Friedrich Halbey

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Johann Friedrich Halbey (born July 30, 1797 at the Eichelbacher Hof near Camberg , † April 8, 1870 in Wiesbaden ) was a Nassau civil servant and politician and a member of the 2nd Chamber of the Estates of the Duchy of Nassau .

family

Friedrich Halbey was the son of forester Johann Daniel Halbey (* July 7, 1763 in Mosbach; † June 20, 1844 in Strinz-Margarethä) and his wife Catharina Elisabeth nee Villmar (* May 16, 1796 in Wehen; † November 28, 1839 at the Eichelbacher Hof), whom he married in Wehen on May 22, 1796.

Friedrich Halbey married Elisabetha Henrietta Lucretia, born Schapper (born January 27, 1804 in Ems, † April 16, 1869 in Höchst am Main) in Erbenheim on August 3, 1830 , the daughter of the court chamber councilor Georg August Schapper . Friedrich Halbey was Protestant.

Life

Friedrich Halbey attended the Weilburg grammar school from 1817 to 1818 and then studied law at the University of Göttingen . On October 1, 1821, he became a candidate in the office of Selters , from August 26, 2013 in the Hadamar office and from January 17, 1825 in the labor office . His salary was two hundred guilders from October 1, 1823 , and three hundred guilders from January 1, 1825. From 1826 to 1827 he was an accessist with the state government in Wiesbaden. From April 2, 1827 he was office secretary in the Rennerod office . Here he earned four hundred guilders from July 1, 1826, and 600 guilders from April 1, 1827. From June 18, 1829 he was in the same position in the Marienberg office , and from June 23, 1830 in the Hochheim office . His salary was 700 guilders on July 1, 1829 and eight hundred guilders from July 1, 1830. From May 14, 1831, he worked for two weeks at the Wiesbaden Criminal Court before he was again official secretary on June 1, 1831 (this time in the Höchst office ). From 1832 to 1836 he was official secretary in the Usingen office . In 1832 and 1833 the salary rose again by 100 guilders each.

On March 12, 1836 he became an official assessor and on April 5, 1836 bailiff in the office of Nastaetten . Here he earned 1500 guilders. From February 13, 1839 to 1843, he was bailiff in the Idstein office and finally received 1,700 guilders.

On December 27, 1843 he was appointed to the judiciary and transferred to the Dillenburg as a bailiff. In the following two years his salary rose to 2,000 guilders. From 1849 to 1856 he was a district administrator in the Hadamar district office and from 1856 to 1867 an official in the Höchst office. In 1859 he received a salary of 2500 guilders. In 1864 he was appointed a secret councilor and retired in 1867.

In 1852 he was elected to the second chamber of the estates of the Duchy of Nassau for constituency VI (Hadamar), to which he belonged until 1857.

literature

  • Jochen Lengemann : MdL Hessen. 1808-1996. Biographical index (= political and parliamentary history of the state of Hesse. Vol. 14 = publications of the Historical Commission for Hesse. Vol. 48, 7). Elwert, Marburg 1996, ISBN 3-7708-1071-6 , p. 163.
  • Nassau parliamentarians. Part 1: Cornelia Rösner: The Landtag of the Duchy of Nassau 1818–1866 (= publications of the Historical Commission for Nassau. 59 = Prehistory and history of parliamentarism in Hesse. 16). Historical Commission for Nassau, Wiesbaden 1997, ISBN 3-930221-00-4 , pp. 65-66.
  • Thomas Klein: Outline of German administrative history. 1815-1945. Volume 11, Series A: Preussen, Hessen-Nassau. (Including predecessor states). Johann Gottfried Herder Institute, Marburg (Lahn) 1979, ISBN 3-87969-126-6 , p. 158.
  • Eckhardt Treichel: The primacy of bureaucracy: bureaucratic state and bureaucratic elite in the Duchy of Nassau 1806 - 1866, diss., 1988, ISBN 3-515-05446-4 , pp. 254, 523-534

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