Friedrich von Krosigk (politician)

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Friedrich (Fritz) von Krosigk (born September 28, 1784 in Poplitz , † March 7, 1871 in Merseburg ) was a German politician .

Life

Friedrich von Krosigk came from the Upper Saxon noble family Krosigk , whose former ancestral seat was Krosigk near Halle (Saale) . He was one of the children of the Majoratsherrn on Poplitz , Ferdinand Anton von Krosigk , and his wife Dorothea Luise, née von Cramm . His brothers included Dedo , Heinrich , Ludwig , Ernst and Anton Emil von Krosigk . Friedrich became hereditary lord on Großböhla , royal Prussian real secret council and regional president of theMerseburg administrative district in the Prussian province of Saxony . He was also provost of the Merseburg cathedral monastery . As a representative of the cathedral monastery, he was a member of the provincial parliament of the province of Saxony and deputy state marshal there . He was also a member of the Merseburg Freemasons' Lodge on the Golden Cross .

family

He married Henriette von Thielau (1790-1816) on January 1, 1809 in Lampertswalde and Karoline von Leipziger (1796-1840) on May 27, 1818 in Kropstädt . The first marriage resulted in two children: the daughter Marie von Krosigk (1810-1893) and the later major Friedrich von Krosigk (1815-1891). The second marriage resulted in six children: the son Kurt von Krosigk (1819–1898), who became the Prussian Privy Councilor and District Administrator, the daughter Anna von Krosigk (1820–1897), who married the civil servant Ludwig von Kamptz in 1841 , the son Ernst von Krosigk (1821–1890), later Prussian lieutenant general, the son Karl von Krosigk (1822–1882), later senior government councilor, and the daughter Thekla von Krosigk (1824–1872), who married the chamberlain Julius von Zech-Burkersroda in 1851 , and the son Hans von Krosigk (1828–1870), who died as a major as a result of an injury sustained at Saint-Privat-la-Montagne .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Negotiations of the ... Provincial Landtag of the Province of Saxony along with the very highest Landtag farewell: 1841, p. 12, digitized