Friedrich Carl Ludwig von Kardorff

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Friedrich Carl Ludwig von Kardorff , also Friedrich Karl Ludwig von Kardorff (born March 21, 1812 in Alt-Pannekow, today part of Altkalen ; † May 8, 1870 in Neustrelitz ) was a German administrative lawyer and 1849/50 member of the Mecklenburg Assembly of Representatives .

Life

Friedrich Carl Ludwig von Kardorff came from the Steinhorst house of the Mecklenburg prehistoric noble family von Kardorff ; he was the second son of Wilhelm Friedrich Leopold von Kardorff (1786–1816) on Penzlin (now part of Gallin-Kuppentin ) and his wife Lisette Christine, nee. von Bülow , widowed von Hopffgarten († 1825).

After the death of his parents he came to live with relatives in Neustrelitz and attended the Carolinum grammar school here (Neustrelitz) . From 1831 to 1834 he studied law at the Universities of Halle , Heidelberg and Munich . In Halle he joined the old Halle fraternity .

After completing his studies, he became a chamberlain and auditor at the grand-ducal law firm in Neustrelitz. In 1839 he passed the examination for judicial office and became a judge at the Neustrelitz city court. From September 1841 he accompanied Grand Duchess Marie and her daughter Duchess Luise (1818–1842) on their trip to Italy, on which Duchess Luise died on February 1, 1842. He then accompanied her body back to Neustrelitz. On March 9, 1842 it appointed Grand Duke George to Chamberlain .

In 1844 he became judge in Fuerstenberg / Havel , then part of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, and Michaelis 1845 he became the third member of the Bailiff, the government agency for the Principality of Ratzeburg , and the Justice Office in Schoenberg appointed.

In the by -election in March 1849, made necessary by the resignation of the doctor Carl Wilhelm Marung , he was elected a member of the Mecklenburg Assembly of Representatives for the constituency of Mecklenburg-Strelitz / Principality of Ratzeburg 1 . He joined the faction on the right .

Almost at the same time, on June 27, 1849, he was appointed extraordinary collaborator with the grand ducal government in Neustrelitz. After the dissolution of the Assembly of Representatives as a result of the Freienwalder arbitration award , he became a government councilor in 1850 , later with the title of Privy Council , in the Mecklenburg-Strelitz State Ministry in Neustrelitz.

Awards

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Günter Cerwinka (Ed.): 200 years of fraternity history: from Friedrich Ludwig Jahn to the Linz fraternity tower ; selected representations and sources. Heidelberg: Winter 2008 (representations and sources on the history of the German unity movement in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries 16), ISBN 978-3-8253-5507-4 , p. 172
  2. ^ Julius Wiggers : The Mecklenburg constituent assembly and the preceding reform movement: A historical account. 1850, pp. 59 and 72

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