Friedrich Heydweiller

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Friedrich Jakob Heydweiller (born July 5, 1778 in Krefeld ; died March 31, 1848 in Mannheim ) was a Prussian district administrator .

Life

Friedrich Heydweiller, who belonged to the Evangelical Reformed Church , was a son of the factory owner Johann Valentin Heydweiller (1734–1795) and his wife Friederike Wilhelmine Heydweiller, née Kall (1748–1818). Before 1808 he married (in Königsberg ?) In Ernestine von Göll (born August 18, 1789 in Königsberg; died January 20, 1866) the daughter of the Prussian Colonel von Göll and his wife Rosalie von Göll, née von Schlichting.

Heydweiller was an active soldier in Prussian service until 1807 and subsequently settled there after purchasing a property not far from Königsberg, in order to manage it himself until 1813. At the beginning of 1813 he took a position as an expanding calculator at the East Prussian Provincial Catering Commission, before moving to the management of a wealth and income tax commission in March of the same year, to which he was a member until October 1814. In 1814 he also passed his state examination in Berlin .

After participating in the Wars of Liberation in 1815, which took him to France, Heydweiller was finally employed in the office of State Chancellor Karl August von Hardenberg before he was given the management of the newly formed Krefeld district on May 1, 1816 , to which his native town also belonged . On January 1, 1817, Heydweiller took over the administration of the Lennep district as his last post (appointed January 16, 1817). Heydweiller retired in mid-September 1824.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Horst Romeyk : The leading state and municipal administrative officials of the Rhine Province 1816-1945 (=  publications of the Society for Rhenish History . Volume 69 ). Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-7585-4 , p. 529 .
  2. Manfred Huppertz (author): The district administrators and senior district directors of the Rheinisch-Bergisch district and its predecessor districts , documentation of the district archive of the Rheinisch-Bergisch district, Bergisch Gladbach 2016, p. 21.