Carl von Fabeck

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General Carl von Fabeck
Gut Jablonken around 1860, Alexander Duncker collection

Friedrich Wilhelm Benjamin Carl von Fabeck (born January 16, 1788 in Jablonken , Ortelsburg , † July 15, 1870 in Potsdam ) was a Prussian lieutenant general .

Life

origin

Carl was the third son of Carl Friedrich von Fabeck (1745-1829) and Henriette, widowed Stockmar, née Stahlkopf (1747-1833).

Military career

At the age of twelve Fabeck joined the infantry regiment "von Brünneck" No. 2 in Königsberg . As a lieutenant in the L'Estoq Corps, he took part in the Battle of Prussian Eylau in 1807 . As the captain of the York Corps, he was seriously wounded in the Battle of Leipzig and received the Iron Cross, 2nd class , from Field Marshal Yorck von Wartenburg . He took part in the war against France as a company commander with the Kaiser Alexander Garde Grenadier Regiment No. 1 in 1815 and then became a major in command of a district of Paris (1816) and commander of the 2nd East Prussian Grenadier Battalion of the Alexander Regiment, the was formed from the former battalion of Fabeck. In 1840 he became major general and commander of the 3rd Infantry Brigade in Stettin .

For his services, Fabeck u. a. Awarded the Red Eagle Order II. Class with oak leaves and swords and the Order of St. John .

Fabeck was buried in the old garrison cemetery.

family

Fabeck had married Amelie Ottilie Charlotte, widowed von Knobloch, born von Massenbach (born November 4, 1786 in Königsberg, † May 12, 1832 in Berlin) in Königsberg on March 11, 1810 . She was the daughter of the later general of the cavalry Friedrich von Massenbach (1753-1819). The couple had the following children:

  • Karl Friedrich Eduard (1811-1811)
  • Gustav August Theodor Robert (1813–1889), Prussian lieutenant general
  • Hermann Wilhelm Alexander Franz (1816–1873), Prussian lieutenant general
  • Karl (* 1815; † March 29, 1821)
  • Ottilie Maria Henriette Luise (* 1817 - † December 28, 1889), canoness in Gieseke-Keppel
  • Karl Gustav Hermann Otto (1820-1821)
  • Marie Ottilie Henriette Luise (March 17, 1822 - March 17, 1851)
  • Ida Ottilie Marie Henriette (* April 28, 1825 - December 17, 1851)
  • Hugo (1828–1870), Prussian major

After the death of his first wife, Fabeck married Emilie Hotho on October 1, 1833 in the French Cathedral in Berlin (* March 8, 1801 in Berlin; † December 18, 1882 in Potsdam). The following children were born from this marriage:

  • Heinrich Karl Arthur (born September 30, 1835, † 1915), Colonel
⚭ 1865 Henriette Olga von Beneckendorff and von Hindenburg (* June 12, 1841; † September 29, 1879)
⚭ 1882 Anna Luise Marie von der Groeben (* August 12, 1852)
  • Amalie Emilie Henriette Luise Marie (born September 26, 1836 - † March 11, 1838)
  • Helene Karoline Antonie Viktoria Margarethe Emilie (born October 13, 1837) ⚭ Wilhelm Ludwig Gustav Henning from the East
  • Friederike (Frida) Wilhelmine Luise (* March 23, 1840) ⚭ 1868 Gustav Karl Kreuzwendedich von dem Borne (* November 14, 1832)
  • Rosalie Emilie Luise (born July 5, 1842)

literature

  • Kurt von Priesdorff : Soldier leadership . Volume 5, Hanseatische Verlagsanstalt Hamburg, undated [Hamburg], undated [1938], DNB 367632802 , pp. 425-427, no. 1625.
  • C. von Zeppelin: The Wars of Liberation 1813-1815. For the 100th anniversary celebration. Weller-Verlag, Berlin 1913.
  • von Etzel: Kaiser Alexander Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1. Berlin 1855.
  • von Kries, von Renthe: History of the Emperor Alexander Guard Grenadier Regiment No. 1. Berlin 1904.
  • History of the Kronprinz Grenadier Regiment (1st East Prussia) No. 1.
  • Marcelli Janecki : Handbook of the Prussian Nobility. Volume 2, 1893, pp. 228f.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Great General Staff, History of the II. East Prussian Grenadier Battalion ( Memento of the original from November 8, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.grosser-generalstab.de
  2. The battalion that his uncle Ferdinand von Fabeck had led as commander in the battle of Prussian Eylau. Ferdinand von Fabeck received the order Pour le Mérite for this , took his leave as colonel in 1809 and died in Prussian Holland in 1831.
  3. Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelige Häuser B Volume X, p. 146. Volume 52 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1972
  4. http://gw.geneanet.org/jrdus?lang=de&pz=friedrich+oskar+walter&nz=rolcke&ocz=0&p=gustav+carl+kreuzwendedich+235&n=von+dem+borne