German | German language | Nazism | German Empire | German people | French Resistance | Wilhelm II, German Emperor | German reunification | German Army | German Academic Exchange Service | resistance | German literature | German Navy | Lord's Resistance Army | German battleship Tirpitz | William I, German Emperor | German cuisine | Middle High German | German Archaeological Institute | Revolutions of 1848 in the German states | Polish resistance movement in World War II | Imperial German Navy | German (language) | German Emperor | German battleship Gneisenau | Frederick III, German Emperor | Low German | German Peasants' War | German East Africa | German Confederation |
Jakob Dautzenberg (born 2 February 1897, in Würselen (today part of the district of Aachen); died 20 August 1979 in Aachen) was a German politician, member of the Communist Party of Germany, and resistance fighter against the Nazis.
Fechner participated in the social-democratic resistance group led by Franz Künstler, and was jailed in 1933–1934 and 1944–1945 by the Nazi regime.