Hans Heinrich von Heringen

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Hans Heinrich von Heringen (born January 3, 1697 ; † June 21, 1773 in Dresden ) was a German lawyer, Saxon Chamberlain, excise officer and most recently a privy councilor and general accus director as well as manor owner .

Life

He came from the Thuringian noble family von Heringen and was the only son of the Saxon-Weissenfels court master Hans Ludwig von Heringen (1664–1743), the owner of the monastery in Ottenhausen (1664–1743) and his wife Rahel Sophia née von Starschedel († 1750) ).

In 1717 Hans Heinrich von Heringen received his doctorate in law at the university . After he had been in the service of the Duke of Saxony-Eisenach as court and judicial councilor for some time, he moved to the Dresden court in 1734, where he first became an excise officer and in 1739 became chief tax collector and chamberlain. In 1748 he was given the title of a Privy Councilor and in 1765 he became General Acccess Director of the Electorate of Saxony, succeeding the late Heinrich von Brühl . He worked as such until his death. He died at the age of 77 on June 21, 1773 in front of the Seetor in Dresden in the Sahrisches Haus and was buried on June 25, 1773 in the churchyard of St. Johannis. Among other things, he owned the Ottenhausen monastery.

Hans Heinrich von Heringen was married to Eva Juliana Magdalena born von Weisenberg († 1773) since 1726. He left no sons, but the following children and grandchildren:

These three children and grandchildren jointly received the goods from Hans Heinrich von Heringen and managed them jointly until 1787.

Web links

  • Lutz Bannert: Heringen (Heeringen) (to Ottenhausen), Hans (Hannß, Hanns) Heinrich von . In: Saxon Biography , published by the Institute for Saxon History and Folklore eV, online edition [1] (accessed on March 7, 2017)

Individual evidence

  1. In the Saxon biography he is mistakenly referred to as the Saxon electoral chief steward. However, he was in the service of the Duke of Saxony-Weissenfels.
  2. ^ Certificate from the cantor and Kirchner Kröber on August 10, 1774