Curt von Bloedau

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Carl Curt Gustav von Bloedau (born November 30, 1864 in Sondershausen ; † April 16, 1924 there ) was district administrator and member of the state parliament of the Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen .

family

Curt von Bloedau was the son of the royal Prussian Takonde lieutenant (from 1896 colonel) Günther Ferdinand Carl von Bloedau and his wife Sophie Emilie Elisa (Elise) Schneidewind. Curt von Bloedau, who was an Evangelical Lutheran, remained unmarried. His uncle, the manor owner Hermann Friedrich von Bloedau , belonged to the Reichstag as a non-attached member of the constituency of the Duchy of Saxony-Altenburg from 1898 to 1903.

education and profession

Curt von Bloedau attended grammar school in Erfurt and graduated from high school there in 1885. He then studied law in Leipzig (1885/1886), Freiburg im Breisgau (1886), Berlin (1886/1887), Göttingen (1887) and again Berlin (1887/88). March 15th / 27th In September 1890 he passed the first state examination in law at the OLG Celle ("sufficient"). After his legal clerkship (1891 to 1896) in Osterode am Harz, in Lüneburg, Herzberg am Harz and Celle, he passed the 2nd state legal examination at the OLG Celle in 1896 (1897?) ("Sufficient without repetition"). From 1897 he was a court assessor in Herzberg am Harz before entering the Schwarzburg special houses state service on November 1, 1897. From January 5, 1898 he was a court assessor at the Sondershausen District Court and from April 4, 1899 at the Gehren District Court . Since August 24, 1899 he worked for the district administrator in Sondershausen. On October 3, 1899, Curt von Bloedau was dismissed from the Prussian judicial service because of the transfer to the state administration of the Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen. From October 1, 1899, he was a government assessor in Sondershausen, and in 1900 temporarily as a representative of the district administrator in Sondershausen. From 1901 to 1902 he worked in Ebeleben. In both positions he was responsible for the construction of the Greußen-Ebeleben-Keula railway . On June 22nd, he was entrusted with the provisional administration of the Arnstadt District Office on July 1st, 1902. From June 27, 1903 to September 30, 1912 he was district administrator in Arnstadt . On October 1, 1912, he was given the title of Privy Councilor in the Princely Ministry in Sondershausen, in the Department of the Interior. He was retired on February 1, 1922.

politics

From February 2, 1904 to March 31, 1912 he was a member of the Schwarzburg-Sondershäuser Landtag (1904 in the constituency general elections 4, 1905 to 1912 for the constituency general elections 4B).

Further tasks

Curt von Bloedau was a Royal Prussian lieutenant in the Landwehr. From 1904 he was a member of the supervisory board of the Schwarzburgische Landesbank zu Sondershausen.

He played a leading role in various clubs. He was chairman of the state committee for the Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen of the German Fleet Association , member of the Arnstadt Museum Society from 1902, member of the Association for German History and Antiquity in Sondershausen (chairman there from 1913 to 1920), chairman of the Jung-Deutschland Association, local group Sondershausen (1913), and Secretary of the Bloedau Family Association (1910).

Works

Curt von Bloedau was the author of a large number of articles on Schwarzburg history and heraldry.

Honors

On August 7, 1909, he was appointed chamberlain . He received a number of medals: Princely Honor Cross III. Class (May 24, 1904); Princely Cross of Honor 2nd Class with broken oak 1914/15 (August 21, 1918). - Knight of Honor of the Brandenburg Balley of the Order of St. John (1900); Right knight of the Order of St. John . Commander's Cross 2nd class of the Duke of Saxony-Ernestine House Order (1909). Royal Prussian Order of the Red Eagle IV class (1910).

literature

  • Jochen Lengemann : Landtag and regional representation of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen 1843–1923. Biographical handbook (= Parliaments in Thuringia 1809–1952. Vol. 3). G. Fischer, Jena et al. 1998, ISBN 3-437-35368-3 , pp. 151-152.