Alexander of Bally

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Alexander von Bally (born January 11, 1802 in Breslau , † November 13, 1853 in Berlin ) was a German lawyer, landowner, entrepreneur and member of the Frankfurt National Assembly .

Life

Bally studied in Wroclaw law and in Vienna Catholic theology . In 1822 he became the private secretary of Prince Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen . Later he was a secret councilor in the service of Victor Amadeus von Hessen-Rotenburg . Bally became administrator of the Duchy of Ratibor in 1830. From 1837 he was a landowner himself in Silesia. He also acquired mines and smelters.

During the revolution of 1848/49 he represented the constituency of Bytom in Upper Silesia in the Frankfurt National Assembly. He was a member of the more conservative Café Milani faction . He was also a member of the Catholic Club . After the murder of Felix Lichnowsky and Hans von Auerswald on September 18, 1848, Bally wrote an emphatic obituary. In Frankfurt he stood up for Austria's side. Therefore, he voted against the election of Friedrich Wilhelm IV. As German Emperor.

He also worked as an author. He wrote about horse breeding and horse racing, but also political and economic writings.

Individual evidence

  1. Alexander von Bally: Words of mourning spoken next to the coffins of Prince von Lichnowsky and General von Auerswald, German Reichstag members Frankfurt am Main: Sauerländer, 1848

Fonts

  • About horse breeding, horsemanship, races and racehorses . Stuttgart, 1852
  • The state within the state is called the church . Frankfurt am Main, 1850
  • The new Austria its trade and money situation . Vienna, 1850

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