Albert von Ingersleben

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Albert Ernst August Ferdinand von Ingersleben (born March 1, 1805 in Seehausen , † May 17, 1891 in Wiesbaden ) was a Prussian lieutenant general and commandant of Königsberg .

Life

origin

Albert was a son of the Prussian Major General Kasimir von Ingersleben (1778-1848) and his wife Karoline, née von Unruh (1774-1862), a daughter of Lieutenant General Karl Philipp von Unruh .

Military career

Ingersleben visited the Berlin Cadet House, was aggregated as a Second Lieutenant in the Kaiser Alexander Grenadier Regiment of the Prussian Army on October 13, 1822, and was assigned to August 16, 1823. From 1826 to 1829 he was commanded for further training at the General War School and in 1833/34 for the Guard Artillery Brigade and in 1834/37 for the topographic office . Ingersleben was promoted to captain and company commander by mid-August 1842 . During the revolutionary unrest in March 1848 he took part in the suppression of street fighting in Berlin. On July 12, 1849, he was transferred as a major to the 31st Infantry Regiment . From February 11, 1854, he was employed as a commander of the 2nd battalion in the 27th Landwehr Regiment in Halle (Saale) . On July 12, 1858, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel. On January 7, 1858 he came as a commander in the 13th Infantry Regiment and was promoted to colonel on November 22, 1858 . Under position à la suite , Ingersleben was promoted to commander of the 23rd Infantry Brigade on July 24, 1861, and to major general on October 18, 1861 on the occasion of King Wilhelm I's coronation celebrations . On October 17, 1864 he was transferred to Königsberg as commandant . In this position he was promoted to lieutenant general on June 18, 1865, before being put up for disposal on April 9, 1867 with the award of the star to the Order of the Red Eagle, 2nd class with oak leaves, with a pension .

Ingersleben was an honorary knight of the Order of St. John and died on May 17, 1891 in Wiesbaden.

His company commander wrote in his assessment in 1847: “Connected with a moral way of life, great zeal for service, which he carries out with caution and prudence as well as perseverance and diligence. Keeps order and punctuality and is suitable for transport on his tour. "

family

He married on May 28, 1841 in Kulm Emilie von Loga (1822–1871), who published as a novelist under the pseudonym "Emmy von Rothenfels". She was a daughter of the district councilor and landowner Ludwig Franz von Loga. After her death, he married Olga von Bentheim (* 1849) in Wiesbaden on September 2, 1875.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German poet lexicon. P. 409.