Edvard Rambusch


Edvard Johan Carl Rambusch (* 7 May 1846 in Korsør, 3 January 1934) was a Danish officer and member of the Landsting, the first chamber in the Danish Reichstag. Edit LifeQualtext

Rambusch was the son of the former Stationsmeister C.A.G. Rambusch and his wife Helene Wetehe. He then moved to Denmark, where he became an officer in 1864, Corporal 1869, Lieutenant 1870, Lieutenant in the Engineer's Corps 1874, Captain 1883. He took his leave in 1893 as lieutenant-colonel > He was a member of the Landsting from 1903 to 1918, and a member of the Danish Central Committee in 1904, Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Workers' Rights (chairman from 1908), member of the conservative electorate in Copenhagen (fifth - later fourth - group 1890-1919, chairman 1908) 1910, honorary member in 1919).

For his work as a deputy, he was honored in 1887 with the award of the title "Correspondent Honoraire of the Academie d'Aérastation Météorologique" and with the award of the Order "Knight of the Dannebrog". He also worked as a war correspondent. He wrote numerous essays in magazines and encyclopedias.

He was a member of the Moor Plantage Lerkenfeldt Berge and active for the political arguments for the cultivation of the moor. For this purpose, a memorial stone was erected to him in 1927. In 2009, the DR, a Danish radio station, reported on the many facets of the person Rambusch. Edit source text

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