Friedrich von Münch (landowner, 1788)

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Baron Friedrich von Münch (born September 15, 1788 in Augsburg ; † August 8, 1856 ) was a German manor owner and entrepreneur - he was royal Bavarian chamberlain and lord of Mühringen , Filseck Castle and Aystetten Castle .

biography

family

Friedrich I. Freiherr von Münch was a son of Christian III. Freiherr von Münch and his wife Johanna Barbara Jakobina, b. from Rauner. On January 29, 1824 he married Wilhelmine Auguste Amalie Freiin Schertel von Burtenbach , a daughter of the princely Thurn und Taxis hunting junker Christian Albrecht Freiherr Schertel von Burtenbach and his wife Franziska Wilhelmina Juliana, born. by Troyff . The son Carl Wilhelm Friedrich II. Freiherr von Münch and the daughter Caroline Freiin von Münch survived the father.

In memory of his eldest son Christian Friedrich August Freiherr von Münch , who was born on September 6, 1828 and died on September 17, 1841 , the Münch couple had a memorial stele set up in the park of Filseck Castle , which was secured in Göppingen after the castle was destroyed by fire was, after a restoration of the palace complex and a new installation of the palace park after being erected there again since 2016.

officer

Münch joined the Bavarian military as a volunteer during the Wars of Liberation and in 1815 served as a sub-lieutenant in the 1st Royal Bavarian Hussar Regiment. In the following year he was transferred to the Royal Bavarian Regiment Garde du Corps. In 1820 he was given the requested departure from the regiment. Later he held the position of major in the 2nd Battalion Göggingen in the Landwehr .

Landowners and entrepreneurs

Münch lived in the Hohenmühringen and Aystetten castles, inherited from his father, but also stayed frequently in Augsburg.

He dealt with the administration of his property in Mühringen with Dommelsberg , Dürrenhardt , Egelstall , Mühlen , Wiesenstetten , furthermore in Filseck , Gündringen , and Aystetten with Neusäß .

In addition, he followed the progress of industrialization in Augsburg and made interesting investments. He benefited from his family relationships with the Augsburg business class. When the mechanical cotton spinning and weaving mill in Augsburg was founded in 1837 , he was among the 47 shareholders who invested a minimum contribution of 5000 guilders. The investors were largely Augsburg bankers and their close relatives. Until 1851 Münch was a committee member of the company, which proved to be extremely profitable in the following years. Eight years after the mechanical cotton spinning and weaving mill in Augsburg was founded, the Augsburg worsted yarn mill was converted into a stock corporation. In this case, too, the draftsmen came from the family environment of the banker Ferdinand Benedikt Schaezler . Again, Münch was among the shareholders.

Münch was inherited by his only living son, Carl Wilhelm Friedrich II. Baron von Münch.

literature

  • Intelligence gazette and weekly bulletin of the royal Bavarian district capital Augsburg from October 4, 1828 . No. 79.ktbe. Printed with Brinhaußer's writings, Augsburg 1828, p. 345. Digitized
  • Royal Bavarian Government Gazette from July 5, 1815 . No. 29. Munich, Sp. 565. Digitized
  • Royal Bavarian Government Gazette from October 19, 1816 . No. 35. Munich, Sp. 664. Digitized
  • Royal Württemberg Court and State Handbook 1847 . Verlag der Königlichen Hofbuchdruckerei zu Guttenberg, Stuttgart 1847, p. 631. Digitized
  • Fr. Cast: Historical and genealogical book of the nobility of the Kingdom of Württemberg. According to official sources obtained from the authorities and other authentic sources . Printing and publishing by JA Gärtner, Stuttgart 1839, p. 274 f. Digitized
  • Royal statistical-topographical Bureau (Ed.): Description of the Oberamt Horb . Verlag H. Lindemann, Stuttgart 1865, p. 223. Digitized
  • Justus Perthes (Hrsg.): Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of baronial houses 1862 . Vol. 12. Verlag Justus Perthes, Gotha 1862, p. 539 ff. Digitized
  • Justus Perthes (ed.): Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of baronial houses 1873 . Vol. 23. Verlag Justus Perthes, Gotha 1873, p. 459 f. Digitized
  • Theodor Schön: On the history of Hohenmühringen . In: From the Black Forest. Sheets of the Württemberg Black Forest Association . Vol. 14, No. 3, March. Stuttgart 1906, p. 50 ff.
  • Wolfgang Zorn: Trade and industrial history of Bavarian Swabia 1648-1870. Economic, social and cultural history of Swabian entrepreneurship. Publications of the Swabian Research Foundation at the Commission for Bavarian State History. Series 1. Studies on the history of Bavarian Swabia . Vol. 6. Verlag der Schwäbische Forschungsgemeinschaft, Augsburg 1961.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Fr. Cast: Historical and genealogical book of the nobility of the Kingdom of Württemberg. According to official sources obtained from the authorities and other authentic sources . Printing and publishing by JA Gärtner, Stuttgart 1839, p. 274 f .
  2. ^ Intelligence sheet and weekly gazette of the royal Bavarian district capital Augsburg from October 4, 1828 . No. 79 . Printed with Brinhaußer's writings, Augsburg 1828, p. 345 .
  3. Margit Haas: Göppingen does not remove the monument. In: NWZ Südwestpresse. September 29, 2015. Retrieved July 18, 2017 .
  4. Arnd Woletz: Dispute about the Münch monument before the solution. In: NWZ Südwestpresse. October 20, 2015, accessed July 18, 2017 .
  5. Michael Schorn: Schloss Filseck Landscape Park will be finished later. In: NWZ Südwestpresse. April 19, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2017 .
  6. Marcus Zecha: memorial stele returns. In: NWZ Südwestpresse. September 9, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2017 .
  7. Annerose Fischer-Bucher: Ceremony: Münch stele back at Filseck Castle. In: NWZ Südwestpresse. September 12, 2016. Retrieved July 18, 2017 .
  8. ^ Werner Litz: Göppingen saves memorial in the castle park. In: NWZ Südwestpresse. June 16, 2017. Retrieved July 18, 2017 .
  9. Royal Bavarian Government Gazette from October 19, 1816 . No. 35 . Munich 1816, Sp. 664 .
  10. ^ Wolfgang Zorn: Trade and Industrial History of Bavarian Swabia. 1648-1870 . In: Economic, social and cultural history of Swabian entrepreneurship. Publications of the Swabian Research Foundation at the Commission for Bavarian State History. Studies on the history of Bavarian Swabia . tape 6 . Verlag der Schwäbische Forschungsgemeinschaft, Augsburg 1961, p. 243 .
  11. Royal Bavarian Government Gazette from July 5, 1815 . No. 29 . Munich 1815, Sp. 565 .
  12. Army order of December 11, 1820, No. 5 § 2. Bavarian Army, accessed on July 19, 2017 (1807 and subsequent years).
  13. ^ Address handbook of the Upper Danube District in 1818 . Verlag Dannheimer, Kempten 1818, p. 234 .
  14. Royal Württemberg Court and State Manual 1847 . Verlag der Königlichen Hofbuchdruckerei zu Guttenberg, Stuttgart 1847, p. 631 .
  15. ^ Wolfgang Zorn: Trade and Industrial History of Bavarian Swabia. 1648-1870 . In: Economic, social and cultural history of Swabian entrepreneurship. Publications of the Swabian Research Foundation at the Commission for Bavarian State History. Studies on the history of Bavarian Swabia . tape 6 . Verlag der Schwäbische Forschungsgemeinschaft, Augsburg 1961, p. 226 f .