Eduard von Goeddaeus

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Eduard Ludwig Karl Bernhard von Goeddaeus (born November 11, 1815 in Kassel , † February 1, 1888 in Frankfurt am Main ) was a civil servant in the Electorate of Hesse . From 1860 to 1862 he headed the Foreign Ministry and the Ministry of the Electoral House. He was a member of the five-member State Ministry.

family

Goeddaeus' father was the State Councilor Bernhard Philipp Friedrich von Goddaeus (born August 7, 1788 in Rinteln, † March 5, 1853 in Marburg), landowner in Brünchenhain. On May 14, 1812 he had Friederike Charlotte Juliane born. married by and to Gilsa (born October 10, 1791 in Kassel, † October 16, 1866 in Lamspringe). Eduard was the second son and the third of ten children from this marriage.

The paternal grandparents were Heinrich Goddaeus (1742–1819) and Amalie Sophie Adelheid, born in 1814, judge at the court of appeal in Kassel . von Hüllesheim (1768–1828). The maternal grandparents were Karl Ludwig Philipp von Gilsa (1753–1823) and Wilhelmine Charlotte Christine von Wintzingerode (1754–1792).

Eduard von Goddaeus married Elisabeth Anna Blauroth (* 1852) in Treysa in 1878 . The marriage had four children.

Life

Goeddaeus visited the Ernestinum Rinteln . From 1835 to 1840 he studied law and political science at the Philipps University of Marburg and the Georg-August University of Göttingen . He became a member of the Corps Guestphalia Marburg (1835) and the Corps Guestphalia Göttingen (1836). After completing his studies, he became a trainee lawyer at the Supreme Court in Marburg in 1840 and was a public prosecutor there from 1843 to 1850 . He was also a member of the Marburg city council in 1847 and 1850. In 1850 he was transferred to the higher district authority in Kassel as a government assessor, where he was also a state commissioner on a part-time basis. In 1851 he became an advisor to the electoral government in Kassel and at the same time sovereign commissioner at the Jewish supervisor's office in Kassel, in 1852 also government commissioner of the Halberstadtschen Fräuleinstiftung and in 1854/55 a member of the commission for agricultural affairs. In 1855 he was transferred to Witzenhausen as district administrator . In 1856 he became Legation Councilor and Lecturing Council in the Kassel Foreign Ministry , in the Secret Cabinet and in the State Ministry as a whole. In 1858/59 he was also a member of the order commission.

On July 15, 1859, after the resignation in May of the State Ministry led by Friedrich Scheffer (1800–1879) since February 1856 , he succeeded Friedrich Siegmund von Meyer (1807–1888) as acting head of the Foreign Ministry in the Abée Ministry -Volmar and then on June 9, 1860 appointed to the Secret Legation Council and Chairman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of the Electoral House and member of the State Ministry as a whole. He resigned in June 1862 and was put on hold. Acting successor was on June 22, 1862 Jakob Arnold Karl von Dehn-Rothfelser (1808-1881), who headed the Ministry until December 1862 in addition to the Ministry of Finance.

In 1864 he was appointed Minister- Resident of the Electorate of Hesse at the French court, but in the same year he left the civil service and went to Frankfurt am Main as legal advisor . In 1868 he was once again in the (now Prussian) civil service as district administrator of the Fritzlar district .

Eight years after the death of the last Elector of Hesse-Kassel, Friedrich Wilhelm , Eduard von Goddaeus published the book From the Life of Elector Friedrich Wilhelm of Hesse in 1883 .

Brünchenhain

The Brünchenhain mansion , which he inherited from his father in 1853 and which he inherited from his father , was built in 1719 by his great-great-grandfather, Heinrich Dehn-Rothfelser (1657–1725) .

Honors

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kurhessischer Kammerherr and Oberststallmeister, Grand Chamberlain of Katharina von Württemberg , Queen of the Kingdom of Westphalia , Governor of the palace in Braunschweig ( Gilsa, Carl Ludwig Philipp Freiherr von u. Zu. Hessische Biographie. In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).)
  2. The Rintelner Gymnasium in the mirror of the time 1817–1967 ed. from the Ernestinum high school. Bösendahl, Rinteln 1967, p. 101
  3. ^ Kösener corps lists 1910, 69 , 254; 158 , 78
  4. Electoral Hessian Court and State Handbook for the year 1850 , Kassel, 1850, p. 105
  5. ^ Ludwig Horwitz: The administration of Jewish affairs in the former Kurhessen. Gebr. Gotthelft, Kassel, 1908, pp. 19–21
  6. ^ Christine Goebel: The federal and Germany policy of Kurhessens in the years 1859 to 1866; An analysis of the decline phase of the German Confederation. Tectum Verlag, Marburg, 1995, ISBN 978-3-929019-68-1 , p. 58
  7. ^ Conrad Abée received the Ministry of Justice on May 5, 1859, and Colonel Johann Carl Rainier von Ende became head of the War Ministry on the same day. Carl Rohde was a member of the Board of Directors from May 10th and Minister of Finance from July 25th, 1859. The Ministry of the Interior was provisionally headed from May 13, 1959 by State Councilor Heinrich Eduard von Stiernberg (1807-1884), then from April 17, 1860 by Minister Otto Volmar (1804-1883). (Christine Goebel: Die Bundes- und Deutschlandpolitik Kurhessen in the years 1859 to 1866; An analysis of the decline phase of the German Confederation. Tectum Verlag, Marburg, 1995, ISBN 978-3-929019-68-1 , p. 88
  8. Electoral Hessian Court and State Handbook for the year 1862, Kassel, 1862, p. 109
  9. ^ Peter Truhart (Ed.): Eastern, Northern & Central Europe. Annex: International Organizations. (Volume 4/2). KG Saur, Munich, 2006, ISBN 3-598-21549-5 , p. 589
  10. In January 1863 the Ministerialrat Koch followed this on an interim basis, then from February 1863 Conrad Abée (1806–1873), who headed it from November 1863 at the same time as the Ministry of Justice until the end of the electoral state. (Christine Goebel: The Federal and Germany Policy of Kurhessen in the years 1859 to 1866; An analysis of the decline phase of the German Confederation. Tectum Verlag, Marburg, 1995, ISBN 978-3-929019-68-1 , p. 58)
  11. From the time the previous District Administrator Ludwig Weber was transferred as District Administrator to Wolfhagen in the now Prussian administrative district of Cassel to the appointment of the new District Administrator Karl Moritz Willibald Johann von Eschwege in the province of Hessen-Nassau created on December 7, 1868 .
  12. ^ Eduard von Goeddaeus: From the life of the Elector Friedrich Wilhelm von Hessen , Gustav Klaunig Hofbuchhandlung, Kassel, 1883