Adolph Heinrich Bose

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Adolph Heinrich Bose (born May 30, 1734 ; † May 7, 1797 in Merseburg ) was an electoral chamberlain, court marshal of the Electress Maria Antonia of Saxony and canon and prelate of the collegiate church Merseburg as well as imperial knight, hereditary lord, feudal lord and court patron on Oberfrankleben and nodding .

Life

He was the eldest son of the Saxon-Weißenfels chamberlain Ernst Ludolph Bose on Oberwünsch , who inherited the manor in Frankleben, called Oberhof, from Christoph Dietrich Bose the Younger at the end of 1741 through an inheritance that was disputed within the family . He had two younger brothers, Carl Dietrich Bose (* 1736) and Friedrich Ernst Bose (* 1738). But his father died as early as 1742, so that he grew up with his mother.

Until he reached the age of 21, he and his siblings were under the guardianship of Wolf Heinrich von Helldorff on Gröst and, from 1752, of Johann Jacob von Zobel on Gröppendorf . When Adolph Heinrich Bose reached adulthood in 1755, he was free to dispose of his father's manor, Oberfrankleben.

Adolph Heinrich Bose embarked on a career at the Dresden court, where he was first chamberlain and captain and then rose to chamberlain. In addition, he was court marshal of the Electress Maria Antonia of Saxony in Dresden, who was widowed in 1763, until her death in 1780 .

When he died in 1797, he left his son Adolph Ludwig Christoph Bose (born May 26, 1755 in Frankleben) as the only feudal heir, who at that time was already electoral chamberlain at the court in Dresden.

The body of Adolph Heinrich Bose was transferred from Merseburg to Frankleben and buried in the local church on May 11, 1797 in the family crypt.

literature

  • Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal dictionary of all sciences and arts . Supplement s4, Leipzig 1754, Col. 281-283
  • Carl von Bose, Georg von Bose, Gerhard von Bose (eds.): Family tables and contributions to the history of the von Bose family (Bose book) , reissued 1980

Individual evidence

  1. certificate of Pastor Johann Christian Heuckenrott from May 15, 1797