The Chemnitz Reichstag constituency was constituency No. 16 in the Kingdom of Saxony which returned a deputy to the German Reichstag. It was based upon what was the town of Chemnitz.
Following the North German Confederation Treaty the Kingdom of Saxony entered the North German Confederation in 1866.[1] As a consequence, the Kingdom returned Deputies to the Reichstag of the North German Confederation. After the founding of the German Empire on 18 January 1871, the deputies were returned to the Reichstag of the German Empire.[2] Following this Saxony participated in Reichstag elections from February 1867. Glauchau-Meerane returned a series of Reichstag Deputies until 1919 when the existing constituencies were scrapped.
The deputies elected for the Glauchau-Meerane Reichstag constituency were as follows:
North German Federation | |||
---|---|---|---|
Election | Reichstag Deputy | Party | |
February 1867* | 1st | Franz Xaver Rewitzer | German Progress Party |
August 1867 | 2nd | Friedrich Wilhelm Emil Försterling | Lasallean General German Workers' Association |
Reichstag of the German Empire | |||
1871 | 1st | Richard Ludwig | German Progress Party |
1874 | 2nd | Johann Most | Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany |
1877 | 3rd | Johann Most | Socialist Workers' Party of Germany |
1878 | 4th | Louis Wilhelm Vopel | National Liberal Party |
1881 | 5th | Bruno Geiser | Socialist Workers' Party of Germany |
1884 | 6th | Bruno Geiser | Socialist Workers' Party of Germany |
1887 | 7th | Ernst Otto Clauss | National Liberal Party |
1890 | 8th | Max Schippel | Socialist Workers' Party of Germany |
1893 | 9th | Max Schippel | Social Democratic Party of Germany |
1898 | 10th | Max Schippel | Social Democratic Party of Germany |
1903 | 11th | Max Schippel | Social Democratic Party of Germany |
1907 | 12th | Gustav Noske | Social Democratic Party of Germany |
1912 | 13th | Gustav Noske | Social Democratic Party of Germany |
References
edit- ^ Headlam, J. W. "Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire by J. W. Headlam". www.heritage-history.com. Heritage History. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
- ^ J. W., Headlam. "Bismarck and the Foundation of the German Empire by J. W. Headlam". www.heritage-history.com. Heritage History. Retrieved 19 August 2020.