Carl Friedrich Reiche-Eisenstuck

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carl Friedrich Reiche-Eisenstuck
Schönfeld Manor (around 1860)

Carl Friedrich Reiche-Eisenstuck (born February 18, 1790 in Annaberg , † February 2, 1864 in Dresden ) was a German politician. He was mayor of Annaberg and a member of the Saxon state parliament .

Live and act

The son of the Annaberg postmaster, councilor and vice city judge Karl Friedrich Reiche and his wife Johanne Christiane Eisenstuck attended the Annaberg Lyceum in Wittenberg before studying law . After returning to his hometown, he became a lawyer and court director of the neighboring towns of Zwönitz and Gelenau . After the death of his father in 1813 he took over his post as Annaberg postmaster . In 1823 he became a council member in Annaberg for the first time. At the Landtag in 1824, he took part in the deliberations of the Select Committee of the Electoral Saxon Estates for Annaberg. In 1825 and 1827 he was elected as the successor to his uncle Johann Christian Eisenstuck as Annaberg city judge. In 1828 he became mayor of Annaberg for the first time. The following year, at the age of 39, he was adopted by his uncle, so that from that point on he had the double name "Reiche-Eisenstuck". After the death of his uncle he came by inheritance u. a. in the possession of the manor Schönfeld near Annaberg.

As Mayor of Annaberg, Reiche-Eisenstuck took part in the last two estates of the Kingdom of Saxony , at which 1830 and 1831 a. a. the constitution of the country was discussed. For the first constitutional state parliament of 1833/34 he was appointed by King Anton to represent the mayor of the First Chamber. He gave up his post as mayor of Annaberg, which had been confirmed to him for life after the introduction of the Saxon town regulations in 1832, on July 15, 1836. At the same time, he lost his place in the first chamber of the state parliament. As a member of the 11th municipal electoral district, however, he was immediately able to win a mandate for the state parliament in 1836/37. He was proposed as a candidate for the post of President of the Chamber by the members of Chamber II of the State Parliament and appointed by the King. He handed over his post as Annaberg postmaster to his son on April 1, 1838. In the same year he was one of the first commoners to receive the post of Saxon governor . For health reasons, he rejected a renewed candidacy for the office of President of the Second Chamber at the following Landtag in 1839/40.

Then he succeeded in the civil service. Until 1843 he was governor in Freiberg . He then worked in the Saxon Ministry of the Interior in 1845 a. a. as a lecturing councilor and as a member of several commissions (including on the Leipzig riots of 1845 and the revolution in the Ore Mountains in summer 1848). On June 30, 1849, Reiche-Eisenstuck received the requested dismissal from civil service on the condition that he must continue to be available for special assignments. From then on he led a life as a manor owner. In 1851 he was elected deputy district chairman of the Erzgebirge knighthood and in 1858 he took over the honorary post of justice of the peace in his residential district.

After he had stayed away from the state parliaments in 1842/43, 1845/46 and 1847, he returned to the Saxon state parliament in 1848 as a representative of the Erzgebirge manor owners. He remained a member of the Second Chamber until his death, although he did not always exercise the mandate. In the last years of his life he held the title of Privy Councilor . On August 16, 1861 he was made an honorary citizen of the city of Annaberg.

The tomb for Barbara Uthmann, which he donated and designed by the sculptor Franz Pettrich , has stood in the Trinitatis cemetery since October 17, 1834 .

Works

  • Reports on the events of 1831 in Annaberg , Annaberg 1831.
  • Collected notes on Annaberg town history from the year 1696 to 1824 (forays through the history of the upper Ore Mountains 38), edited by Helmut Unger , Annaberg-Buchholz 2000. DNB 958845751

literature