Christoph Albert Kurz

Christoph Albert Kurz (born 22 March 1806 in Bern - died 3 April 1864 in Bern) was a Swiss politician who served as the third mayor of Bern.

Christoph Albert Kurz
3rd Mayor of Bern
In office
1864–1864
Preceded byFriedrich Ludwig von Effinger
Succeeded byOtto von Büren
Member of the Grand Council of Bern
In office
1842–1864
Member of the Ständerat
In office
1854–1864
Personal details
Born(1806-03-22)22 March 1806
Bern, Switzerland
Died3 April 1864(1864-04-03) (aged 58)
Bern, Switzerland
Political partyConservative
Alma materAcademy of Bern

Personal life

Christoph Albert Kurz studied rights at the Bern Academy.

Political career

He was working in Bern in 1832 as a lawyer. In 1838 he became a judge, but after the takeover of the Radical Party (forerunner of today's Liberal Democratic Party) in the canton of Bern in 1846, he was relieved of his duties.

He was a member of the Grand Council of Bern from 1842 to 1864 and was seven times president of the Grand Council. He had a part in the formation of the Bernese coalition government of conservatives and radicals in 1854. And he was a member of the Ständerat (first chamber of the federal parliament) from 1854 to 1864. He became the editor of the Zeitschrift für Vaterland Recht in 1858 and he made numerous publications.[1]

Kurz was elected Mayor of Bern in 1864, but died in office the same year. He was the first Mayor of Bern to die in office.

gollark: It selects for it because it's a working strategy, and politicians who say vague meaningless emotive things do better than hypothetical ones who try and just say facts.
gollark: Politicians can just go around spouting meaningless slogans and people vote for them. The system selects for it.
gollark: I spent a while rephrasing this, but whatever: ultimately, the stupid persuasive things politicians go around doing to get votes *do work* on people.
gollark: I mean, this looks like partly blaming issues with democracy on markets on the somewhat-biased-media thing.
gollark: Wait, you sort of did though.> effective democracy and market systems require rational operation of the general population. this rational operation is inhibited via a mechanism known as "manufacturing consent"

See also

Preceded by
Friedrich Ludwig von Effinger
Mayor of Bern, Switzerland
1864
Succeeded by
Otto von Büren

References

  1. "Christoph Albert Kurz". Christoph Zürcher. 6 November 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.