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'''Walter Ferber''' (24 December 1907 - 13 April 1996) was a ] opinion journalist. He advocated a ]-influenced ] and was committed to the reconstruction of the ] after the ]. Ferber understood federalism to be a universal social principle that applied to all areas of human community life.<ref>Undine Ruge: ''Die Erfindung des „Europa der Regionen“. Kritische Ideengeschichte eines konservativen Konzepts''. Campus, Frankfurt/Main 2003, S. 159.</ref>
'''Walter Ferber''' (24 December 1907 - 13 April 1996) was a ] opinion journalist.


== Life and career == == Life and career ==
Ferber was born in ] as the ninth of 14 children of the miner Franz Ferber (1872–1950) and the seamstress Maria Ferber, née Weimer (1874–1952). He attended elementary school and a secondary school from 1914 to 1924, which he left to begin a commercial apprenticeship. In his free time he joined the circles around the "Ruhr chaplain" ] and the federalist ] and appeared at Center Party meetings from 1925/26. After his apprenticeship he went on a journey and worked, among other places, in a ball bearing factory in ]. At the same time, he continued his ] education in history, ], ] and ], spending most of his winters in Berlin, where he also came into contact with ].
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== Citations and bibliography == == Citations and bibliography ==

Revision as of 01:17, 26 December 2024

German opinion journalist (1907—1996
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Walter Ferber
Born24 December 1907
Gelsenkirchen, Germany
Died13 April 1996(1996-04-13) (aged 88)
Lungern, Switzerland

Walter Ferber (24 December 1907 - 13 April 1996) was a German opinion journalist. He advocated a Christianity-influenced federalism and was committed to the reconstruction of the German Centre Party after the Second World War. Ferber understood federalism to be a universal social principle that applied to all areas of human community life.

Life and career

Ferber was born in Erle as the ninth of 14 children of the miner Franz Ferber (1872–1950) and the seamstress Maria Ferber, née Weimer (1874–1952). He attended elementary school and a secondary school from 1914 to 1924, which he left to begin a commercial apprenticeship. In his free time he joined the circles around the "Ruhr chaplain" Carl Klinkhammer and the federalist Benedikt Schmittmann and appeared at Center Party meetings from 1925/26. After his apprenticeship he went on a journey and worked, among other places, in a ball bearing factory in Schweinfurt. At the same time, he continued his autodidactical education in history, sociology, pedagogy and political science, spending most of his winters in Berlin, where he also came into contact with Eduard Spranger.

Citations and bibliography

  • Als Walter Feuerbach: 55 Monate Dachau. Ein Tatsachenbericht. 1. und 2. Auflage. Rex-Verlag, Luzern 1945. Nachdruck mit Vorwort von Barbara Distel: 55 Monate Dachau. Ein Tatsachenbericht. Donat, Bremen 1993, ISBN 3-924444-28-5.
  • Als Walter Feuerbach: Grosspreussen oder Deutscher Bund? Ein Beitrag zur Umerziehung der deutschen Katholiken. Paulusdruckerei, Freiburg 1945.
  • Der Föderalismus. 1. Auflage in: Abendländische Reihe 5, Naumann, Augsburg 1946, 2., erweiterte Auflage ebd. 1948.
  • Die Vorgeschichte der N. S. D. A. P. in Österreich. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichtsrevision. Merk, Konstanz 1954.
  • Geist und Politik in Österreich. Die Intelligenz und der Nationalsozialismus vor dem Anschluß. Merk, Konstanz 1955.
  • Kleine Geschichte der katholischen Bewegung. Echter Verlag, Würzburg 1959.
  • Ludwig Windthorst. Der große deutsche Katholikenführer. 1. Auflage. Winfried-Werk, Augsburg 1962.
  • Deutsche Reformkatholiken. Zürich 1980.
  • Föderalistische Hefte. 1948–1950; eine Auswahl, herausgegeben, eingeleitet und mit einem Anhang versehen von J. Ch. Traut und Tonio Gas. 1. Auflage. Nomos-Verl.-Ges, Baden-Baden 1996, ISBN 3-7890-4549-7.
  • Rafael Ferber: Aufrechter Gang. Leben und Werk des Föderalismustheoretikers Walter Ferber (1907–1996). In: Schweizer Monatshefte 77 (1997), H. 5, S. 31–34. doi:10.5169/seals-165747.
  • Rafael Ferber: Pius XII. und die Geistlichen im KZ Dachau. In: Schweizerische Kirchenzeitung 3 (2022), S. 52–53. doi:10.5167/uzh-215750.
  • Jürgen Klöckler: Abendland – Alpenland – Alemannien: Frankreich und die Neugliederungsdiskussion in Südwestdeutschland 1945–1947. Oldenbourg, München 1998, ISBN 3-486-56345-9 (Volltext digital verfügbar).

References

  1. Undine Ruge: Die Erfindung des „Europa der Regionen“. Kritische Ideengeschichte eines konservativen Konzepts. Campus, Frankfurt/Main 2003, S. 159.

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