Heinrich Bernhard Schrader von Schliestedt

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Heinrich Bernhard Schrader von Schliestedt (born October 3, 1706 in Braunschweig ; † July 19, 1773 ibid) was a Privy Councilor and Minister in the Principality of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel .

Life

He was the eldest son of Braunschweig's mayor Paul Schrader. After studying law, he was in Wolfenbüttel secretary under Charles I (Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel) . In 1735 he was appointed to the council and a little later to the councilor. In 1741 he became dean of the Cyriakus monastery (Braunschweig) . In 1747 he bought the Schliestedt estate with the permission of Duke Karl I. and took the name of the von Schliestedt family, which died out in 1613. He had the remains of the dilapidated moated castle torn down and the Schliestedt Castle, which still exists today, was built in Rococo style on the foundation walls . In 1749 Schrader von Schliestedt bought Gut Küblingen and soon Gut Neindorf near Denkte from the Cramm family , which made him an inheritance gift . Then he moved to Braunschweig and in 1754 was appointed Minister of State and real Privy Councilor and was given the Dannebrogden . In 1770 he was promoted again. In 1786 he was raised posthumously to the imperial nobility.

In 1736 he married Johanne Katharine Friederike Köhler, who died in 1752. In 1754 he married Magdalene Ehrengard Louise von Campe. She died in 1763. Of the five children from her first marriage, two sons died young, so that three daughters remained - one of them became dominatrix in the virgin monastery in Salzdahlum and died in 1797. The middle one died in 1799. The third daughter, heiress of the Schliestedt estate, died in 1801.

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