Carl Wilhelm von Bötticher

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Carl Wilhelm Bötticher , from 1864 von Boetticher (born August 26, 1791 in Soldin , † August 27, 1868 in Potsdam ) was a German administrative lawyer and Prussian civil servant.

Life

As a doctor of law, he entered the administrative service of the Crown Prussia . In the Ministry of Culture he represented orthodox positions under Eichhorn . He became the first lecturer at the Prussian State Ministry . From 1826 to 1830 he was President of the Insterburg Regional Court (at the Königsberg Higher Regional Court ) and then President of the Stettin Higher Regional Court . As a go. Upper Judicial Council , he was in 1842 upper president of the Province of Prussia . In this function he belonged to the delegation of the Prussian Church Province to the General Synod in Berlin in 1846. Resigned from this office in the German Revolution in 1848 , he became a member of the 1st Chamber a. with Radowitz representative of Prussia in the Provisional Federal Central Commission of the German Confederation . From 1851 to 1855 he served as district president in Frankfurt (Oder) , after which he became president of the Prussian Chamber of Accounts in Potsdam . On June 15, 1864, on the occasion of his 50th anniversary in office, he was raised to the nobility by King Wilhelm I.

family

Bötticher was married to Henriette Wilhelmine von Bodenhausen . They had three sons; the third, Karl Heinrich von Boetticher , was Vice Chancellor of the German Empire , Vice President of the State Ministry , State Secretary for the Interior and pioneer of German social legislation .

Individual evidence

  1. a b zeno.org (1905).
  2. Christian Gahlbeck, Vacys Vaivada, Joachim Tauber, Tobias Weger : Archive Guide to the History of the Memel Region and German-Lithuanian Relations , Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 2006.
  3. ^ Hans-Jürgen Belke: The Prussian government to Königsberg 1808-1850 . Grote, 1976.
  4. ^ A b Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling, Hans Jörg Sandkühler, Lothar Knatz, Martin Schraven: Philosophical drafts and diaries . Hamburg 1998.
  5. ^ Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage, HA Rep. 90 A, March 1, 2002 Increases in rank, sheet 203 ( online ).

Web links