Hans Adolf Karl von Bülow

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Count Hans Adolf Karl von Bülow (born February 10, 1807 in Essenrode , † February 12, 1869 in Nimmersatt Castle near Bolkenhain ) was a Mecklenburg State Minister .

Life

family

Hans Adolf Karl von Bülow was the son of Hans von Bülow and his wife Jeanette, née Schmucker (1781–1855) from Berlin . His siblings were:

He was since October 28, 1830 with Luise Karoline Henriette (* July 8, 1809, † October 24, 1858 in Berlin), a daughter of Ernst von Bülow-Cummerow and his wife Friederike Dorothea Elisabeth (* 1780; † unknown), Daughter of Heinrich Ernst Fliessbach (1740–1806), court chef of Prince Karl von Mecklenburg-Strelitz . They had two children together:

  • Elisabeth Luise Adelheid von Bülow (born September 10, 1831 in Kummerow ; † October 24, 1906 in Schwerin ), married to Rudolf Karl Friedrich Wilhelm von Bassewitz (born July 13, 1823 in Berlin; † December 15, 1877 in Raguth );
  • Adelheid Ernestine Sofie von Bülow (* April 4, 1833 - † April 18, 1891 in Ornshagen in the Regenwalde district ), married to Ludwig Nikolaus Friedrich Ernst Gustav von Perponcher-Sedlnitzki (* June 19, 1827 in Berlin; † November 30, 1914 in Ornshagen) son of Hendrik George de Perponcher Sedlnitzki and Prussian vice chief of the castle, was raised to the rank of count on June 9, 1853;
  • Hans Gottfried Georg von Bülow (born August 29, 1839 - † December 19, 1887).

Career

He spent his childhood partly in Kassel , partly on his father's estate in Essenrode and partly in Berlin, where he also attended the French grammar school , and completed his education in 1825 at the Roßleben monastery school .

He studied at the University of Berlin and the University of Göttingen , the laws, regulations and cameralistics , made 1828 his first exam at the Supreme Court and began his service career as Auskultator the city court in Berlin . In 1830 he graduated from the government in Szczecin and then entered there as a trainee lawyer.

Interrupted by a two-year administration in which he administered the property of his father-in-law, he passed his state examination in 1836 and was transferred there as an assessor in the department of the interior of the Stettin government ; there he stayed until 1840 as a temporary worker.

In 1841 he was transferred to Gdansk as a councilor , but was then transferred there in the same year at the disposal of the Minister of Foreign Affairs . In 1842 he was sent to Copenhagen to negotiate the sound tariff and in 1845 returned to the post of Real Legation and Lecturing Councilor in the Political Department.

In 1848 the business of the first council of the political department was entrusted to him and in December 1848 he was given the management of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on an interim basis until he was relieved of this position at his own request in 1849; then he returned to his post as undersecretary of state to Count Arnim.

At his own request, he was appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Royal Hanoverian Court , but left this post shortly afterwards due to the rift with Hanover.

In 1850 he was a member of the Volkshaus of the Erfurt Union Parliament . He resigned the mandate after a short time (the minutes of April 18 call the resignation), and no successor was appointed. He became a member of the first chamber in the Prussian state parliament , where he was entrusted with assignments to Grand Duke Friedrich Franz II of Mecklenburg , who let him take over the management of his ministry.

At the request of the king, in 1850, as successor to Ludwig von Lützow , Minister of State and President of the entire Ministry of the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin ( Prime Minister ) with the retention of the rights of a Prussian subject and the reservation, at any time back into the service of King Friedrich Wilhelm IV. To enter; he remained in this office until 1858. In the winter of 1850/51 he traveled to the Dresden Ministerial Conferences , which were about the restoration of the German Confederation .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Szlaki kulturowe: Bolków - Castle Niesytno. Retrieved January 22, 2019 .