Bernhard von Schönberg

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Bernhard von Schönberg

Bernhard Karl Franz von Schönberg (born March 7, 1827 in Kreipitzsch , † April 26, 1902 in Dresden ) was a German administrative lawyer in the Kingdom of Saxony.

Life

Bernhard was the son of Chamberlain Franz von Schönberg , the owner of the Kreipitzsch manor and the Rudelsburg castle ruins . He studied law at the University of Leipzig and founded the Corps Guestphalia Leipzig in 1849 . Around 1855 he became a councilor in Zwickau and chairman of the local music club. In this function he arranged that on 7./8. June 1860, on the occasion of the 50th birthday of Robert Schumann , commemorations in honor of the composer took place and a memorial plaque was placed on the house where he was born, today's Robert Schumann House in Zwickau . Most recently, Schönberg was Royal Saxon Real Privy Councilor and President of the Saxon Chamber of Accounts in Dresden. His successor was Hermann von Salza and Lichtenau . Schoenberg died at the age of 75 and was buried in the Trinity cemetery.

family

Schönberg married Marie Fischer on April 12, 1864 in Zwickau (born March 14, 1843 in Zwickau, † April 25, 1924 in Dresden), the daughter of the manufacturer Christian Fischer and Emma Mieg . The couple had two daughters Johanna (1867–1945) and Margarethe (1869–1948) and their son Bernhard (1882 – after 1953). Margarethe married the politician Hans Dietrich von Zanthier . Like his father, Bernhard also became a lawyer.

Honors

  • Honorary member of the Corps Guestphalia Leipzig

Works

  • The poor legislation of the Kingdom of Saxony. For practical use, with special ... Leipzig 1864. Digitized version (GoogleBooks)
  • with Albert Fraustadt: History of the Schoenberg family Meissnian tribe . Leipzig 1878.
Vol. 1, Part 2 (GoogleBooks)
Vol. 2 (GoogleBooks)
Reprinted by Nabu Press 2011. ISBN 978-1-271-37519-6 . GoogleBooks

Individual evidence

  1. thesaurus.cerl
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 92/1
  3. Todtenschau . Dresdner Geschichtsblätter, No. 2, 1903, p. 175.
  4. ^ Genealogical handbook of the nobility, Adelige Häuser A Volume I, Volume 5 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1953, page 350
  5. ^ Son Bernhard had a doctorate in law and was most recently a member of the Saxon government.