Wingolf Explained
Wingolf (pronounced as /de/) is an umbrella organization of 35 student fraternities at 34 universities in Germany, Austria and Estonia. It has approximately 5,000 members. It is one of the oldest oecumenical organizations in Germany. It has a close relationship with the Falkensteinerbund in Switzerland.
It is a Christian organization and was the first German Studentenverbindung not to practice academic fencing.
Symbols
The motto of all Wingolf fraternities is "Δι ένoς πάντα" - "Di henos panta" or "All things through him" from Philippians 4, Verse 13). Its colors are black, white, and gold,
Chapters
See main article: List of Wingolf members.
Notable members
Following is a list of notable members.[1]
- Albrecht Alt, theologian
- Willibald Beyschlag, theologian
- Gustav Bickell, orientalist
- Friedrich von Bodelschwingh, theologian
- Harald Braun, film director
- Hans Conzelmann, theologian and scholar
- Hermann Cremer, theologian
- Friedrich Delitzsch, Assyriologist
- Konrad Duden, philologist and lexicographer
- Friedrich von Duhn, philologist
- Johannes Heinrich August Ebrard, theologian
- Sigfrid Gauch, writer
- Franz Grashof, engineer
- Adolf von Harnack, theologian and church historian
- Erich Haupt, theologian
- Karl Heim, theologian
- Hermann Volrath Hilprecht, Assyriologist and archaeologist
- Emanuel Hirsch, theologian
- Heinrich Julius Holtzmann, theologian
- Ferdinand Justi, linguist and orientalist
- Martin Kähler, theologian
- Johannes Kahrs, member of the German parliament, Deutscher Bundestag
- Emil Friedrich Kautzsch, Hebrew scholar
- Paul Kleinert, theologian
- August Klostermann, Luteran theologian
- Johannes Kuhlo, co-founder of the Posaunenchor (trombone choir/church brass ensemble) movement who developed the kuhlohorn
- Walter Künneth, theologian
- Georg Leibbrandt, Nazi Party official
- Friedrich Maurer, philologist
- Carl Meinhof, linguist, one of the first linguists to study African languages.
- Alexander von Oettingen, theologian
- Gottlieb Olpp, medical missionary
- Wilhelm Pauck, church historian and theologian
- Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen, pioneered rural credit unions in Germany
- Albrecht Ritschl, theologian
- Gerhard Ritter, historian
- Adolf Schlatter, theologian and professor
- Paul Schneider, pastor
- August Tholuck, theologian
- Paul Tillich, theologian and philosopher
- Jacob Volhard, chemist
- Theodor Weber, theologian and professor of philosophy
- Theodor Zahn, theologian and biblical scholar
External links
Notes and References
- Gesamtverzeichnis des Wingolf, Lichtenberg 1991