Carl Rudolph von Ingersleben

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Carl Rudolph von Ingersleben († May 9, 1737 in Nöckern near Zerbst ) was a princely Barby governor and manor owner.

Life

He came from the Magdeburg noble family von Ingersleben and embarked on an administrative career in the service of the dukes of Saxe-Weissenfels , who had acquired the county of Barby and appointed him as their governor in the former royal seat of Barby.

Carl Rudolph von Ingersleben sat on Gut Neudorf as heir, feudal lord and court lord. In 1717 he bought the indebted Hans Caspar von Weißigk whose manor Spören in office Zörbig , which was then in the duchy of Saxe-Merseburg was.

In 1695 he married the widowed Martha Sibylle von Schlegel from the house of Zehringen (1669–1709), and he became the stepfather of their children, including the later Prussian major Christoph Friedrich Zanthier .

In 1737 Carl Rudolph von Ingersleben died in Nöckern. He left five sons, including Christoph Friedrich Ferdinand von Ingersleben (baptized March 11, 1705), a royal Prussian lieutenant in the Anhalt regiment in Halle / Saale. Furthermore, Friedrich Heinrich von Ingersleben (* 1711), who was staying in Dresden, and the three younger brothers Carl Dietrich, Joseph Albrecht and August Friedrich von Ingersleben, who were not of legal age when their father died and therefore had to be placed under guardianship.

The later major general Johann Ludwig von Ingersleben was his cousin.

literature

  • Johann Friedrich Gauhe : The Holy Roman Empire Genealogical-Historical Adels-Lexikon. In it the oldest and most handsome nobles, barons and counts families flourishing today according to their antiquity and origin, distributions in different houses and the lives of the most famous people who have emerged from them, in particular state ministers with proven certificates, together with a necessary preface, appendices and register . Johann Friedrich Gleditsch & Son, Part II, Leipzig 1747, Sp. 492. [However, at the time mentioned in 1738, Carl Rudolph von Ingersleben had already died.]
  • Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of noble houses 1941. S. 188ff.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ General historical lexicon , Volume 4, Leipzig 1732, p. 283.