Ferdinand of Pistorius

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Johann August Ferdinand Pistorius , from 1818 by Pistorius , (born October 16, 1767 in Heidenheim an der Brenz , † September 11, 1841 in Stuttgart ) was a Württemberg court advisor and politician .

origin

Ferdinand Pistorius was the son of the Oberamtmann Johann Christoph Gottlieb Pistorius (1732–1806) and Susanne Jakobine Friederike geb. Neuffer (1739-1810). He had seven siblings, including the chief bailiff Johann Karl von Pistorius .

Life and work

Ferdinand von Pistorius attended school in Göppingen and then studied at the Tübingen monastery . In March 1798 he became educator of Prince Paul of Württemberg in Erlangen, and from 1800 to October 1803 of Prince Wilhelm of Württemberg, later King Wilhelm I of Württemberg . In 1803 he became a councilor and later a councilor in Stuttgart. In 1805 Pistorius became a member of the local charities in Stuttgart and from 1808 its president. In 1820 the Landtag elected him a member of the Württemberg State Court. In 1830 he was appointed secret legation councilor.

politics

From 1815 to 1817, Pistorius was a member of the state assemblies for the Lorch district and in 1819 for the Welzheim district. From 1821 to 1831 he was a member of the Second Chamber of the Württemberg State Parliament, which was also known as the Chamber of Deputies .

family

In 1803 Ferdinand von Pistorius married the young widow Emilie Vischer b. Feuerlein (1776–1816) from Calw, a daughter of the government council and secret cabinet secretary Carl Friedrich Feuerlein (1730–1808) and his wife Auguste Franziska, née Fischer. Ferdinand and Emilie had seven children. Ferdinand von Pistorius entered a second marriage in 1819 with Eleonore Feuerlein (1790–1870). She was a sister of his first wife. Eleonore Pistorius b. Feuerlein made the house of her father Feuerlein and her husband Pistorius in the Stuttgarter Seegasse (today Friedrichstrasse 46) a foster home for art and education in Stuttgart and went down in Stuttgart's history as the Seegasse queen . The house of the Seegasse queen was built by her uncle, the court architect Reinhard Fischer , but later had to give way to the building of the Württembergische Vereinsbank founded in 1869, which was destroyed in World War II.

Honors

literature

  • Frank Raberg : Biographical handbook of the Württemberg state parliament members 1815-1933 . On behalf of the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg. Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-17-016604-2 , p. 668 .

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Registered in Tübingen from 1786 (registration no. 38 491): “Joh. Aug. Ferd. Pistorius Geoppingen. aet. 19 J., p .: Christ. Gottl., O. Amtmann zu Göppingen. “ The matriculations of the University of Tübingen 1477–1817 , Vol. 3, p. 333.
  2. Friedrichstrasse in Stuttgart was formerly called Seegasse, see z. B. the list of historical street names in Stuttgart
  3. The story of the sea lane queen. From the old days of Friedrichstrasse - The Pistorius house and the Feuerlein family . In: Stuttgarter Zeitung No. 178 of August 6, 1955, p. 36
  4. Royal Württemberg Court and State Handbook 1828, p. 32.