Bernhard Maempel

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Eduard Ferdinand Bernhard Maempel , also Mämpel , (born July 28, 1816 in Arnstadt , † April 5, 1870 in Sondershausen ) was an administrative officer and parliamentarian in the Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen .

family

Bernhard's father was Friedrich Daniel Maempel (1788–1840), architect and operator of the Friedrichsmühle in Arnstadt. Friedrich was a grandson of Fabian Maempel (* 1710 in Oberpörlitz , † 1775 in Arnstadt), who became a citizen of Arnstadt in August 1739 and in January 1759 took over the Gasthof Zur golden Henne am Ried in Arnstadt. The hen was then passed on to the youngest son: to Friedrich's father Johann Benjamin (1757–1833), then to Friedrich's brother August (1801–1854). Bernhard's mother was Wilhelmine Charlotte Hülsemann (1793-1858), sister of the court and chamber councilor Johann Heinrich Christian Hülsemann (1783-1854) and a descendant (in the 5th generation) of the Lutheran theologian Johann Hülsemann (1602-1661) .

Bernhard married Emilie Karoline Hülsemann (born September 16, 1819 in Arnstadt, † October 17, 1878 ibid) in 1847, called Lina , a niece of his mother's. The politicians Wilhelm Hülsemann (1812–1862) in Sondershausen and Julius Hülsemann (1824–1888) in Arnstadt were the wife's brothers. Wilhelm's wife Mathilde Magdalene Charlotte Rosette Margarethe Maempel (1820–1898) was a niece of Bernhard's father.

Bernhard had three siblings. His sister Agnes Friederike Dorothee (1818–1889) was married to the Privy Councilor and politician Eduard Edmund Krieger (1807–1887). Their eldest son Friedrich Albert Krieger (1841–1924), district judge in Erfurt and then higher district judge in Naumburg , was married to Friederike Louise Emilie Anna Hülsemann (1844–1913), a daughter of Wilhelm and Mathilde Hülsemann.

Life

After graduating from high school in Arnstadt in 1834, Maempel studied law at the University of Jena . In 1837 he became a member of the Corps Thuringia Jena . After graduating, he entered the service of the Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen . In 1842 he was government secretary in the Princely Government Chancellery in Arnstadt. From July 1855 until his death he was district administrator in the administrative district of Sondershausen .

In October 1864 Maempel was appointed a member of the Higher Disciplinary Court for disciplinary investigations against court servants and public servants who were neither judges nor members of the consistory.

Maempel applied several times as a member of the state parliament of the principality. For the electoral period 1856-1859 (with meetings from June 1857 to the end of 1859) he was elected indirectly (by electors) for the area of ​​general elections. In his application for 1860-1863 he was defeated by his competitor. For 1864–1867 he successfully applied to the highest taxed population. In the first Landtag of this electoral period (the 10th Ordinary Landtag, with meetings from the beginning of October to the beginning of November 1865) he was elected Vice President. After this session Maempel resigned in accordance with the statutes for promotion. He decided not to apply again.

Maempel was (together with other government representatives) a member of the first head office of the Sparkasse of the Arnstadt District Court, founded in 1842. Later he was a representative of the Sondershausen district on the board of directors of the Nordhausen-Erfurt Railway, and he was deputy chairman of the board of directors of the Thuringian bank. Like some dignitaries of the Sondershäuser Unterherrschaft who were interested in agricultural policy, he was a member of the Sondershäuser agricultural association for many years.

He was the holder of several medals: He received the Schwarzburg Cross of Honor III. Class, the Prussian Crown Order III. Class and the Knight's Cross First Class of the Saxon-Ernestine House Order .

See also

literature

  • Negotiations of the Association for the Promotion of Agriculture in Sondershausen Jg. 1ff., Sondershausen: Friedrich August Eupel 1841ff.
  • The German. Sondershäuser newspaper together with government and intelligence paper for the principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen. [Sondershausen: Eupel.] (Incomplete) digitized version
  • Directory of the Arnstadt high school graduates from 1765 to 1890. In the program of the Princely High School in Arnstadt Easter 1891. Progr.-No. 710. pp. 7-25. Digitized
  • Family tree of the Maempel family from 1710 to 1894. o. O., o. J. [Arnstadt]
  • Kösener corps lists 1910. PDF
  • Family Hülsemann genealogical table I. o. O., o. J. [Ed. Family union Hülsemann. 1928.]
  • Family Hülsemann family tree I A. (descendants of Johann Heinrich Christian Hülsemann, VII, 1 of family table I.) o. O., o. J. [Ed. Family union Hülsemann. 1928.]
  • Jochen Lengemann : Landtag and regional representation of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen 1843–1923. Biographical handbook (= Parliaments in Thuringia 1809–1952. Vol. 3). G. Fischer, Jena et al. 1998, ISBN 3-437-35368-3 (including short biography p. 225f.)
  • Ulrich Lappe: Gravestones and stones from the old cemetery in Arnstadt. In From the past of Arnstadt and the surrounding area. A local history reader. 9th issue. Arnstadt 1999, pp. 32-46.
  • Chronicle of Arnstadt. Timeline / Lexicon. Festschrift for the 1300th anniversary of the city of Arnstadt, ed. v. Andrea Kirchschlager, Ulrich Lappe a. Peter Unger. 2003. ISBN 3-934277-07-1
  • Ulrich Lappe: The inn "To the golden hen" on the reed. In From the past of Arnstadt and the surrounding area. A local history reader. 17th issue. Arnstadt 2008, pp. 40-43.
  • Arnstadt's civil register 1700–1753 edited and supplemented from the church registers, other sources and literature by Andrea Kirchschlager. 2016. ISBN 978-3937230-25-2
  • Andrea Kirchschlager, Mayor and Councilor of the City of Arnstadt from the Middle Ages to the Present. Commemorative publication on the occasion of the 750th anniversary of the granting of city rights to Arnstadt on April 21, 1266 by Abbot Heinrich von Hersfeld. Arnstadt: Verlag Kirchschlager 2016.

Individual evidence

  1. Obituary in Der Deutsche 1870 No. 42 ; Acknowledgments and details of the registry office in No. 43 .
  2. Chronicle 2003 p. 259.
  3. Bürgerbuch p. 286 (No. 1438).
  4. He bought the inn from his surprisingly widowed first-born Auguste Johanne Marie verw. Reichardt (1738-1809). - Fabian's tomb is preserved in the lapidarium of the Arnstadt Castle Museum (Lappe, tombs, p. 35).
  5. ^ Johann Benjamin's brother Johann Christian August (1749–1799) was repeatedly the ruling mayor (list of high school graduates p. 8 , Kirchschlager, mayor p. 86 and 22). His son Ernst Benjamin (1794–1863) lived as a merchant in Hamburg for a good 30 years, most recently (1850–53) as consul of the Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen (Lengemann p. 227f.).
  6. August's daughter Cäcilie (1843–1911) was married to the politician Reinhold Bärwinkel (1834–1898) . (Lengemann p. 142f.)
  7. August was followed by his elder Oskar (* 1836) and then his elder Paul (* 1868), until the end of 1906. ( Maempel family tree ; Chronicle 2003 p. 273; Lappe, Gasthaus p. 42.)
  8. The couple had four children. The son Wilhelm Emil Robert Carl (1859-1924) was a lawyer and politician in Schwarzburg-Sondershausen (Lengemann p. 226f.)
  9. Lengemann p. 216f.
  10. List of high school graduates, p. 19 .
  11. See Mathilde's obituary in Der Deutsche 1898 No. 109 .
  12. The younger son Ferdinand Emil Thilo Krieger (1843–1910) worked for a long time in the Arnstadt municipal council and in the Landtag of Sondershausen (Lengemann p. 217f.). - For the general relationships cf. the graphics in Lengemann p. 328 and 311.
  13. Directory of high school graduates p. 17 .
  14. Corps lists S. 564, 129/187.
  15. with his uncle (and later father-in-law) Hofrat Heinrich Hülsemann and his cousin (and later brother-in-law) Chamber Assessor Wilhelm Hülsemann next to him in the Chamber Administration, cf. Address book of the various authorities, streets and numbers, together with details of the house owners and their businesses in the city of Arnstadt. For locals and foreigners. Arnstadt: Friedr. Faust 1842, p. 3f. . (The assessors Wilhelm FJ Hülsemann in the State Judicial College and Carl Hülsemann in the Regional Court were Heinrich Hülsemann's younger brothers.)
  16. Der Deutsche 1864 No. 118 (corresponding to the laws of 1860 No. 17 and 1863 No. 36 ).
  17. The Landtag had 15 members: 5 members who were appointed by the Prince for life; 5 MPs directly elected by the 300 most highly taxed electoral citizens (three of them in the subordinate regime ); and 5 MPs elected indirectly (by electors) from the rest of the electorate. All voting processes were public. ( Electoral Act 1856 and electoral regulations in addition .)
  18. Der Deutsche 1860 No. 131 .
  19. Der Deutsche 1865 No. 54 .
  20. Negotiations of the Extraordinary State Parliament in 1866, p. 2 .
  21. Lengemann p. 79f. and 84f.
  22. Peter Unger and Andrea Ziegenhardt, 175 years of Sparkasse in Arnstadt. 2000. ISBN 3000059245 . P. 66.
  23. Der Deutsche 1867 No. 98 .
  24. Der Deutsche 1861 No. 41 and 1869 No. 41 .
  25. such as the district administrator in Ebeleben Eduard Huschke (father of the author Bruno Huschke ), the government member Wilhelm Hülsemann, the publisher Friedrich August Eupel, the pharmacist August Hirschberg, the architect Carl Scheppig . (Lengemann p. 198; p. 195f .; p. 22; p. 186f.)
  26. from 1854 until death; Obituary in the negotiations vol. 31, 1871, p. 10f.
  27. Der Deutsche 1865 No. 94 .
  28. Der Deutsche 1867 No. 58 .
  29. Der Deutsche 1869 No. 73 .