Caspar Hilt

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Caspar Hilt , also Kaspar Hilt (born February 7, 1765 in Mainz , † May 2, 1829 in Wiesbaden ) was a German lawyer.

Life

Caspar Hilt was born as the son of Joseph Karl Hilt, district governor in Erbach in the Rheingau .

Caspar Hilt studied law at the University of Mainz and did further training in 1784 in the Rüdesheim office . After his examination he was appointed assessor in the same office in 1787 . In 1793 he was appointed bailiff in Obernburg am Main . In the same year he was transferred to Eppstein as an official cellar , bailiff and forester . At that time, Eppstein was a place that, due to its close proximity to the fortresses of Mainz and Königstein , was heavily dependent on billeting, contributions and various extortions, particularly on the arbitrariness of the respective government during the war. In 1798 Caspar Hilt came to Oberursel as town and district bailiff and was also elected market master of the Hohen Mark .

In 1809 he was appointed captain and chief of a company in the first regiment of the newly established Landjäger Brigade.

Due to a change of government, he entered the service of the Duchy of Nassau . During this time his first wife also died. On January 24, 1814, he received the title of judicial councilor and was appointed head of the Landsturm built to defend the duchy . In 1815 he was employed as court judge in Wiesbaden , but after a few weeks he was transferred to Dillenburg with the same task . In 1822 he was reassigned to the court in Wiesbaden. Shortly before he started working in Wiesbaden, his second wife died.

On January 12, 1825, he was appointed to the higher appellate judge in Wiesbaden.

In 1793 he married Gertrudis von Luß and Stahlenberg from Rüdesheim for the first time. Later he was married to Anna Maria (* unknown; † 1822), daughter of the ducal Naussau chief hunter Ihlemann from Eltville , with whom he had two children.

His daughter Maria Josepha (1813–1877) married Moritz Lieber (1790–1860), lawyer, politician and tea merchant. Their son, Ernst Lieber , became the leader of the Center Party .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ New Nekrolog der Deutschen, 7th year, 1829, 1st part, pp. 404–406 . BF Voigt, 1831 ( google.de [accessed on January 2, 2018]).
  2. ^ Kurmainzischer Hof- und Staats-Kalender: to the year 1797, p. 166 . St. Rochus Hospitals-Buchdr., 1797 ( google.de [accessed April 12, 2018]).
  3. Ernst Lieber. In: German biography - online version. Retrieved April 12, 2016 .