Friedrich Karl von Thürheim

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Friedrich Karl von Thürheim

Friedrich Karl Hubertus Johannes Nepomuk Graf von Thürheim (born November 6, 1763 in Regensburg , † November 10, 1832 in Ansbach ) was a Bavarian civil servant and minister of state.

Life

Friedrich Karl Graf von Thürheim came from the Bavarian-Swabian noble family of Thürheim . He was the son of the Electoral Palatinate-Bavarian court chamber councilor Carl Graf von Thürheim (Thierheim) and his wife Maria Amalia Friederika, née Freiin Karl von Bebenburg. Together with Friedrich Schiller he attended the Hohe Karlsschule in Stuttgart and later completed a law degree.

After entering the Bavarian service, he married Walburga Freiin von Weiches on January 23. In 1803 he became president of the two new Franconian regional offices in Bamberg and Würzburg and general commissioner . In 1806 he took over the Principality of Ansbach as the Bavarian representative of Prussia . In 1808 he became general commissioner for the Pegnitz district in Nuremberg . He was able to cope with the unrest that arose there because of the administrative reform without any problems.

In 1809 he was temporarily posted as court commissioner to Innsbruck in Tyrol , which was also shaken by unrest . In the following year, 1810, he was appointed general commissioner of the Main District in Bayreuth and in 1814 he was appointed the real secret council.

In 1817, after the overthrow of Maximilian von Montgelas , he was appointed Minister of State for the Interior . At the end of the year he acquired the Bavarian court brands Planegg , Seeholzen , Krailling and Frohnloh from the von Ruffin family . In 1817 he became an honorary member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences .

In January 1826, Thürheim moved to the head of the Foreign Ministry , but could not hold this office for long. In April 1827 he was on leave and the official business was led by Justice Minister Georg Friedrich von Zentner . In 1828 Thürheim finally retired.

Thürheim died on November 10, 1832 in Ansbach.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Werner Gebhardt: The students of the High Charles School. A biographical lexicon . Stuttgart 2011, p. 524.
  2. Cf. for example Graf von Thürheim: Organization of the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg. Churf. Frank. General Land Commisariat, Bamberg, November 11, 1803. Also in: Würzburger Litteraturzeitung. 1803, no. 175-179.
  3. See also Würzburg, decree of the curator v. Thürheim concerns the discipline of the students v. Nov. 26, 1804. In: Intelligence Journal of the Allgemeine Literatur-Zeitung. 1805, p. 5 f.