Friedrich August von Haeseler (Rittmeister)

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Friedrich August von Haeseler (born July 31, 1779 in Klosterhäseler ; † June 26, 1854 ibid) was a Prussian cavalry captain, manor owner and member of the provincial parliament of the province of Saxony .

Life

He came from the von Haeseler family, who had been raised to the nobility. The head forest and game master Friedrich August von Haeseler was his father. He was his first child from his marriage to Sophie Luise Christine von Thümmel (* July 3, 1746; † August 9, 1781) and received the name of the father. After his father's death in 1796 he received the manor Klosterhäseler with the estates Dittersroda and Pleismar.

In 1829 Friedrich August von Haeseler was elected as a member of the state parliament of the Prussian province of Saxony . His constituency, which he represented in the rank of knighthood, consisted of the other districts of the Thuringian knighthood. His deputy as a member of the state parliament in Merseburg was the district director Freiherr von Berlepsch zu Seebach.

On his death in 1854, Friedrich August von Haeseler resigned from the Merseburg provincial assembly. The state parliament mandate was taken over by his son Friedrich Joseph August von Haeseler , who from then on represented the Thuringian knighthood in the state parliament.

family

Friedrich August von Haeseler married Josephine du Quesnoy. From this marriage, which was later divorced, the son Friedrich Joseph August von Haeseler (1812–1889) emerged, who inherited his father's property. He had a number of younger siblings, including his sister Wilhelmine Frederike Sophie (* May 10, 1783; † 1856), who married Carl Heinrich Constantin von Ende and called the Haeseler-von-Ende Foundation into being, which among other things was beneficial served several family members.

In Klosterhäseler there are remains of the park of the manor with the family graves of the von Haeseler family.

literature

  • Gothaisches genealogisches Taschenbuch der Briefadeligen houses, 1907. First volume . Gotha, p. 249

Individual evidence

  1. The Thuringian Circle came to the Kingdom of Prussia in 1815 as part of the newly formed Duchy of Saxony within the Province of Saxony through the Congress of Vienna .