Franz Schuselka

Franz Schuselka ( born August 15, 1811 in Budweis, † September 1, 1886 in Holy Cross ) was an Austrian politician.

Life

Schuselka studied jurisprudence in Vienna, was a short time Internship at the Criminal Senate in Vienna and then worked as an educator in several noble families in Vienna, Salzburg and Prague; since 1839 he decided turned to journalism, left Austria in 1842 and lived for a time in Weimar and then in Jena, but returned in 1843 back to Austria, where he was involved in an investigation into his writings.

In 1845 he went to Jena and stepped over in November to the German Catholic community. He was also an honorary member of the Burschenschaft final compound on the castle cellar Jena. In February 1846 he went to Hamburg and returned in 1848 during the Revolution back to Vienna, was elected to the Pre-Parliament to Frankfurt am Main from the auditorium and was then among the six Austrians, who were elected to the Committee fifties. For the constituency Klosterneuburg, he was a member of the Frankfurt National Assembly, where he was part of the Group of Thunder Mountain. On August 17, 1848, he resigned his seat because he was elected in July in the Austrian Reichstag, where he also took place on the left.

In October 1849 he was in Vienna at the head of the security committee, went to surrender the city to Kremsier, where he was in the Reichstag of the opposition leaders, returned to dissolve the Reichstag back to Vienna, then made a long trip to Germany, was ( near Vienna ) referenced from and to his estate in Gainfarn 1850 after his return from Vienna, two years lived in seclusion, converted to Protestantism and was only in September 1852 again permission to enter Vienna. Later he turned to Dresden, but returned to Vienna and was from 1861 to 1865 deputy in the parliament of Lower Austria. 1862-1879 he edited the weekly magazine of political Founded in Reform, but was torn by a stroke from which he did not fully recovered from the work.

His last years were spent Franz Schuselka in Heiligenkreuz in the Vienna woods, where he died in the early hours of September 1, 1886 and was buried on 4 September 1886 the local cemetery to rest.

Schuselka has been incorporated in the year 1847 in the Masonic Lodge to Brother loyalty on the Elbe in Hamburg. He was Master of the Free German Bishopric in Frankfurt am Main.

In 1912 in Vienna, Rudolf -Fuenfhaus ( 15th district ) was named the Schuselkagasse after him.

Marriage

Schuselka married in 1849 Ida Wohlbrück, 1838 married Brüning [note 1], ( born January 15, 1817 in Königsberg, † 15 November1903 in Baden near Vienna). [Note 2 ] Your origin following, her father was the court actor to Weimar Gustav Friedrich Wohlbrück ( 1793-1849 ), she was at the theaters in St. Petersburg, Hamburg, Hanover and Vienna ( Carltheater ) engaged as a soubrette. After her marriage she took no permanent commitment more, but only made ​​guest appearances on several major theaters in Germany. From April 9, 1855 until April 4, 1857, she headed the National Theatre in Linz. My (stage) pseudonym after her third marriage (first marriage: Ussow ) was Ida Schuselka -Brüning. She was laid to rest in Scotland Vienna, where she owned a villa and where it was in 1893, after more than thirty years Paris, returned on 17 November 1903.

Works

  • World of thought, Vienna 1840
  • Charles Goodheart, Vienna 1841, 2nd edition 1844 Vienna
  • Narratives, Vienna 1843, 2 ​​Bdchn.
  • Funny and informative for children, Vienna 1843
  • Contribution to the judging of the Prussian penal bill, Jena 1843
  • German words an Austrian, Hamburg 1843
  • Is Austria German? , Leipzig 1843
  • Austria and Hungary, Leipzig 1843
  • I.e., The Eastern Question Russian question, Hamburg 1842
  • Mediterranean, Baltic and North Seas, Hamburg 1845
  • The Jesuit war against Austria and Germany, Leipzig 1845
  • The new church and the old policy, Leipzig 1845, 2nd ed Leipzig 1846
  • Germany, Poland and Russia, Hamburg 1846
  • Letters of Joseph II, 3rd edition 1846
  • The solution of the Prussian constitutional question, Bamberg 1847
  • German people policies, Bamberg 1847
  • Austria's forward and backward steps, Bamberg 1847
  • Historical images of Schleswig -Holstein, Leipzig 1847
  • German tours, Vienna, 1849, 2 vols
  • The provisional Austria, Leipzig 1850
  • International agreement, Leipzig 1851
  • The Turkish fatality and the Great Powers, Leipzig 1853
  • Russia's policy in historical images, Dresden 1854, 2 vols
  • Prussia as a great power and the Nondum - meridies. Policy lit, Leipzig 1855
  • Austria and Russia, Leipzig 1855
  • A return history of Russia, Leipzig 1856
  • Austria and Hungary, Vienna 1861
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