Friedrich August Christian Eisendecher

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Friedrich August Christian Eisendecher , also Friedrich Christian August Eisendecher (born  February 11, 1784 , †  March 21, 1842 in Hanover ) was a German court counselor and head of the general tax office of the Kingdom of Hanover .

Life

family

Detail of the grave slab of Henriette Friederike , née Ramberg

Friedrich August Christian Eisendecher was married to Henriette Friederike Ramberg (* February 6, 1801, † September 12, 1860 in Hanover).

With a search engine such as Metager, you can find numerous other Eisendechers with similar dates of birth and similar professions on the Internet .

Career

Friedrich August Christian Eisendecher was head of the kingdom's general tax office at least since 1829. At that time, according to the Hanover address book, he lived in " Friedrichstrasse  862, in summer except for the Calenberger Thore an der Aue 173". Eisendecher which in Ohe already had an older garden house, in the summer of 1830 a new garden shed could relate whose preliminary Hofmaurermeister Ernst Ludwig Taentzel of Georg Ludwig Friedrich Laves was revised - the later Villa Rosa . Apparently, Eisendecher had subsequently given up his city apartment on Friedrichstrasse completely, as he was only recorded in the 1836 address book in the Glocksee .

The State Basic Law of 1833 for the Kingdom of Hanover, which the State , Cabinet and Finance Minister Caspar Detlev von Schulte played a key role in drafting, Eisendecher's General Tax Fund was merged with the previously independent Royal General Fund to form a uniform tax fund, which then became the budget law of the Assembly of Estates was subject.

After the end of the Anglo-Hanoverian personal union , Ernst August , Duke of Cumberland and fifth son of the English King George III. , 1837 King of Hanover. Immediately after taking over the government, he repealed the constitution on November 1, 1837, which led to a constitutional conflict in the kingdom "in which the Hanover magistrate was also involved".

So Eisendecher experienced the return to the old tax system under Caspar Detlev von Schulte, who after his dismissal as cabinet minister had now resigned to the role of simple department minister for finances .

The couple's double grave in the Neustadt cemetery

After Eisendecher's death, his widow sold the villa in the Glocksee - the name Villa Rosa first appeared in the address book in 1844 - to the Austrian real secret council , Baron Kress von Kressenstein .

The Eisendechers are buried in a listed double grave in the Neustädter Friedhof .

literature

  • Wolfgang Voigt: Hanover, Eisendecher garden house, "Villa Rosa." Glockseestrasse 1, 1830. In: Laves and Hanover. Lower Saxon architecture in the nineteenth century. Ed. By Harold Hammer-Schenk and Günther Kokkelink (revised new edition of the publication Vom Schloss zum Bahnhof… ), Ed. Libri Artis Schäfer, 1989, ISBN 3-88746-236-X , p. 484 ff.

Web links

Commons : Friedrich August Christian Eisendecher  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b See this photo of the inscription on the grave slab in the Neustädter Friedhof.
  2. a b c Wolfgang Voigt: Hanover, Eisendecher garden house, "Villa Rosa" ... (see literature).
  3. See this photo of the inscription on Henriette Friederike's grave slab.
  4. See for example this result display.
  5. Klaus Mlynek: SCHULTE, (2) Caspar Detlev von. In: Dirk Böttcher, Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 326; online through google books .
  6. a b Klaus Mlynek: Basic State Law. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 583.
  7. ^ Klaus Mlynek: Ernst August, King of Hanover. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover. P. 163 f.
  8. ^ NN : Schulte (Kaspar Detlev). In: Conversations Lexicon of the Present. Vol. 4, Leipzig: FA Brockhaus , 1840, p. 946, online via Google books .
  9. Gerd Weiß, Marianne Zehnpfennig: The northern suburban development. In: Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany , architectural monuments in Lower Saxony, City of Hanover, Part 1, Vol. 10.1. Edited by Hans-Herbert Möller, Lower Saxony State Administration Office - publications by the Institute for Monument Preservation , Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn, Braunschweig / Wiesbaden 1983, ISBN 3-528-06203-7 , p. 80; and Brühlstrasse. In: middle , annex to vol. 10.2: List of architectural monuments according to § 4 (NDSchG) (excluding architectural monuments of the archaeological monument preservation) / Status: July 1, 1985 / City of Hanover , p. 3.
  10. See this photograph of the double grave.