Georg Achleitner


Georg Achleitner was an Austrian lawyer and politician, most notably as a deputy to the Frankfurt Parliament in 1848-1849.

Education and career

Achleitner was the son of a miller. In 1825, he went to Vienna to study law. In 1831, he returned home and began a law career. From 1831 to 1834, he was legal intern at the courthouse in Strobl. From 1834 to 1835, he was an official of the so-called patrimonial court in Frankenburg and Engelszell. Until the mid-19th century, these courts handled the business of aristocratic landlords independently of the state judicial system. From 1835 to 1849, Achleitner was counsel in Ried, from 1850 to 1854 the regional court assessor in Linz, and from 1854 to 1856 district director in Frankenmarkt. In the period of 1856 to 1863, Achleitner was chief counsel and district judge in Wels, became a justice for the Crownland of Austria above the Enns in 1863, and finally in 1875 was appointed chief justice, from which he retired a year later.

Politics

Achleitner was an original deputy of the Frankfurt Parliament, sitting from its opening session on May 18, 1848 until April 13, 1849. He represented the constituency of the twelfth voting district for Austria above the Enns and Salzburg. There, he joined the Westendhall faction, ideologically a left-wing establishment with pragmatic pro-monarchist tendencies. Achleitner spoke out against the proposal to elect the Prussian king Frederick William IV as German Emperor, signing the circular note of protest on April 3, 1849, the day the crown was offered to the Prussian King.
In tandem with Anton Schmerling, he encouraged the other Austrian deputies to leave the Frankfurt Parliament, all of whom did so on April 5, and formally submitted his resignation eight days later.
Achleitner served as a deputy to other Austrian parliaments: from 1848-1849, in the Upper Austrian provincial estates as a member of the Provisional National Committee; from 1849 to 1861 a member of the state diet of Upper Austria; and from 1864 until 1867 a member of the Upper Austrian parliament, after which he excused himself from political activities and concentrated on his judicial work.