Carl von Hänlein

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Konrad Siegmund Karl von Hänlein (also Carl ) (born March 2, 1760 in Ansbach ; † August 31, 1819 Kassel ) was a Prussian politician and diplomat .

family

Carl von Hänlein was the son of the Margravial Ansbach court, government and judiciary and feudal provost Christoph Ferdinand Hänlein (1725–1790) and his wife Catharina Susanne Sophie Cramer (1733–1808), daughter of Mgfl. Ansbach. Privy Councilor and Director Sigismund Carl Cramer and Maria Barbara Mauder.

Carl von Hänlein, who was of Protestant denomination, married Johanna Christiana Traber (born July 19, 1759 in Harburg, † June 27, 1824 in Kassel) on April 30, 1789 in Ansbach, the daughter of Gfl. Oettingen-Wallerstein. Tax administrators in Harburg Johann Matthäus Traber and Catharina Charlotte Ege.

The following children were born from the marriage:

  • Johann Christoph Ferdinand Louis (1790-1853) became Royal Prussian Legation Secretary in Frankfurt am Main, then in Kassel, ao. Envoy and plenipotentiary minister in Oldenburg, most recently at the Mecklenburgische Höfe and Minister-Resident at the Hanseatic cities in Hamburg.
  • Sophie Christiane Caroline Louise Haenlein (1791, 1814 godmother in Frankfurt am Main)
  • Caroline Sophie Charlotte Louise Haenlein (1793–1861) married the Royal Prussian Lieutenant Colonel and Canon zu Havelberg Theodor Franz Sartorius von Schwanenfeld (1783–1863) in Kassel on January 2, 1816
  • Carl Friedrich Ferdinand von Haenlein (* Ansbach September 17, 1794)
  • Sophie Charlotte Juliane Ernestine von Haenlein (1796-1859)
  • Carl Friedrich Ernst Haenlein (1798–1877), forester in the Duchy of Ratibor

Career

Carl von Hänlein attended grammar school in Ansbach from 1772 and studied in Erlangen from 1774. In 1781 he became a member of the German Society . From 1781 to 1783 he studied in Tübingen and was awarded a Dr. jur. utr. PhD. In 1783 he became Royal Prussian Assessor in the Sayn Administration College and in 1784 Administration Council. In 1786 he became Margrave Ansbachach Court and Government Councilor in the First Senate and in 1793 Royal Prussian Privy Councilor.

In 1794/95 he represented Prussia with the Minister of State Karl August von Hardenberg in Frankfurt and Berlin, represented the Minister when he was absent in the presentation of Frankish affairs in the Royal Cabinet Ministry and especially worked on the establishment and execution of the Franconian state sovereignty sestem.

In 1795 he was a lecturer at the Royal Ansbach-Bavarian Land Ministry and the Senate established for state sovereignty, foreign fiefdom and spiritual affairs. From 1798 he served as Vice-President of the Second Senate of the War and Domain Chamber and Consistorial President.

In 1801 he was the successor to Friedrich Julius Heinrich von Soden district directorate in the Franconian Empire .

In 1802 he was the 2nd Royal Prussian envoy to the Imperial Deputation in Regensburg . After the end of the HRR , it remained in the Royal Prussian Service in 1806, initially for use in Berlin. On July 24, 1806, as a reaction to the founding of the Rhine Confederation, he presented thoughts on the establishment of a North German Reich Confederation in a memorandum.

In 1809 he was appointed Royal Prussian Ambassador to the Princely Primate Court of Aschaffenburg. In 1813 he became the extraordinary envoy and plenipotentiary minister in Kassel and in 1816/17 briefly the first Prussian envoy to the Bundestag . His successor at the Bundestag was August Friedrich Ferdinand von der Goltz .

Honors

On July 10, 1803 he was raised to the Royal Prussian nobility. He received the Grand Cross of the Hessian House Order from the Golden Lion .

literature

References and comments

  1. The widespread erroneous indication of death Year (1849) in Gotha has to be corrected by Karl August Varnhagen von Ense : diaries . Ed. V. Ludmilla Assing , Vol. 10, Hamburg 1868, p. 268 f. Digitized