Friedrich Wilhelm Heineken

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Friedrich Wilhelm Heineken (born October 18, 1787 in Bremen ; † April 2, 1848 in Bremen) was a lawyer , Syndicus of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen and Bremen Senator .

Life

Heineken was the son of Bremen's mayor Christian Abraham Heineken and his wife Margarethe, née. Lovely. From April 1806 he studied medicine at the Illustrious Gymnasium in Bremen and from October 1806 at the University of Göttingen . In autumn 1808, he studied law at the University of Göttingen and from September 1809 as part of the statement of the Göttingen student body because of the gendarmes affair at the University of Heidelberg . In Heidelberg he is proven as a member of the Corps Hannovera Heidelberg . He obtained his doctorate in Heidelberg in 1811. jur.

As a clerk he worked at the Bremen courts and from 1816 first public prosecutor and then lawyer in Bremen. In 1818 Bremen became the second council syndicate and in 1821 the first syndic as successor to Heinrich Gröning , who became mayor of Bremen. In 1822 he became a senator as the successor to Simon Hermann Nonnen, who also became mayor. However, he also remained in law as the office director . As such, he was instrumental in founding Bremerhaven . He carried out his offices until his death in 1848. He was followed in 1848 by the first Syndicus August Iken as the firm's director.

Heineken was married to Anna Theodora geb. Oelrichs, daughter of the Bremen Senator Georg Oelrichs (1754–1809). The two had six sons and three daughters. After his father's death, Heineken took over the Heineken house in Bremen.

Fonts

  • Dissertatio inauguralis juridica de negotiatione quam vocant speditoriam , 1811

literature

  • Heinrich Ferdinand Curschmann : Blue Book of the Corps Hannovera to Göttingen . Volume 1 (1809-1899), Göttingen 2002, No. 5, p. 265.
  • Nicola Wurthmann: Senators, friends and families . State Archive Bremen Vol. 69, p. 486, Bremen 2009, ISBN 978-3-925729-55-3 .