Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Hugo Graf von und zu Lerchenfeld auf Köfering und Schönberg

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Name
  
Hugo von

Nationality
  
German

Role
  
Politician


Occupation
  
Civil servant

Party
  
Bavarian People\'s Party

Religion
  
Roman Catholic

Succeeded by
  
Eugen von Knilling

Born
  
21 August 1871 Kofering (
1871-08-21
)

Political party
  
Bavarian People\'s Party

Died
  
April 13, 1944, Munich, Germany

Preceded by
  
Gustav Ritter von Kahr

Hugo Max Graf von und zu Lerchenfeld auf Köfering und Schönberg (21 August 1871 in Köfering – 13 April 1944 in Munich), known as Graf von Lerchenfeld-Köfering and as Lerchenfeld for short, was a conservative politician and the Prime Minister of Bavaria from 1921 to 1922. He belonged to the Bavarian People's Party, a conservative, separatist party in Bavaria, formed after the First World War.

Life

Hugo Graf von und zu Lerchenfeld was born 1871 in Köfering as the son of Ludwig Graf von und zu Lerchenfeld and Clara von Bray-Steinburg. He was married to Ethel Wyman, of New York.

He originally studied law, graduating in 1893. He was employed as a Bavarian government official from 1897 to 1914, later changing to the Imperial government, working as a civil administrator from 1915 to 1918 in the formerly Russian part of Poland, after this in the German foreign department. After the first world war, he became the federal representative of the German government in the state of Hessen.

Hugo Lerchenfeld was appointed as Bavarian prime minister on 21 September 1921, succeeding Gustav Ritter von Kahr who had resigned earlier. He was chosen by a coalition of conservative parties. He was not a high ranking party official at this stage but rather a respected civil administrator, with a good relationship to the SPD too. He managed during his time in office to largely defuse the crisis caused through Bavarian attempts to break free of the German republic and the federal governments attempts to gain more control over state politics. He also additionally held the post of Minister of Justice.

He faced a coalition crisis in July 1922 due to renewed disputes with the federal government, losing much of his support in his own party but managed to solve the crisis once more. Eventually, for this reason, he had to resign from office on 2 November 1922, being accused of not having achieved enough for Bavaria in the negotiations.

Lerchenfeld continued to serve as a civil servant in the German administration after this, as German ambassador to Austria from 1926 to 1931 and then being involved in legal negotiations with Belgium in 1931.

Graf, as in the name of Hugo Graf von und zu Lerchenfeld, is not a name but a noble title, known in English as count.

References

Hugo Graf von und zu Lerchenfeld auf Köfering und Schönberg Wikipedia