Werner von Melle

Werner von Melle (18 October 1853 – 18 February 1937) was a mayor and senator of Hamburg,[1][2] as well as a jurist.[3] Melle, who held multiple doctorates, also served on the first board of trustees for the Hamburg Scientific Foundation.[4]

Werner von Melle
Werner von Melle in Hamburg senator's ornate, 1905
Second Mayor of Hamburg
In office
1 January 1914  31 December 1914
Preceded byMax Predöhl
Succeeded byAugust Schröder
In office
1 January 1917  12 November 1917
Preceded byMax Predöhl
Succeeded byAugust Schröder
First Mayor of Hamburg and
President of the Hamburg Senate
In office
1 January 1915  31 December 1915
Preceded byMax Predöhl
Succeeded byAugust Schröder
In office
1 January 1918  12 November 1918
Preceded byMax Predöhl
Succeeded bySoldiers' and Workers' Council
In office
(acting only)
18 November 1918  27 March 1919
Preceded bySoldiers' and Workers' Council
Succeeded byhimself (reëlected)
In office
31 March 1919  31 December 1919
Preceded byhimself (reëlected)
Succeeded byFriedrich Sthamer
Personal details
Born18 October 1853
Hamburg
Died18 February 1937 (1937-02-19) (aged 83)
Hamburg
NationalityGerman
Political partyNonpartisan
Alma materGeorgia Augusta

Family

Melle was the son of Emil von Melle, a merchant who later became a senator of Hamburg and eventually sat in the senate of the North German Confederation. Melle's mother, Maria Geffcken, whom his father married in 1850, was the daughter of Senator Henry Geffcken. After marrying Emmy Kaemmerer, the daughter of Georg Heinrich Kaemmerer, a businessman and member of the Hamburg Parliament, in 1880, Melle fathered three daughters.

Career

Melle studied law at the Georgia Augusta University in Göttingen and became a lawyer in Hamburg in 1876, also writing articles for the newspaper Hamburgischer Correspondent. In 1886, he became a full-time journalist with Hamburger Nachrichten. In 1891 he joined the executive board of Hamburg's senior school authority (Oberschulbehörde) and was appointed syndic attorney of the city-state of Hamburg.

In 1900 the Hamburg Parliament elected Melle as fellow senator into the Senate of Hamburg, the executive government of the city-state. Although elected for a life-term, he remained senator only until 1921. For the calendar years 1914 and 1917 the fellow senators elected him deputy mayor (Second Mayor of Hamburg).[5] Then the fellow senators elected him First Mayor of Hamburg, thus head of state and of government (president of the senate) – though under the auspices of a primus inter pares regulation – for the full calendar years 1915, 1918 and for the term 31 March to 31 December 1919.

On 12 November 1918 the Hamburg revolutionary Soldiers' and Workers' Council deposed the Senate of Hamburg, but reappointed the senators as acting administration only on 18 November. In this function Melle continued as acting First Mayor beyond his election term, actually ending on 31 December 1918, until the complete senate resigned on 27 March 1919, thus ending the life-term mandates under the old 1860 constitution.

On 30 March 1919 the Hamburg Parliament, first time elected under equal suffrage by men and women of Hamburg, elected a new senate, into which Melle and six more pre-war senators were reëlected, besides eleven new senators. On 31 March 1919 the fellow senators elected Melle again their president and First Mayor of Hamburg. His predecessor as First Mayor was Max Predöhl (in 1914 and in 1917), his successors were Carl August Schröder in 1916 and Friedrich Sthamer in 1920.

Awards and honors

  • 1917 Honorary Doctor of Theology Faculty of the University of Göttingen
  • 1921 Rector magnificus honoris causa of the University of Hamburg[4]
  • 1928 Honorary Doctor of Political Sciences, University of Hamburg
  • Asteroid 869 Mellena, discovered by astronomer Richard Schorr at the Hamburg Observatory in the Bergedorf borough on 9 May 1917, was named in his honor. The naming was mentioned in The Names of the Minor Planets by Paul Herget in 1955 (H 85).[6]

Works

  • Die Entwicklung des öffentlichen Armenwesen in Hamburg, Hamburg 1883.
  • Gustav Heinrich Kirchenpauer. Ein Lebens- und Zeitbild, Hamburg 1888.
  • Das Hamburgische Staatsrecht, Hamburg 1891.
  • Dreißig Jahre Hamburger Wissenschaft, 1891–1921. Rückblicke und persönliche Erinnerungen, 2 Bände, Hamburg 1923.
  • Jugenderinnerungen, Hamburg 1928.
gollark: According to xkcd, keeping updated would only require 5 printers worth of throughput, which is not very much in terms of bitrate.
gollark: I mean, it's probably way more complicated, but basically you can't send information faster than light that way.
gollark: Anyway, my knowledge of this is not very detailed, but IIRC quantum entanglement means that if you observe one particle the other one collapses into another state, or something like that, and you don't control which state is picked, so you can't send any data.
gollark: Yes. I think they might strip a bunch of the images, but with *no* media, just text content, it's 15GB.
gollark: You can't use quantum entanglement to actually transmit any data.

References

  1. "The History of the University of Hamburg". University of Hamburg. 15 May 2009. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  2. "The University of Hamburg". International Max Planck Research School. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  3. http://d-nb.info/gnd/116875356
  4. "Die Mitglieder des ersten Kuratoriums 1907". Hamburgischen Wissenschaftlichen Stiftung. Retrieved 23 November 2011.
  5. The election as First and Second Mayor of Hamburg followed a rotation in office.
  6. Schmadel, Lutz D. (2007). "(869) Mellena". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. p. 79. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-29925-7_870. ISBN 978-3-540-00238-3.
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