlin) was a German theologian.

after-content-x4

Mahling attended the municipal high school in his hometown. After studying and promotion to the doctor of theology, he worked as head of the Hamburg city mission from 1892 and from 1904 as a pastor at the Lutherkirche in Frankfurt am Main. In 1909 he was appointed as an ordinary on the Chair of Practical Theology at the University of Berlin, which he held for 24 years until he was emeritus in March 1933. At times he performed the function of the dean of the theological faculty.
Since 1909, also member of the “Central Committee of the Inner Mission”, he operated a leader in the field of alcohol fighting, criminal care and sexual ethics. He found his final resting place at the Südwestkirchhof Stahnsdorf.

Friedrich Mahling married the pastor daughter Emilie Wilhelmine Ida Amalie Palmer on November 3, 1892 (born December 11, 1872 in Geinsheim in Hesse) [first] . Came from this marriage

  • Marie Magdalena Elisabeth (born September 1, 1893 in Hamburg, † October 30, 1981 Berlin-Schöneberg) [2] ;
  • Walther Friedrich Otto (born September 28, 1895 in Hamburg, † September 4, 1896 in Hamburg) [3]
  • Johanna Margarethe Hildegard Mahling (Born August 16, 1895 in Hamburg, † May 26, 1982 in Öschelbronn) [4] , Doctor and anthroposophin, since 1926 in Berlin, temporarily in southern Germany during the war [5] .
  • Theodor Eberhard Friedrich Mahling (* 2. August 1899 in Hamburg [6] ; † 1945), musicologist [7] and anthroposopher. Dr. Friedrich Mahling was a professor at the Berlin University of Music in 1934 [8] and head of the press and cultural office of the Reich Music Chamber. He lost this position in June 1935 for “cultural -political unreliability”, but continued to teach at the University of Music in Berlin, where Reich Education Minister Rust had granted him the extraordinary professor title [9] . He was a member of the anthroposophical society [ten] . After Peter Staudenmaier [11] Had Mahling had been active in National Socialist cultural policy since 1932 and joined the NSDAP in 1933. After his discharge, Mahling protested at Goebbels and explained his agreement with the goals and ideals of the 3rd Reich. In May 1936 he was “relieved” by the party authorities and was appointed professor of music at the Music University of Music in Berlin a month later. He remained a party member (at least still in February 1943) and continued to receive shiny assessments from his superiors [twelfth] .
  • Contributions to the history of the development of the inner mission with a special relationship on Hamburg. Commemorative publication for the 50th anniversary celebration of the Hamburg Association of Inner Mission. Gräfe in Commission, Hamburg 1898, ( online ).
  • As editor: Johann Hinrich Wichern: Collected Writings. Band 3: Principle of inner mission. The most important essays, lectures and treatises on questions and tasks of the inner mission. Agency of the Rauhen Haus, Hamburg 1902, ( Digitized ).
  • Problems of modern women’s question. Agency of the Rauhen Haus, Hamburg 1907, ( Digitized ).
  • Johann Hinrich Wichern, the man of the church and the man of the people. Speech. In: The Wichern celebrations. Agency of the Rauhen Haus, Hamburg 1908, pp. 10–30, ( online ).
  • Life interface and life affirmation in a modern view and New Testament lighting (= Biblical time and arguments. To be. 8, H. 2/3, ZDB-ID 845774-8 ). Runge, Berlin-Lichterfelde 1912.
  • The psyche of young people and the religious moment in youth care (= The years of development. 7, ZDB-ID 539189-1 ). Eger, Leipzig 1913.
  • Wages and punishment in their relationship to religion and morality according to New Testament view (= Biblical time and arguments. Ser. 9, H. 2/3). Runge, Berlin-Lichterfelde 1913.
  • The world of thought of the educated. Problem and tasks. Agency of the Rauhen Haus, Hamburg 1914.
  • Religious and national rebirth. Agency of the Rauhen Haus, Hamburg 1915, ( Digitized ).
  • The current state of morality. In: Quarterly font for inner mission. Volume 36, No. 1, 1916, (also as a special impression. Bertelsmann, Gütersloh 1916).
  • Social aspects in religious education and religious instruction. At the same time an introduction to the social world of thoughts of the new and the Old Testament (= Friedrich Mann’s educational magazine. 933, ZDB-ID 505477-1 = Treatises for the care of Protestant education and teaching. 4). Beyer, Langensalza 1923.
  • The moral requirements of welfare care (= The welfare care in individual representations. first, ZDB-ID 638032-3 ). Heymann, Berlin 1925.
  • As a publisher with August Nebe and Carl Mirbt: On the memory of August Hermann Franckes. For his two hundred years of death on June 8, 1927. Bookstore of the orphanage, Hall 1927, ( Digitized ).
  • The Protestant worldview and alcoholism (= The alcohol question in religion. 3, 2, ZDB-ID 537888-6 ). Neuland-Verlag, Berlin 1928.
  • Short homiletic introductions to the old church epistles of the Eisenach Perikopen rows (= Homiletic auxiliary books. 2, ZDB-ID 539061-8 ). Brönner, Frankfurt am Main 1929.
  • The will to the Volkskirche. In: Wilhelm Koepp (ed.): Reinhold-Seeberg-Festschrift. Band 2: On the practice of Christianity. A. Deichert, Leipzig 1929, pp. 75-104.
  • Short homiletic introductions to the old church gospels (= Homiletic auxiliary books. 8). Brönner, Frankfurt am Main 1931.
  • The inner mission. 2 volumes. Bertelsmann, Gütersloh 1935–1937.
  • Wilhelm Lütgert: Wichern and meal. Speech gave to D. Friedrich Mahling, held in the auditorium of the Berlin University on June 29, 1933. In: Journal of Systematic Theology. Band 11, 1934, S. 171–187.
  • Kurt Galling (ed.): Religion in history and present. Band 4: Kop – O. 3rd, completely new edition, unabridged study edition. Mohr, Tübingen 1986, ISBN 3-16-145098-1, p. 605.
  1. State Archives Hamburg, registry office Hamburg 22, marriage register 1892, No. 350
  2. State Archives Hamburg, registry office Hamburg 22, birth register 1893, No. 1486
  3. State Archives Hamburg, registry office Hamburg 22, birth register 1895, No. 1486; Sterber Register 1896, No. 808
  4. State Archives Hamburg, registry office Hamburg 22, birth register 1897, No. 1622
  5. In detail: Lola Jaerschky: Hildegard Mahling. In: Messages from anthroposophical work in Germany. Jg. 36, 1982, pp. 239–240. Among other things, Hildegard Mahling had reached the dismissal of the author L. Jaerschky from the concentration camp custody. See also: Ernst Weißert: Letter to a Berlin Eurythmist on her 75th birthday. In: Educational art. Bd. 41, Nr. 12, 1977, S. 647–648, ( online ).
  6. State Archives Hamburg, registry office Hamburg 22, birth register 1899 Volume 03, No. 1379
  7. Synesthesia. In: Austria music lexicon. Austrian Academy of Sciences, accessed on January 8, 2020 .
  8. Marc Brüninghaus: Entertainment music in the Third Reich. Diplomica, Hamburg 2010, ISBN 978-3-8366-8813-0, p. 29, (partial view on Google Books).
  9. Axel Jockwer: Entertainment music in the Third Reich. Dissertation Konstanz 2004.
  10. Uwe Werner: Anthroposophers in the time of National Socialism. (1933-1945). Oldenbourg, Munich 1999, ISBN 3-486-56362-9, p. 155 note 420, (partly on Google Books).
  11. Peter Staudenmaier: Between Occultism and Nazism. Anthroposophy and the Politics of Race in the Fascist Era (= Aries Book Series. 17). Brill, suffering, etc. 2014, ISBN 978-90-04-26407-6, pp. 153–154 (partial view in Google Books).
  12. In -depth Peter Staudenmaier: Between Occultism and Fascism: Anthroposophy and the Politics of Race and Nation in Germany and Italy, 1900–1945 . Dissertation Cornell University 2010, p. 204, note 87 and 88.

after-content-x4