Eduard Schott von Schottenstein

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Eduard Freiherr Schott von Schottenstein (born February 20, 1822 in Ulm , † April 3, 1897 in Reutlingen ) was a German administrative officer.

origin

His parents were the government director Karl Schott von Schottenstein and his first wife, Freiin Adelheit Brand von Lindau (born June 14, 1796, † March 8, 1830). He still had two brothers.

Life

Eduard Schott von Schottenstein studied at the Eberhard Karls University in Tübingen . In 1842 he became a member of the Corps Suevia Tübingen . In 1849 he passed the second higher service examination. In 1850 he became an actuary at the Oberamt Kirchheim and also worked temporarily for the Stuttgart city office. In 1853 he switched to the government of the Neckar District in Ludwigsburg as a collegiate assistant . In 1855 he was promoted to assessor. In 1856 he was appointed chief administrator and in 1856 chief magistrate of the upper department of Böblingen and received the title of councilor. From 1864 to 1870 he was court marshal of the queen mother Pauline von Württemberg . In 1870 he became a councilor and in 1885 senior councilor in the government of the Black Forest district in Reutlingen . In 1888 he was retired.

From 1862 Schott was a shareholder in the Böblingen sugar factory .

family

He married Franziska de Paula Wilhelmine Guionneau des Marets on February 15, 1851 (* December 9, 1826, † March 7, 1900), a sister of Karl August von Guionneau . The couple had a son:

  • Eugen (March 19, 1852; † February 4, 1897) ⚭ 1894 (divorced 1895) Anna Charlotte Josephine Bertha Luckwald (* August 26, 1858; † April 21, 1912)

Awards

literature

  • Wolfram Angerbauer (Red.): The heads of the upper offices, district offices and district offices in Baden-Württemberg from 1810 to 1972 . Published by the working group of the district archives at the Baden-Württemberg district assembly. Theiss, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-8062-1213-9 , pp. 513 .

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener corps lists 1910, 197 , 247
  2. ^ Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the baronial houses for the year 1818, p.763
  3. ^ Court and State Handbook of the Kingdom of Württemberg 1869, p. 50