Ernestine Lutze
Member of the Weimar National Assembly
In office
1919–1920
ConstituencySaxony I
Personal details
Born17 June 1873
Merzdorf, Germany
Died27 April 1948(1948-04-27) (aged 74)
Dresden, Germany

Ernestine Lutze (17 June 1873 – 27 April 1948) was a German trade unionist and politician. In 1919 she was one of the 36 women elected to the Weimar National Assembly, the first female parliamentarians in Germany. She remained a member of parliament until the following year.

Biography

Lutze was born Ernestine Elsterwerda in Merzdorf in 1873.[1] She attended primary school in Dresden and Großenhain,[1] and began working as a maid aged nine. She later became a florist and a board member of the Flower Worker's Association and married painter Karl Otto Lutze. In 1911 she attended trade union school in Berlin.[1] Back in Dresden, she became a committee member of the regional health insurance fund and in 1917 was appointed to Dresden City Council's housing committee.[2] After the outbreak of the German Revolution in 1918, she became a member of the city's Workers' and Soldiers' Council.[2]

Having been a speaker for the Social Democratic Party (SPD) for several years, in January 1919 she was elected to the Weimar National Assembly from the Saxony I constituency as a representative of the SPD. She lost her seat in the 1920 Reichstag elections. In 1926 she joined the new Old Social Democratic Party, becoming a member of the executive committee of the party's East Saxony branch. Between 1926 and 1929 she served as a city councillor in Dresden.[2]

She died in Dresden in 1948.

References

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