Carl Adolf Huebner

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carl Adolf Huebner

Carl Adolf Huebner (born April 30, 1739 in Mühlhausen / Thuringia ; † April 10, 1824 there ) was a town clerk and office director of various Mühlhausen higher courts.

Life

Hübner was the son of the town clerk Johann Adolf Hübner and Anna Katharina Schreiber from Höngeda in Upper Saxony . His father later became the ruling mayor of the free imperial city of Mühlhausen.

After his apprenticeship, Hübner worked for nine years as an actuary at the forestry office. a. was responsible for the city's felling and wood distribution rights. In 1777, Huebner became a member of the Mühlhausen city council and on January 2, 1789, he became the lawyer and office director of the criminal and appeals court in Mühlhausen. On January 4th, 1802, he was appointed Real Imperial Councilor by the city council. In the course of the Prussian occupation of Mühlhausen for the compensation awarded from the Treaty of Lunéville , Hübner was appointed to the provisional police magistrate, which existed until 1805, alongside the future mayor and canton mayor Christian Gottfried Stephan and the two councilors Ledebur and Lauprecht. Ledebur retired on July 22 of the same year. Two years earlier, on July 10, 1803, he had given the Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm III. honored in Hildesheim . As a privateer, Hübner was proposed and appointed as a member of the imperial estates of the Kingdom of Westphalia by the municipal Mairie in 1808 , and he took part in their two meetings in 1810 and 1812.

Hübner married twice. His first wife was Regine Juliane Rotschier, the daughter of an old urban patrician family († September 16, 1795), his second wife was the noble Bernhardine Christine Caroline von Wintzingerode , a second cousin of the Württemberg and Westphalian diplomat Georg Ernst Levin von Wintzingerode , whom he married on February 19, 1797. The von Wintzingerodes were based in Kirchohmfeld in Eichsfeld and managed u. a. under the Prussian and the Westphalian states the forests in the southern Harz and in the Eichsfeld. Since 1771, Hübner carried the town goods of the Thuringian Teutonic Order - Balley as a fiefdom, and from 1782 he held office at the Zwästener Komturhof near Jena.

literature

  • Hübner, in: German Gender Book Vol. 12, ed. Koerner Bernhard, Charlottenburg / Görlitz / Limburg 1905 (06?), P. 135f.