Friedrich Bröhmer

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Gottlieb Friedrich Bröhmer (born April 11, 1796 in Oberlind , † April 22, 1851 in Coburg ) was a German lawyer and politician.

Life

Friedrich Bröhmer was the son of an accounting clerk who died in 1798, whereupon his mother Rosine Barbara Bröhmer, née. Zehner (1765–1825) moved to Coburg with his siblings. There he received his first lessons in the private school of the later school councilor Ehregott Johann Elieser Bagge (1788-1826). He then attended the local grammar school and began studying law at the University of Göttingen on April 22, 1815 , which he successfully completed on November 5, 1817.

On January 6, 1819, Duke Ernst of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha awarded him the title of court advocate. In March 1830 he was appointed assessor with a seat and vote at the ducal chamber and in the same year he was elected to the judicial office as a judicial councilor. In 1837 he was appointed to the Gotha Chamber of Commerce and on March 31, 1839, he was transferred to the Ministry as Assistant Councilor in Coburg.

On July 29, 1844 he was appointed to the State Council and on January 2, 1846 to the Privy Council of State.

In 1848 he represented Duke Ernst II of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha as head of government for the Coburg region when he took part in the battles against Denmark in Schleswig-Holstein and became a national hero as the victor of Eckernförde .

When the state governments of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha declared their accession to the Three Kings Alliance , as head of the Coburg department of the State Ministry, he asked for his dismissal immediately because he had previously committed the state to the Paulskirche constitution (see also note of the twenty-eight ).

Honors

On August 17, 1827, the city of Coburg granted him honorary citizenship .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Government and Intelligence Gazette for the Duchy of Coburg, January 10, 1846, p. 23
  2. Martina Schattkowsky, Uwe John: Dresden May Uprising and Imperial Constitution 1849: Revolutionary aftershocks or democratic political culture? Leipziger Universitätsverlag, Leipzig 2000, ISBN 3-934565-16-6 , p. 136 ( limited preview in Google Book search).