Albrecht von Goldacker

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Albrecht von Goldacker , also Albrecht Goldacker († October 14, 1743 in Weberstedt ), was a princely Saxon-Gotha major general and war councilor.

Life

origin

Albrecht was a member of the Thuringian noble family von Goldacker .

career

Goldacker entered the service of the Ernestine Wettins and rose to major general and council of war. At the same time he had a seat in the Secret Council and Cabinet in Gotha .

He was a co-owner of the feudal estates in Weberstedt and Allerstedt and a co-leaned on the Ufhoven manor near Langensalza. After the last owner of the estate in Ufhoven, Colonel Burckhard Dietrich Goldacker, died without heirs on November 4, 1735, Albrecht Goldacker raised claims to this estate, which his employer, Duke Friedrich von Sachsen-Gotha, wrote to the king in a personal letter supported by Poland and Elector of Saxony Friedrich August II. At the same time, Major General Julius Augustus von Goldacker was also eligible .

In 1742, a year before his death, there were legal disputes with Karl August von Hayk regarding heirlooms from Ufhoven.

He died at the age of 76.

coat of arms

Albrecht von Goldacker had a split coat of arms . Above, in gold, a black, rising goat with golden horns growing out of the division, below split by silver and red. On the helmet a growing man with a gold cloak, white beard and silver tipped red Tatar cap. The ceilings are black and gold on the right and red and gold on the left.

literature

  • Johann Friedrich Seyfart : The impartial history of the Bavarian War of Succession , Leipzig 1780, p. 507, FN 738
  • Heinrich August Verlohren: Root register and chronicle of the Electoral and Royal Saxon Army. Degener & Co , Neustadt an der Aisch 1983, pp. 246–247
  • Ulrich Hess: Privy Council and Cabinet in the Ernestine States of Thuringia , 1962, p. 371.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German nobility samples from the German Ordens-Central-Archive. With the permission of His Imperial Royal Highness the Most Highly Honorable Archduke Wilhelm of Austria, High and German Masters, KK Feldzeugmeisters and General Artillery Inspectors.
  2. Ulrich Hess: Privy Council and Cabinet in the Ernestine States of Thuringia , 1962, p. 371.
  3. Saxony-Anhalt, D 48, V No. 32