Eduard Heinrich Heydenreich

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Eduard Heinrich Heydenreich (born February 4, 1790 in Dresden ; † February 17, 1883 ibid) was a German lawyer, lecturer at the university in Wittenberg, lawyer and city councilor in Dresden.

Live and act

Eduard Heinrich Heydenreich studied law and first became a private lecturer in law at the university in Wittenberg, then still in Saxony . When Wittenberg became Prussian at the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, he finally moved to Dresden and worked as a lawyer in the Saxon residence . However, Heydenreich is not listed in the Dresden address book until 1829, only from 1831, then as the owner of Johannesgasse 197 in the Pirnaische Vorstadt in 1839, he sold the house and in return bought the house at Amalienstraße 10, which he moved to in the same year. In 1847 Heydenreich became a city councilor in Dresden, a civil honorary position. During the revolution of 1848/49 Heydenreich remained a supporter of the monarchy, which he expressed in his poems, which he wrote in his spare time. In 1879 he became a lawyer at the Royal District Court. Heydenreich administered the family scholarship from 1847 until his death in 1883. A commemorative coin was also issued in his honor. Heydenreich last lived at Amalienstraße 19 on the first floor.

family

Eduard Heinrich Heydenreich came from the Saxon Heydenreich family, which includes several famous theologians, lawyers, politicians and officers in their family tree. The uninterrupted lineage goes back to Hannß Heydenreich on Walthersdorf near Freiberg. He was born on February 4, 1790 as the son of the royal Saxon senior consistory advisor Benjamin Carl Heinrich Heydenreich (* October 24, 1762 - May 16, 1835 in Dresden), married since October 18, 1787 in Dresden to Christiane Friederike (* around 1765 ; buried September 24, 1827 in Dresden), a daughter of Johann Gottlieb Müller, General-Accis-Ober-Einnehmer in Dresden.

Eduard Heinrich Heydenreich had eight siblings:

  1. Gustav Heinrich Heydenreich (born June 7, 1791 in Dresden, † May 22, 1857 in Weißenfels ), theologian, entomologist and superintendent in Weißenfels;
  2. Adolf Heinrich Heydenreich (born October 4, 1792 in Dresden, † October 27, 1855 in Dresden), royal Saxon officer, most recently with the rank of artillery major, staff officer and director of the military education institute;
  3. Ernestine Henriette Christiane Heydenreich (born June 12, 1797 in Dresden, † December 21, 1880 in Dresden). She lived with her parents on Amalienstraße .;
  4. Wilhelmine Henriette Heydenreich (born August 13, 1799 in Dresden; † March 6, 1845 in Wittenberg) married to Dr. jur. Paw tusk in Wittenberg;
  5. Karl Heinrich Heydenreich (born June 26, 1801 in Dresden, † April 29, 1882);
  6. Auguste Henriette Heydenreich (* 1802 in Dresden);
  7. Ludwig Ernst Heydenreich (born January 20, 1804 in Dresden, † April 20, 1889 in Leipzig), wholesale merchant;
  8. Charles Henry Heydenreich (born December 8, 1816 in Dresden; buried July 18, 1881 in Green-Wood Cemetery , New York), 1840 music teacher in Dresden, Gildner, 1861–1864 soldier in the 20th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment . He was a half-brother from his father's relationship with NN geb. Patitz.

Heydenreich was married since November 4, 1816 in Dresden with Juliana Friederica Agnesa Rhäsa (born September 13, 1795 in Dresden; † September 9, 1865 in Dresden), a daughter of Carl Gottlob Rhäsa (* 1754; † August 26, 1823 in Teplitz ), royal. Saxon. Court and Justice Chancellery Secretary to Dresden. Nine children resulted from the marriage:

  1. Julius Karl Heinrich Heydenreich (born October 28, 1817 in Dresden; † September 8, 1904 in Blasewitz near Dresden), theologian and pastor of Leubnitz-Neuostra , married to Emilie born on June 11, 1851. Steffen (1830–1910), a student of Clara and Robert Schumann . Her son, Eduard Karl Heinrich Heydenreich (born May 29, 1852 in Dresden; † † March 2, 1915 in Leipzig) was a doctor of philology, high school teacher, lecturer in history at the Royal Bergakademie zu Freiberg , professor, genealogist and archivist and, most recently, commissioner for nobility matters in the Saxon Ministry of the Interior with the rank and title of a Royal Saxon Upper Government Council.
  2. Rosalie Heydenreich (* May 1819 in Dresden, † June 1823 in Dresden);
  3. Elise Henriette Louise Heydenreich (born January 11, 1822 in Dresden); married since November 4, 1847 with the high school senior teacher Karl Traugott Sachse (1816–1863);
  4. Marie Heydenreich (* May 1823 in Dresden, † June 1823 in Dresden);
  5. Bernhard August Heinrich Heydenreich (* May 12, 1825 in Dresden; † March 9, 1893 in Dresden), royal. Saxon General;
  6. Mathilde Heydenreich (born March 1827 in Dresden, † January 1828 in Dresden);
  7. Wilhelm Heydenreich (* 1830 in Dresden, † 1852 in Dresden);
  8. Pauline Henriette Marie Heydenreich (born April 23, 1833 in Dresden) married since November 9, 1865 to Julius Hermsdorf (1822–1893), pastor in Grünlichtenberg :
  9. Wilhelmine Henriette Heydenreich (born October 28, 1836 in Dresden).

Awards (selection)

Fonts (selection)

  • Claudius Tryphoninus, De iure pignorum pars 1 . Dissertation Wittenberg 1812.
  • Happy homecoming, Sr. Majesty, our most gracious King and Lord Friedrich August . Teubner Publishing House, Leipzig 1844.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Address book Dresden 1831 , p. 113.
  2. ^ Address book Dresden 1840 , p. 108.
  3. ^ Address book Dresden 1880 , p. 188.
  4. ^ Address book Dresden 1883 , p. 181.
  5. ^ SLUB Dresden, Ludwig Ernst Heydenreich: Corrections and additions to the family tree of the Hannss Heydenreich family on Walthersdorf near Freiberg 1401-1901 by Willy Heydenreich
  6. ^ Address book Dresden 1844 , SLUB, p. 118
  7. ^ Family tree of the Heydenreich family, 1904