Franz Paul von Mittermayr

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Franz Paul von Mittermayr (painting in the Munich City Museum )

Franz Paul Joseph Mittermayr , from 1792 Edler von Mittermayr (born April 2, 1766 in Munich ; † July 6, 1836 there ), legal licensee (Lic. Jur., Teaching license ), was royal Bavarian municipal administrator and First Mayor of Munich.

As "Noble von Mittermayr" , Elector Karl Theodor von Pfalzbayern raised him to the imperial nobility on July 4, 1792 in Munich (enrollment in the Kingdom of Bavaria with the aristocratic class on June 30, 1809).

Life

Mittermayr spent his first school days in Polling . In 1784 he finished his high school studies at the electoral school in Munich (today Wilhelmsgymnasium Munich ) and then completed the compulsory basic studies (= philosophy) at the adjoining lyceum. From autumn 1786 he studied law at the University of Ingolstadt . After completing his studies, he started legal practice at the City Chief Justice Office in Munich. In 1791 he joined the Inner Council of the Munich Magistrate . In 1804 he was appointed mayor for life. After the magistrate constitution was repealed in 1810, he was appointed municipal administrator of Munich. Mittermayr was first mayor of Munich from May 1818 until his death on July 6, 1836. During his term of office, the construction of the Isar bridge and the new building of the burned down National Theater fell. He was loyal to King Max Joseph and also held his mayor's office for life, which was not unusual at the time.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ In Hettler & Sing: The Lord Mayors of Munich - 200 years of living city history. Volk Verlag, Munich 2009, p. 23/24, section Mittermayr.
  2. Hübler: Illustrations and brief life story of the mayors of the Königl. Capital and residence city of Munich. From 1818 to the present day. Obernetter, Münchern 1896. Text panel 1 and illustration Mittermayr panel 2, drawn by Wilhelm Wagenbreth.
  3. ^ Max Leitschuh: The matriculations of the upper classes of the Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich , 4 vol., Munich 1970–1976; Vol. 3, p. 174.

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