Johann Viktor Bredt


Johann Viktor Bredt was a German jurist and politician. He served as Minister of Justice of the Weimar Republic in 1930/1.

Biography

Bredt was born in Barmen, on 2 March 1879, the only son of Viktor Richard Bredt, an industrialist, and his wife, Henriette.
He worked at the Barmer Bankverein in 1897/8 before studying jurisprudence and economics at Tübingen, Göttingen and Bonn. In 1901, he was awarded a doctorate and in 1904 a Dr. phil.. In 1909, he became a professor at Marburg. Bredt worked in the civil service in 1903-09 and in 1910 was appointed to a professorship for jurisprudence at Marburg university.
Johann married twice: in 1902 Ada Bredt at Barmen and in 1931 Olga Bredt.

Political career

From 1911 to 1918, and from 1921 to 1924, Bredt was a member of the lower chamber of the Landtag of Prussia, first for the Free Conservative Party in the Kingdom of Prussia, then in the Free State of Prussia. From 1924 to 1932, he was the parliamentary leader of the Reich Party of the German Middle Class in the Reichstag. He also held various honorary and political positions on a local and regional level.
In 1926, Bredt was an expert witness for the parliamentary committee on the causes of the German collapse in 1918. In 1930 and 1931, he served as Minister of Justice in the first cabinet of Heinrich Brüning. Bredt also played a key role in the German reformed church. In 1925, he was awarded an honorary doctorate in theology Dr. theol. h. c. by the University of Bonn.
Bredt died 1 December 1940, aged 61, in Marburg.

Works

Die Trennung von Kirche und Staat, 1919Die Rechte des Summus Episcopus, 1919Neues evangelisches Kirchenrecht für Preußen, 3 volumes, 1921–27 Der Geist der deutschen Reichsverfassung, 1924Der deutsche Reichstag im Weltkrieg, 1926Die belgische Neutralität und der Schlieffensche Feldzugsplan, 1929Geschichte der Familie Bredt, 1937Haus Bredt-Rübel, 1937Die Verfassung der reformierten Kirche in Cleve-Jülich-Berg-Mark, 1938.