Hermann von Heyden

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Johann Detloff Hermann von Heyden (born April 25, 1810 in Kartlow , † January 21, 1851 in Berlin ) was a member of the Prussian House of Representatives and District Administrator of the Demmin district .

Life

Hermann von Heyden was the second son of Wichard Wilhelm von Heyden (1782-1836) to Cartlow and Wilhelmine von Gloeden (1789-1820). After attending school, he studied law and then lived with his first wife in Zützen and, from 1839, in Stettin , where he was assessor for the Pomeranian provincial government. In 1840 he was appointed a councilor. In 1841 he was elected district administrator for the Demmin district. During his tenure he was awarded the Order of the Red Eagle and elected to the Prussian House of Representatives after 1848. In 1851 he was asked by King Friedrich Wilhelm IV to become Minister of Agriculture in the Prussian government. However, he died shortly after the audience with the king in Berlin.

After his father's death, Hermann von Heyden had received the Leistenow estate with Gatschow and Cadow (now Kadow). In Leistenow he had a new manor house built and a landscape park designed by Peter Joseph Lenné . In 1850 he bought the neighboring estates of Buschmühl and Flemmendorf from his brother Karl .

family

Hermann von Heyden married Emilie Lüdicke (1813–1844) in 1836, daughter of the manor owner in Zützen, Carl Georg Friedrich Lüdicke (1789–1851). The marriage produced three sons. Ernst von Heyden (1837–1917) was landscape director of Western Pomerania and a member of the Prussian mansion . Wilhelm von Heyden (1839–1920) was the Prussian Minister of State for Agriculture.

A sister of Emilie Lüdicke, Anna Marie (1812-1891), was the mother of the royal Prussian government president, chamberlain and politician Axel von Colmar (1840-1911).

In 1849 Hermann von Heyden married his second wife Auguste von Lützow (1820–1891), the widow of District Administrator Axel Freiherr von Maltzahn . She brought her son Helmuth von Maltzahn (1840–1923) into the marriage.

literature

  • Harald von Heyden: Constantly changing. Reports from six generations of the von Heyden / von Heyden-Linden family from 1800–1989. Heyden'sche Familienstiftung (Ed.), Borgwedel, p. 242ff.