Georg von Wrangel

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Georg von Wrangel

Georg Gustav Ludwig von Wrangel , Freiherr zu Ludenhof ( Russian Егор Васильевич Врангель Egor Wassilewitsch Wrangel ; * September 28th July / October 9th  1783 greg. In Maidel ; † June 3rd jul. / June 15,  1841 greg. In St. Petersburg ), was a Russian lawyer .

Life

Origin and family

Georg was a member of the Swedish line of the Barons Wrangel af Ludenhof of the Baltic noble family von Wrangel . His parents were the Russian captain and collegiate assessor, Wilhelm Freiherr von Wrangell zu Ludenhof (1747-1845) and Barbara, née von Wrangell from the house of Lagena (1758-1838). The Russian major general Alexander von Wrangel (1794–1841) and the Russian admiral Wilhelm von Wrangel (1797–1872) were his brothers.

He married in Kazan in 1811 with Praskowia Jakowkin (1794-1858), daughter of Ilya Feodorowitsch Jakowkin ( Elias Jakowkin ; 1764-1836), who came from Perm , the first rector of the University of Kazan , at the same time its main professor and also director of the Kazan grammar school, Professor of the History, Geography and Statistics of the Russian Empire, Knight of the Order of Vladimir from 1809 , oldest member (President) of the Society of Friends of Patriotic Literature . Jakowkin had originally intended his daughter Anna to marry Baron Wrangel, which is why he tolerated with displeasure that Nikolai Ivanovich Lobachevsky , then a poor student who had had an eye on her, frequented his house. Finally Jakowkin sent his daughter Anna to Petersburg, where she later married a prince who was also a student at Kazan University. From Georg von Wrangel's marriage to Jakowkin's daughter Praskowia, seven children emerged.

Career

Wrangel studied successively from February 1802 at the Universities of Dorpat , then in Wittenberg and Heidelberg . Under the leadership of Speranski and Rosenkampff in the Law Commission in St. Petersburg, a call to the University of Kazan followed , where he was initially an assistant in 1809, but from 1815 to 1819 a full professor of Russian law. From 1820 to 1837 he was professor at the Tsarskoye Selo Lyceum and from 1836 to 1841 at the University of St. Petersburg . He had been teaching at the Pedagogical Institute in St. Petersburg since 1832 and had been the inspector of the local law school from 1835. He was also a teacher of the heir to the throne Alexander II and a real councilor .

literature

  • Henry von Baensch: History of the von Wrangel Family. Berlin / Dresden 1887, p. 372

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Otto Magnus von Stackelberg (edit.): Genealogical manual of the Estonian knighthood , Volume 1, Görlitz [1931], p. 576.
  2. ^ Intelligence Journal of the Jenaische Allgemeine Literarur-Zeitung , 1808, pp. 393 and 395.
  3. ^ Biographical Index of Russia and the Soviet Union , Volume 1, Munich 2005, p. 3742 , cf. Н. П. Загоскин, Биографический словарь профессоров и преподавателей Имп. Казанского университета (1804-1904) , ч. I, стр. 210-214. [Russian; Nikolai Pavlovich Zagoskin: Biographical Dictionary of Professors and Teachers of the Imperial University of Kazan (1804-1904) , Part I, pp. 210-214.] He did not die in 1838 (and his daughter did not die in 1871, but in 1858) as stated here: see. Henry von Baensch: History of the von Wrangel Family. Berlin / Dresden 1887, p. 372.
  4. Bernhard Stern: History of public morality in Russia , Berlin 1907, p. 47 f.
  5. ^ Heinrich Storch : Russia under Alexander the First , Volume 9, St. Petersburg and Leipzig 1808, p. 21.
  6. ^ Intelligence sheet of the Jenaische Allgemeine Literatur-Zeitung , Volume 35, 1810, p. 467.
  7. ^ Oppositions-Blatt, or Weimar newspaper , Volume 9, Weimar 1819, p. 407.
  8. Leipziger Literaturzeitung , Volume 37, 1815, pp. 2052 f.
  9. Rudolf Sponsel: Nikolai Iwanowitsch Lobatschewski Internet publication for general and integrative psychotherapy (ISSN 1430-6972), IP-GIPTDAS = January 6, 2006 Internet first edition, last change: September 15, 2015. Accessed on March 25, 2019.
  10. Otto Magnus von Stackelberg (edit.): Genealogical Handbook of the Estonian Knighthood , Volume 1, Görlitz [1931], p. 577.
  11. ^ Arnold Hasselblatt and Gustav Otto : Album academicum of the Imperial University of Dorpat. C. Mattiesen, Dorpat 1889, p. 4 (No. 40).