Heinrich Brning

font size="+1">Heinrich Brning
style="background:#efefef;" align="center" colspan="2" | 200px
align="left" | Order: 21st Chancellor of Germany
align="left" | Term of Office: March 30, 1930 - October 7, 1931
align="left" | Predecessor: Hermann Mller
align="left" | Successor: Franz von Papen
align="left" | Date of Birth: November 26, 1885
align="left" | Date of Death: March 30, 1970
align="left" | Political Party: Catholic Center Party
align="left" | Profession: economist
Dr. Heinrich Brning (November 26, 1885March 30, 1970) was a German politician who was Chancellor of Germany. Born in Mnster in Westphalia, he studied history, law and national economy at various German universities and the London School of Economics before serving in the army in World War I as a machine gunner, receiving rank as an officer. In 1925 he was elected to the Reichstag, the German Parliament, in which he represented Breslau, and in 1929, he became head of the Centre Party, belonging to its right wing. Recognized for his financial acumen, he was appointed Chancellor of Germany on March 29, 1930, after the collapse of Social Democrat Hermann Mller's coalition government in an effort to remedy the economic crisis caused by the Great Depression. Within a month, however, his remedy to the dire situation -- increased taxes and severe budget cuts -- had been rejected by the Reichstag and were only implemented in the summer, when President Paul von Hindenburg began ruling by decree based on Article 48 of the Weimar constitution, circumventing Parliament. The measures were unsuccessful, and when negotiations over rearmament failed, Brning resigned his position as Chancellor on May 30, 1932. He was briefly succeeded by Franz von Papen, a member of his party's own right wing, before Adolf Hitler became Chancellor on January 30, 1933. Brning fled Germany in 1934 to escape Hitler's political purges. He settled in the United Kingdom and later the United States, where he taught at Harvard University's School of Business Administration. He returned to Germany in 1952 and, not having been able to continue a political career, died in the United States in 1970. In exile, he wrote "Memoirs 1918 - 1934".

Brnings First Government, March 1930 - October 1931

Changes
  • May 3, 1930 - Bredt resigns as Justice Minister. He is succeeded by acting Minister. Curt Jol
  • June 26, 1930 - Dietrich succeeds Moldenhauer as Finance Minister. Dietrich is succeeded as Economics Minister by acting Minister Ernst Trendelenburg.
  • October 1, 1930 - With the evacuation of the Rhineland by the Allies, Treviranus becomes Minister without Portfolio.

Brning's Second Cabinet, October 1931 - May 1932

Changes Hermann Mller>
idth="40%"|Chancellor of Germany
1930–1932
width="30%"|Succeeded by:
Franz von Papen
receded by:
Julius Curtius
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1931–1932
Succeeded by:
Konstantin von Neurath
Brning, Heinrich Brning, Heinrich Brning, Heinrich Brning, Heinrich

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
japanese baseball hall of fame
johann joachim eschenburg
esposizione universale roma
charles james mathews
cryotronics
jeane kirkpatrick
cryotron
immortal woman he
chester bowles
transformation problem
royal uncle cao
robert dundas, 2nd viscount melville
convention parliament
iron crutch li
lan caihe
monarchist league
necropolis
henry dundas, 3rd viscount melville
anamorphosis
samuel whitbread
samuel whitbread (brewer)
history of parliamentarism
battle of puebla
vinson massif
sturgeon
l dongbin
xie jun
exterior derivative
johannes hevelius
appeal to spite
little crow (disambiguation)
virgin mary
cutting off the nose to spite the face
tech model railroad club
musk
vosges mountains
charlotte corday
ground jay
cholula
walter johnson
helicoplacus
humboldt
freezing rain
nutcracker (bird)