Early life Theodor Neubauer was born in the family of an estate inspector. His father was a German nationalist and monarchist and raised Theodor accordingly. He attended high school in Erfurt from 1901 to 1910, then studied history and modern languages for the next three years in Brussels, Jena and Berlin. He obtained a doctorate in 1913. From 1917 to 1923, he taught in Erfurt, then Ruhla and Weimar. Of national-liberal tendency, he enlisted in the army in 1914 with the rank of lieutenant and fought on the
Russian front where he was demobilized in 1917 after gas poisoning. In December 1918, he joined the
German Democratic Party, then turned to the left and became a member of the
Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD) in late summer 1919, before joining the
Communist Party of Germany (KPD) with the left wing of the USPD in December 1920.
Communist functionary He was elected to the Landtag of Thuringia in September 1921. Also elected to the State Council in Thuringia in October 1923, he had to flee after the overthrow of the SPD-KPD coalition government which had been established there. In 1930, he was elected member of the Central Committee of the KPD, responsible for foreign policy issues, and, temporarily, for social policy. In 1932, Neubauer published the book Deutsche Außenpolitik heute und morgen (German foreign policy today and tomorrow). Apart from his sociopolitical works, Neubauer also composed some 150 poems. == Memory ==