Carl Christian Foerster

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Carl Christian Förster , recently wrote to Carol Christian Förster , (* 21st December 1618 in Altenburg ; † 23. August 1695 in Zeitz ) was 1661-1671 high princely Saxony-naumburgischer bailiff of offices Schleusingen , Suhl , Kühndorf and Benshausen . His official briefing in the important administrative office in a part of the ducal county of Henneberg took place on May 24, 1661 by the commissioned council and commissioner Dr. Christian Günther Förster from Meiningen . At the same time he was electoral and princely Saxon communal land rent master in the county of Henneberg.

After ten years of successful activity in Schleusingen, he was appointed to the court of Duke Moritz von Sachsen-Zeitz in Zeitz as a princely Saxon-Naumburg court, judiciary and chamber councilor. It can be detected there until at least November 1694.

Carl Christian Förster was the son of Helias Förster, JUD Comes Palatinus Caesareus, also Princely Saxon Councilor and Chancellor of Altenburg , who with Maria, the widow of Volckman Scherer , Princely Saxon Chancellor of Coburg , and daughter of Johann Freund , Electoral Saxon Chancellor zu Naumburg and Zeitz, later Chancellor of Merseburg , was married.

He married Margaretha, the youngest daughter of Johann Reichard , Chamber Councilor of the Princely Saxon Altenburg region and chief tax collector. From this marriage the son Lic. Johann Nicolaus Förster emerged, who was born on January 28, 1658 in Schleusingen. From 1677 he attended the collegiate school in Zeitz and from 1678 the University of Leipzig , where he studied philosophy and law. Due to the crisis at the university that began in 1680, Carl Christian took his son from the university in July of the year. J. back to Zeitz. From October 1680 he continued his studies at the University of Alttorf until 1682. He graduated as a licentiate in law on March 8, 1683. In the same month he went on a study trip. From Altdorf he traveled via Regensburg and Ingolstadt to Munich , Augsburg , Ulm , Tübingen and Strasbourg . From there he went to the French capital Paris in May 1683 to learn the French language. After a brief, serious illness, Johann Nicolaus Förster died on March 23, 1683 in Paris. The funeral sermon given by the Danish court preacher Hector Gottfried Masius, later professor of theology in Paris and at that time as envoy in Paris, was published by Friedemann Hetstädt in Zeitz.