Heinrich Karl Ludwig Bardeleben

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Heinrich Karl Ludwig Bardeleben (born May 9, 1775 in Spandau , † March 23, 1852 in Frankfurt (Oder) ) was a German lawyer and politician.

Bardeleben was the illegitimate son of Colonel Ferdinand Heinrich von Bardeleben († November 1, 1822).

In 1798 Bardeleben worked as governor and teacher in the cadet corps in Berlin . In 1804 he is a government assessor in Bromberg . On October 17, 1807, he presented the Prussian Minister of State and reformer Heinrich Friedrich Karl Freiherr vom Stein with his anonymous, undated publication Prussian Future. To the fatherland . In the wars of liberation against Napoleon in 1813/1814, as captain of the Prussian Landwehr, he was the leader of the Frankfurter Landwehr contingent and commanding artillery officer under General von Tauentzien and Lieutenant General Leopold Wilhelm von Dobschütz during the siege and storming of the city and fortress of Wittenberg . Bardeleben becomes a knight of the iron cross . He then lived as a judicial commissioner and judicial advisor in Frankfurt (Oder). He also wrote under the pseudonym Heinrich Frohreich . He adopted Heinrich Adolf Schwager in 1822 after both of his parents died. Bardeleben has made a great contribution to the history of Frankfurt (Oder).

His adoptive son was Heinrich Adolf von Bardeleben , who was only raised to the nobility in 1891 , born Heinrich Adolf Schwager (1819–1895), who later became the royal Prussian secret chief medical officer , general physician 1st class à la suite of the medical corps , professor at the University of Berlin and on the medical-surgical academy for the military in Berlin.

Works

  • Bernhard Naphtali: or, the religion of religions , 1811, digitized
  • Palm Sunday, 1803

As Heinrich Frohreich:

  • Caesar Caffarelli, Count of Casara, the daring robber duke , 1803, digitized
  • Events on Bergach
  • Depictions from the world of the Erlangen sons of the muses for remembrance and heart, 1798
  • The Werbers daughter in Eichtersheim , 1811
  • Rahmanet King of the Moors, or the Magic Ring, 1805

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Yearbook of the German Nobility. Tape. 2, 1898, p. 19, digitized