Friedrich Wilhelm Buyer

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Friedrich Wilhelm Kauffer (born July 19, 1786 in Reichenbach in Upper Lusatia , † February 1, 1851 in Zwickau ) was a German lawyer .

Life

Friedrich Wilhelm Kauffer was the son of Reichenbach pastor Christian Gottlieb Kauffer (born April 24, 1757 in Zodel ; † August 18, 1830 in Reichenbach) and his wife Friederike Eleonore, daughter of the Arnsdorf pastor Johann Gottlieb Gleisberg. He was the oldest and had seven other siblings, including:

Due to a cold after a severe leaf disease , he was temporarily blind and had considerable visual difficulties until the end of his life. This led to the fact that he had to leave the high school in Görlitz to learn a commercial profession; however, he developed such a strict desire for higher education that he returned to high school shortly afterwards and successfully completed it.

He enrolled at the University of Leipzig in 1805 to study law and gave piano lessons as well as poetry and singing lessons in order to provide for a living. He finished his studies in 1808 and then got a job as an actuary at the courts in Callenberg and Tirschheim .

After receiving his lawyer , he went to Dresden in 1810 and received inspection from the Accis districts in Dresden and Tharand .

Prince Otto Victor I. von Schönburg-Waldenburg appointed him in 1816 to his royal council and bailiff of the rule remittances (now Remse ). In 1820 he became the government and consistorial director of the then overall government in Glauchau , but in 1833, due to the organizational changes that had taken place, he went to the appellate court in Dresden as an appeal councilor . After a reorganization, in 1835 he went to the appellate court in Zwickau as the first councilor of appeal.

Friedrich Wilhelm Kauffer had been married to Charlotte, a daughter of Hieronymus Fiebiger, pastor in Markersdorf , since August 12, 1805 , and had four daughters and a son.

Awards and honors

Fonts (selection)

Literature (selection)

Individual evidence

  1. New Lusatian Monthly . 1806, p. 50 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  2. ^ Royal Saxon court civil and military state . Weidmann, 1845, p. 12 ( limited preview in Google Book search).