Adolf von Jagow

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Adolf (Adolph) Friedrich Wilhelm von Jagow (born March 22, 1811 in Krüden , † March 9, 1881 in Berlin ) was a royal Prussian chamberlain .

biography

Krüden Castle around 1860, Alexander Duncker collection

Adolf von Jagow comes from the von Jagow family and was a son of Captain Christoph Friedrich von Jagow (1780–1839), a brother of Friedrich Wilhelm von Jagow , and Louise, née Schultz, (1785–1859). In 1935 he studied in Greifswald . In 1837 he was elected arbitrator for the sixth district in the district of Osterburg . He later became a member of the district committee and member of the district council for the district of Osterburg in the electoral association of larger rural landowners .

Jagow was appointed chamberlain in 1844, and in 1873 he was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Hohenzollern House Order. He was the lord of Krüden, Krüden- Aulosen , Klein Kapermoor , Stresow and with Gehrhof and Gerichsee , lord of two manors suitable for the Landtag . In addition, he was dike captain for Krüden and in 1853 became a member of the society committee of the Magdeburg-Wittenbergeschen railway .

In 1860 Adolf von Jagow had the manor house Krüden , which dates from around 1700, rebuilt in the Tudor style. From November 15 to November 16, 1869, he organized a pheasant hunt in the Garbe forest district for the future German Emperor Wilhelm I and was the host at the Krüden manor. The entourage included, among others, the Upper President of the Province of Saxony Hartmann von Witzleben , the Infantry General Gustav von Alvensleben , the Wing Adjutant Eduard von Steinaecker and Lieutenant Colonel Armand von Lucadou . With his share in the Garbe forest area - the remaining parts were owned by von Jagow auf Pollitz and von Jagow auf Aulosen - he was involved in the “best pheasantry in Germany”.

It cannot be determined whether Adolf von Jagow had children or was married. Matthias Wilhelm Ludwig Friedrich Karl von Jagow (1838-1919), son of Friedrich Wilhelm von Jagow , is recorded in 1900 as Herr von Krüden, Gehrhof, Biesehof, Gerichsee, Klein Kapermoor and Stresow, which suggests that the succession was interrupted by childlessness .

literature

  • Peter P. Rohrlach: Historical local dictionary for the Altmark . BWV Verlag , 2018, pp. 282, 754 and 1270 ff.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Yearbook of the German Nobility . 1896, p. 855 ( google.de [accessed June 24, 2020]).
  2. ^ Adolf von Jagow in: Official Gazette of the Government of Magdeburg: 1837, p. 282.
  3. ^ Handbook of the Province of Saxony: 1877 . Baensch, 1877, p. 162 ( google.de [accessed June 24, 2020]).
  4. ^ Adolf von Jagow in the register of persons in the minutes of the Prussian State Ministry 1817–1934/38, Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences, p. 657 (PDF)
  5. ^ JAF Hermes: Historical-geographical-statistical-topographical manual from the administrative districts of Magdeburg: from JAF Hermes u. MJ Weigelt. topographical part . Heinrichshofen, 1842, p. 376 ( google.de [accessed September 29, 2018]).
  6. ^ JAF Hermes: Historical-geographical-statistical-topographical manual from the administrative districts of Magdeburg: from JAF Hermes u. MJ Weigelt. topographical part . Heinrichshofen, 1842, p. 370 ( google.de [accessed September 29, 2018]).
  7. ^ Adolf von Jagow in: Der Briefwechsel von Johann Bartholomäus Trommsdorff (1770–1837), p. 169.
  8. Prussia: Königlich Preußischer Staats-Anzeiger: 1853, 1 - 6 . Decker, 1853, p. 140 ( google.de [accessed June 28, 2020]).
  9. ^ Wilhelm van Kempen: Palaces and manors in the province of Saxony and in Anhalt . W. Weidlich, 1961, p. 35 ( google.de [accessed June 28, 2020]).
  10. a b Königlich Prussischer Staats-Anzeiger: 1869, 10-12 . Decker, 1869, p. 4386 ( google.de [accessed September 29, 2018]).
  11. Prussia: Königlich Preußischer Staats-Anzeiger: 1869, 10-12 . Decker, 1869, p. 4437 ( google.de [accessed June 28, 2020]).
  12. The Feathered World. Magazine for bird lovers, breeders and dealers. Ulmer, 1875, p. 138 ( google.de [accessed September 29, 2018]).
  13. Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of noble houses . Justus Perthes, 1900, p. 449 ( google.de [accessed on July 2, 2020]).