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The New International Encyclopædia/Heckscher, Johann Gustav Wilhelm Moritz

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The New International Encyclopædia
Heckscher, Johann Gustav Wilhelm Moritz
1015828The New International Encyclopædia — Heckscher, Johann Gustav Wilhelm Moritz

HECKSCHER, hĕk'shẽr, Johann Gustav Wilhelm Moritz (1797-1865). A German politician, born in Hamburg. He served during the War of 1815 as a volunteer in the Hanseatic Corps, and then studied at the universities of Göttingen and Heidelberg. Upon completing his studies he settled in Hamburg, where he practiced law, and, after 1840, directed the politics of the Hamburger Nachrichten. In 1848 he was elected to the Vorparlament, in which he opposed the propositions of the Democratic Party. In the National Assembly at Frankfort (1848-49) he was at first a member of the Left Centre, but inclined more and more to identify himself with the Right. He advocated the election of Archduke John of Austria as Vicar of the Provisional Government, in which he himself was appointed Minister of Justice, and opposed the proposition to exclude Austria and erect a German empire with a Prussian King as hereditary Emperor. Later he helped to organize the Pan-German Party.