Brunhilde Hanke | |
Term Start1: | July 13, 1967 |
Term End1: | April 5, 1990 |
Term Start2: | October 20, 1963 |
Term End2: | March 18, 1990 |
Term Start3: | 1961 |
Term End3: | 1984 |
Birth Name: | Brunhilde Anweiler |
Birth Date: | 23 March 1930 |
Party: | Die Linke Socialist Unity Party of Germany (1946—1989) |
Awards: | Patriotic Order of Merit, in silver (1979) Patriotic Order of Merit, in bronze (1974) |
Spouse: | Helmut Hanke |
Children: | Bärbel Dalichow |
Brunhilde Hanke (née Anweiler; born 23 March 1930) is a German retired politician who was mayor of Potsdam and a member of the State Council of East Germany.
Hanke was born in Erfurt into a working-class family. She completed an apprenticeship as a seamstress in 1947, during which she joined the Free German Trade Union Federation. She soon also became a member of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) and its youth organisation, the Free German Youth (FDJ). In 1951–52 she studied at the Komsomol academy in Moscow. She completed a diploma in social sciences at the German: [[Parteihochschule Karl Marx]] in 1962.
From 1952 until 1963 Hanke was part of the FDJ's central council. Hanke became mayor of Potsdam in 1961. Her tenure as mayor was marked by the construction of 37,000 apartment units, largely in the Plattenbau style. During her mayoralty she also came into conflict with SED leadership regarding the preservation and restoration of historic buildings. Hanke remained mayor until 1984. Afterwards, from 1987, she led the local German: [[Cultural Association of the GDR|Kulturbund]] in Potsdam.
In 1963 Hanke was elected to the German: [[Volkskammer]]. In 1967 she was made a member of the State Council of the GDR, the country's collective head of state. She remained a member of both institutions until 1990.
Hanke was awarded the Patriotic Order of Merit in bronze in 1974 and in silver in 1979.
Following German reunification, Hanke became a member of the political party Die Linke.