Eduard von Ungern-Sternberg

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Eduard Otto Ernst Jakob Freiherr von Ungern-Sternberg (born November 22, 1836 in Lassila, then in the parish of Kadrina , today in Rakvere , Estonia ; † November 25, 1904 in Berlin ) was a writer and member of the German Reichstag . He published under E. v. Sternberg and the pseudonyms Jakob Ernst and Otto Diwisch .

Life

Ungern-Sternberg was a son of Albert Moritz Eduard von Ungern-Sternberg (1798−1841) and Juliana Jakobine Katharina, nee. von Ramm (1809–1872). He attended the Knights and Cathedral School in Reval and the University of Dorpat from 1855 to 1857, Berlin, Vienna and Heidelberg until he was awarded a Dr. phil. PhD. During his student days he was a member of the Baltic Corporation Estonia Dorpat fraternity . He subsequently traveled extensively and was active as a journalist and politician in Baden and Schleswig-Holstein between 1862 and 1867 and in Hamburg and Berlin from 1871 to 1873. Between 1867 and 1869 he was in the north German consulate in Constantinople . From 1869 to 1871 he lived as a private citizen in Vienna, Munich and Berlin. In Augsburg he headed the Süddeutsche Reichspost from 1873 to 1875. Then he moved to Dresden , where he took over the Neue Reichszeitung. His deputy here was Franz Perrot . In 1883 he moved to the Kreuzzeitung in Berlin.

From February 1884 to 1887 he was a member of the German Reichstag for the constituency of Minden 3 ( Bielefeld , Wiedenbrück ) and the German Conservative Party . He was founding / board member of the Association of Tax and Economic Reformers founded in 1875 .

In 1871 he married Anna Helene Freiin von Ungern-Sternberg (1845–1924). They divorced in 1874, but remarried in 1877.

literature

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Individual evidence

  1. a b c Lexicon of German-Language Literature of the Baltic States and St. Petersburg (2007), p. 1348
  2. ^ Fritz Specht, Paul Schwabe: The Reichstag elections from 1867 to 1903. Statistics of the Reichstag elections together with the programs of the parties and a list of the elected representatives. 2nd Edition. Carl Heymann Verlag, Berlin 1904, p. 137.
  3. Pfälzer Zeitung: 1876, [1] . 1876 ​​( google.de [accessed on November 26, 2017]).