Eduard Alexander


Eduard Ludwig Alexander was a German politician of the Communist Party and a representative in the Reichstag.

Career

Eduard Ludwig Alexander was born in Essen; his father was an office manager. He attended the Royal Gymnasium at Burgplatz zu Essen, where he received his Abitur in 1900. He then studied at the Humboldt University of Berlin, at the Albert Ludwig University of Freiburg, and at the Université de Lausanne Jura, working from 1911 as a Rechtsanwalt and Justiziar in Berlin.
In 1917 Alexander was involved in the formation of the Spartacus League and joined the Communist Party of Germany together with his wife upon the founding of the party in the Communist Party in 1918-1919. Between 1921 and 1925, he was a city councillor in Berlin while simultaneously serving, under the pseudonym Eduard Ludwig, as head of the press service of the KPD and financial editor of Die Rote Fahne.
At Pentecost in 1923, he and his wife Gertrud participated in the Marxist Labor Week and founded the Frankfurt Institute for Social Research. In 1927 he was a co-founder of the Marxist Labor School, which taught Hermann Duncker, Jürgen Kuczynski, Georg Lukács and Karl August Wittfogel among others.
In the 1928 election, Alexander was elected to the Reichstag, but was not allowed to run in the 1930 election as a member of the so-called Conciliator faction.
In 1931, he was elected mayor of the city of Boizenburg with the support of both the KPD and SPD, but was not able to assume office due to a breakdown of the party alliance.
Following the Nazi rise to power in 1933, Alexander was disbarred on the grounds that he was allegedly half-Jewish. Later the same year, he was appointed as an arbitrator for trade affairs of the German-Russian trading association.
On 22 August 1944, Eduard Ludwig Alexander was arrested as part of the "Aktion Gitter" campaign and transferred to Sachsenhausen concentration camp. He died in transit to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp on 1 March 1945.

Personal life

In 1902, he met Gertrud Gaudin, who at that time was graduating from art studies in Berlin. They married in 1908; under her married name Gertrud Alexander was later known as a communist politician, author, publicist and cultural critic. They divorced in the 1920s and in 1925 she moved to Moscow with both of their children.
In 1929 he married Maria Seyring, a physician, with whom he had three children.

Memorials

In Berlin since 1992, Alexander's name appears on one of the 96 plaques in the Memorial to the Murdered Members of the Reichstag, on the corner of Scheidemannstraße / Republic Square in Berlin near the Reichstag building.
In March 2009, in front of Alexander's former residence at Cimbernstraße 13 in the Steglitz-Zehlendorf – Nikolassee district of Berlin, a Stolperstein was laid in his memory.

Works