| Hans Luther |
Chancellor of Germany
|
In office
January 15, 1925 – May
12, 1926 |
| Preceded by |
Wilhelm Marx |
| Succeeded by |
Wilhelm Marx |
|
| Born |
10 March 1879(1879--)
Berlin |
| Died |
11 May 1962 (aged 83)
Düsseldorf |
| Political party |
None |
| Profession |
lawyer |
Hans Luther (10 March 1879–11
May 1962) was a German politician and Chancellor of Germany.
Born in Berlin, Luther started in politics in 1907 by becoming
the town councillor in Magdeburg. He continued on becoming secretary of the German
Städtetag in 1913 and then mayor of Essen in 1918. In December 1922, Chancellor
Wilhelm Cuno appointed Luther minister of Food and Agriculture.
He kept his position in 1924 when Wilhelm Marx become
Chancellor. In 1925, he was appointed Chancellor of Germany, but Marx resumed office the following
year. Luther also briefly served as acting President of Germany following the death
of Friedrich Ebert.
In 1930, Hans Luther was made president of Reichsbank. Soon
after he was made German ambassador to the United
States, a position he held from 1933 to 1937, after which he
retired.
In 1933 Luther, lectured at the Columbia University
campus. Luther's speech stressed Hitler's "peaceful intentions" toward his European neighbors. Afterward, Nicholas Murray Butler, Columbia's president, held a reception in his honor.[1]
After the Second World War, Luther came out of retirement to become an advisor for the
new government.
He died in Düsseldorf.
Hans Luther's First Cabinet, January - December 1925
- Hans Luther, Chancellor
- Gustav Stresemann (DVP),
Minister of Foreign Affairs
- Martin Schiele (DNVP),
Minister of the Interior
- Otto von Schlieben (DNVP), Minister of
Finance
- Albert Neuhaus (DNVP), Minister of
Economics
- Heinrich Brauns (Z), Minister of Labour
- Josef Frenken (Z), Minister of
Justice
- Otto Geßler (DDP), Minister of Defence
- Karl Stingl (BVP), Minister of Posts
- Rudolf Krohne (DVP), Minister of Transport
- Gerhard Graf von Kanitz, Minister of Food
Changes
- October 26, 1925 - Schiele, Schlieben, and Neuhaus resign
from the Cabinet. They are replaced on an acting basis by Gessler (who remains also Defense Minister) at Interior, Luther (who
remains also Chancellor) at Finance, and Krohne (who remains also Transport Minister) at Economics.
- November 21, 1925 - Frenken resigns as Justice Minister
and is replaced on a temporary basis by Chancellor Luther
Luther's Second Cabinet (January - May 1926)
- Hans Luther, Chancellor
- Gustav Stresemann (DVP), Minister of Foreign Affairs
- Wilhelm Külz (DDP), Minister of the Interior
- Peter Reinhold (DDP), Minister of
Finance
- Julius Curtius (DVP), Minister
of Economics
- Heinrich Brauns (Z), Minister of
Labour
- Wilhelm Marx (Z), Minister of
Justice
- Otto Geßler (DDP), Minister of
Defence
- Karl Stingl (BVP), Minister of
Posts
- Rudolf Krohne (DVP), Minister of Transport
- Heinrich Haslinde (Z), Minister of Food
See also
Preceded by
Wilhelm Marx |
Chancellor of
Germany
1925–1926 |
Succeeded by
Wilhelm Marx |
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