Hermann Carl Weiss

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Hermann Carl Weiss (born on August 5, 1776 in Geringswalde near Leipzig ; died 1828 ) was Prussian District Administrator of the Sankt Vith district from 1816 until its dissolution in 1821 .

Career

The Protestant Hermann Carl Weiss studied law and camera science in Königsberg and Göttingen .

During the coalition wars he was commissioner of the deposital magazine of the Rhine Army. When, as a result of the Congress of Vienna, the Rhineland fell to Prussia , Weiss was initially commissioned in April 1816 and finally, with the highest cabinet order of January 16, 1817, the administration of the district administration of the St. Vith district was also given. With the dissolution of the Sankt Vith district by the very highest cabinet order of December 27, 1820 and its incorporation into the Malmedy district on February 1, 1821, he resigned from office and left the region.

With the Duisburg and Rees area of ​​activity, he then joined the general commission in Münster as an economics commissioner . An application for the Duisburg district office can be found in the relevant personnel files.

literature

  • Karl Leopold Kaufmann : The Malmedy border district in the first five decades of Prussian administration. Ludwig Röhrscheid Verlag, Bonn 1940, p. 7 f.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Horst Romeyk : The leading state and municipal administrative officials of the Rhine Province 1816-1945 (=  publications of the Society for Rhenish History . Volume 69 ). Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-7585-4 , p. 809 f .
  2. Max Bär : The administrative constitution of the Rhine province since 1815. (Publications of the Society for Rheinische Geschichtskunde XXXV), Droste Verlag, Düsseldorf 1998 (second reprint of the Bonn 1919 edition), ISBN 3-7700-7600-1 , p. 240.
  3. ^ Johann Friedrich Schannat : Eiflia Illustrata or geographical and historical description of the Eifel translated from Latin and enriched with comments and additions by Georg Bärsch . Jakob Anton Mayer, Aachen and Leipzig 1852, Volume 3, Section 1, Section 1, p. 41.