Ludwig von Friedeburg
Ludwig-Ferdinand Heinrich Georg Friedrich von Friedeburg was a German sociologist, Nazi officer and Social Democratic politician who served as Hesse’s from 1969 to 1974. A leading figure in West Germany's post-war education reforms, he promoted the introduction of and upper-secondary reform in Hesse. Earlier, he served in the Kriegsmarine during the Second World War and, at age 20, became one of Germany's youngest U-boat commanders. After leaving politics he directed Frankfurt's Institute for Social Research from 1975 to 2001.
Early life and family
Friedeburg was born in Wilhelmshaven on 21 May 1924, the elder son of Admiral Hans-Georg von Friedeburg, who became Commander-in-Chief of the Kriegsmarine in 1945.Military service
He joined the Kriegsmarine in 1941 and completed U-boat and officer training. In 1944 he commanded [German submarine German submarine U-155 (1941)|U-155 (1941)|U-155] and later the newly-commissioned U-4710. His command of U-155 included one Atlantic patrol; U-4710 undertook no patrols before Germany's surrender.Education and academic career
After 1945 Friedeburg studied psychology, philosophy, and sociology, becoming associated with the Institute for Social Research in Frankfurt, where he worked with Theodor W. Adorno and later habilitated in sociology. He led the Institute's empirical research department in the 1950s, held a professorship at the Free University of Berlin, and returned to Frankfurt as co-director of the IfS in 1966. Following his government service he became the Institute's managing director, taking over from.Around 1959, Adorno's close collaborator and ex-director of IfS Max Horkheimer sought to block the publication of Student und Politik. Eine soziologische Untersuchung zum politischen Bewusstsein Frankfurter Studenten, a book Friedeburg wrote with Jürgen Habermas and three others, on the grounds that it would "encourage" the East German Communists and "play into the hands of the potential fascists at home".
Friedeburg's scholarship helped institutionalise empirical social research in post-war West Germany, notably in industrial sociology, and he contributed to editions and debates surrounding Adorno's studies of authoritarianism.
Political career
A member of the Social Democratic Party of Germany, Friedeburg was appointed Hesse’s in October 1969 under Minister-President Albert Osswald, serving until December 1974. He prioritised equal educational opportunity, piloting and then expanding comprehensive schools and negotiating with the GEW teachers’ union to launch at least ten integrated-school trials in 1969. These initiatives, along with upper-secondary reform, drew opposition from the CDU but influenced nationwide education policy.During and after his ministerial tenure he also shaped higher-education modernisation in Hesse, reforming universities and teacher-training programs.
Later life
Returning full-time to the IfS, Friedeburg remained active in education and civic debates. In 1999 he delivered remarks at the opening of the Wehrmachtsausstellung in Kiel, continuing to engage Germany’s public discourse on history and democracy. He died in Frankfurt am Main on 17 May 2010.Personal life
Friedeburg married Ellen Schölch. His known children are Robert and Christoph. His younger brother Friedrich-Ferdinand von Friedeburg also served in the navy.Selected works
Soziologie des Betriebsklimas. Studien zur Deutung empirischer Untersuchungen in industriellen Gesellschaften. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt am Main, 1963.- Foreword to Theodor W. Adorno, Studien zum autoritären Charakter.