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Wolter Freiherr v. Tiesenhausen was born on 30 September
1940 in Athens, where his father, Berend Reinhold Freiherr v. Tiesenhausen, was
editor in chief of the German newspaper "Neue Athener Zeitung".
He grew up in Giessen, West Germany,
and began his journalistic career in the German service of the American news
agency "The Associated Press". In 1963 he changed to AP´s parliamentary office
in Bonn. Two years later he started working for the Bonn office of "Mannheimer
Morgen", aswell as several other regional newspapers.
In 1966, he married Waltraut Glasenapp.
Their daughter Elisabeth was born in 1967, followed by two sons:
Matthias (1970) and Cyrill (1975). In 1980, the family moved to Kiel, capital
of the German land Schleswig Holstein, where Wolter worked for the then Prime
Minister Gerhard Stoltenberg. He wrote speeches for Stoltenberg and worked on
the politician´s federal engagements, which at the time was a particularly
interesting task as Stoltenberg was part of the CDU shadow cabinet led by Franz
Josef Strauss. But already one year later, the then leader of the federal
opposition and chairman of the Christian Democratic Party, Helmut Kohl, called
Wolter back to Bonn.
This
excursion into politics was followed by a long-lasting career-shift into radio
journalism, as Wolter became the chief editor of the Bonn office of Deutsche
Welle (Germany’s international radio). In 1997 he moved to Berlin where he led
the transformation of the Deutsche Welle’s Berlin office into a parliamentary
studio.
Wolter v. Tiesenhausen is a
knight ("Rechtsritter") of the Order of St. John, he has been decorated with
the federal merit cross ("Bundesverdienstkreuz") first class and has held
honorary positions in professional and charity organisations. He is not a good,
but a passionate golf player, loves the opera and is interested in the Middle
Ages and recent history. His dream is to write a great historical novel.
Wolter@Tiesenhausen.de
updated : 10/31/01
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