Friedrich Seestern-Pauly

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Friedrich Seestern-Pauly, painting by Erwin Speckter (approx. 1840), Sparkasse Schwarzenbek

Friedrich Seestern-Pauly (born November 1, 1789 on Gut Bossee , today part of the Westensee municipality ; † May 30, 1866 in Schwarzenbek ) was a German administrative lawyer , author of legal history and the last Danish bailiff in the Schwarzenbek office.

origin

Friedrich Seestern-Pauly was the second child and eldest son of the Hamburg merchant George Friedrich Pauly (* 1751 in Buchholzmühle near Dessau-Roßlau ; † 1816 in Blengow, now part of Rerik ) and his wife Maria Catharina (1769–1830), née . Ahlers (* 1769 in Hamburg, † 1830 in Schleswig). Pauly had acquired the Bossee estate in 1783; In 1804 he sold it to Joachim Christoph Janisch and bought the goods Blengow and Garvsmühlen near Rerik. In 1808 he was appointed the Mecklenburg-Schwerin Secret Domain Councilor. After a ship he operated, he used the middle name Starfish , which he also gave his sons as a middle name ; this then became the double name Seestern-Pauly .

Life

Friedrich Seestern-Pauly studied law at the University of Kiel and moved to the University of Göttingen at Easter 1809 , where he became a member of the Corps Vandalia . After the gendarme affair , Michaelis moved to Leipzig University in 1809 . In Leipzig he was Theodor Körner's room next door and frequented the Senior Citizens' Convention in Leipzig . Seestern-Pauly was a member of the Corps Thuringia I Leipzig . On March 11, 1811, he was punished with three Lausitzers with the Consilium abeundi , because they had made themselves suspicious of participating in a country team connection and, in part, the invitation to a duel . Körner faced the harsher penalty of relegation , which is why he fled to Berlin.

In 1812 Pauly passed his legal exam before the Gottorf High Court . In 1814 he was appointed royal Danish chamberlain and auscultant at the Gottorf Higher Court. In 1816 he came to Glückstadt as a senior judge .

Office building in Schwarzenbek, later district court

On September 15, 1827 he became the successor of Friedrich Wilhelm Compe the appointment of a magistrate and first officer of the Office Schwarzenbek in time for the Danish state associated Lauenburg ; he remained in this office for 38 years. During his term of office, the Sparkasse was founded in 1829, the Berlin-Hamburg railway that ran through the area opened in 1846, and the Sachsenwald was linked and measured . During the Schleswig-Holstein uprising , the so-called Lauenburg interim began with the convening of a general assembly on April 7, 1848 in Schwarzenbek. Seestern-Pauly remained in office even after the restoration of Danish rule. In 1854, during a visit from the Danish King Frederick VII, he was appointed Danish Chamberlain and the title of Privy Budget Councilor . With the Gastein Convention , he even became a Prussian bailiff and retired on November 29, 1865 with maximum wages.

Seestern-Pauly set up an extensive library on the history of the Holstein region and law and also published on this topic. His collection, including the Otia Jersbecensia , was auctioned on October 21, 1873 in Frankfurt am Main . His publications appeared in the publishing house of the Schleswig-Holstein deaf-mute institution founded by Georg Wilhelm Pfingsten .

family

Seestern-Pauly was married to Sophia Amalia (1789-1827), a daughter of the Schleswig superintendent Jacob Georg Christian Adler , with whom he had nine children.

Seestern-Pauly was then married to Caroline Juliane (1810–1882), b. von Stemann, with whom he had eight children. These children were:

  • Hans Hermann Walter Seestern-Pauly (1829–1888), Counselor in Lübeck
  • Friedrich Christian Wilhelm Georg Seestern-Pauly (1831–1897), architect in Frankfurt am Main
  • Kai Werner Hans Seestern-Pauly (1833–1917), leaseholder of the manor at Purpesseln near Gumbinnen
  • Olga Caroline Sophie Seestern-Pauly (1835-1893)
  • Magdalene Clementine Seestern-Pauly (1837–1839)
  • Gottlieb Harro Seestern-Pauly (1838–1839)
  • Hans Christian Amandus Seestern-Pauly (1839–1895), engineer in Schleswig
  • Beate Georgine Friederike Seestern-Pauly (1844–1914), music teacher in Kiel

Honors

  • DNK Order of Danebrog Knight BAR.png Dannebrogorden (1840)
  • Hamburg Medal of Thanks (1843)
  • Seestern-Pauly-Strasse in Schwarzenbek is a reminder of him .

Fonts

  • Contributions to the history as well as the state and private law of the Duchy of Holstein. 2 volumes
Volume 1, Schleswig: Institute for the Deaf and Mute 1822 ( digitized version )
Volume 2, Schleswig: Institute for the Deaf and Mute 1825 ( digitized version )
  • Actual report on the scholarships available for students in the Duchy of Holstein together with a tabular overview of these scholarships. Schleswig: Institute for the Deaf and Mute 1823
  • The Neumünster parish and Bordesholm official customs: together with an attempt at a history of this Holstein customary law. Schleswig: Institute for the Deaf and Mute 1824 ( digitized version )
  • Documentary report on the mild foundations in the Duchy of Holstein. Schleswig: Asylum for the deaf and dumb 1831

estate

  • Directory of the archive director Dr. К. Rossel in Wiesbaden and librarian JG Hamel in Homburg vd H. inherited libraries, which together with other valuable books and copper works and an interesting collection of works and manuscripts about Schleswig-Holstein from the estate of the High Court Councilor F. Seestern-Pauly on October 21 in Frankfurt to be auctioned on the Main. Frankfurt am Main 1873

literature

  • Detlev Lorenz Lübker, Hans Schröder (ed.): Lexicon of the Schleswig-Holstein-Lauenburgischen and Eutinischen writers from 1796 to 1828. Volume 1, Altona: Aue 1829, S. 565 (Nr. 1098).
  • Franz Michaelsen: Seestern-Pauly, Friedrich in: Schleswig-Holstein biographical lexicon. Volume 1, Neumünster: Wachholtz 1970, pp. 246–248.

Individual evidence

  1. Genealogical information , accessed on May 25, 2015
  2. See Paul von Hedemann-Heespen : History of the noble estates Deutsch-Nienhof and Pohlsee in Holstein. Volume 2, Schleswig: Bergas 1906, p. 208 with note 7
  3. ^ Enrolled ex ac. Kiel on April 17, 1809
  4. Erich Bauer , Friedrich August Pietzsch: Critical to the early history of the Göttingen and Heidelberg Vandalia in: Yearbook Einst und Jetzt Volume 10 (1965), pp. 108-124 (p. 119 No. 35)
  5. The representation that he was a member of the Corps Lusatia Leipzig (so W. Emil Peschel , Eugen Wildenow: Theodor Körner und die Seinen. Volume 1, Leipzig (Kröner) o. J. (1898), p. 261) is based on one old confusion with a Pauli ( Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 3 , 17 with reception date at Lusatia 1808); as a member of the Corps Thuringia I Leipzig listed in Kösener corps lists 1910, 155 , 9; also in Erich Bauer in Criticals on the Early History of the Göttingen and Heidelberg Vandalia (1965) and in Michaelsen (lit.), p. 148
  6. ^ W. Emil Peschel , Eugen Wildenow: Theodor Körner and his own. Volume 1, Leipzig (Kröner) undated (1898), p. 261 (there as Leipziger Lausitzer).