Andreas Dietrich von Böltzig

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Andreas Dietrich von Böltzig (born November 19, 1704 in Oberröblingen ; † May 31, 1783 ibid) was a German heir, feudal lord and court lord and patron of the church in Oberröblingen and canon in the former bishopric of Halberstadt .

Life

He was the second eldest son of Andreas Friedrich von Böltzig (died on May 21, 1716), who was the royal Polish and electoral Saxon superintendent of the offices of Gommern and Elbenau.

Together with his younger brother Friedrich Carl von Böltzig, Andreas Dietrich von Böltzog attended the pedagogy in Halle from 1720. He then studied from 1727 at the University of Halle . Due to the premature death of his father, he and his three brothers Adrian Johann, Friedrich Carl and Friedrich Wilhelm von Böltzig and his sister Friederica Louysa, who later married Major von Eldit in Magdeburg, inherited his manors in Oberröblingen, Groß Salze and Struvenberg. After several years of inheritance disputes, he received the Oberröblingen estate in the Sangerhausen office , which he made the center of his life.

With his court administrator Johann Friedrich Hoffmann in Oberröblingen corresponded u. a. Johann Christoph Gottsched .

The assumption of the office of canon in Halberstadt made his presence there temporarily necessary. He remained unmarried his entire life and left no children behind, so that all of his possessions fell to the only brother who survived him, Friedrich Carl von Böltzig. He was captain and mayor in Groß Salze and, due to the childless death of his brother Friedrich Wilhelm von Böltzig in 1783, he also inherited the Roitzsch manor in the Bitterfeld office .

literature

  • Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of noble houses , 5 (1904), p. 124f.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Archive of the Francke Foundations in Halle
  2. von Böltzig in the Gutsarchiv Oberröblingen at the German Digital Library
  3. ^ Johann Christoph Gottsched's correspondence. Correspondence including the correspondence of Luise Adelgunde Victorie Gottsched, 1731-1733. 2008, p. 601.