Jaspar von Bülow (Oberhofmarschall)

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Jaspar Friedrich von Bülow , also: Jasper (born April 17, 1794 in Bützow , † February 5, 1871 in Schwerin ) was a German court official and Oberhofmarschall von Mecklenburg-Schwerin .

Jaspar von Bülow came from the Plüskow-Kogel house of the Mecklenburg noble family Bülow and was a son of Captain Jaspar Friedrich von Bülow (1769–1838) and his first wife Elisabeth, née. of shields . He took part as a voluntary hunter in the Wars of Liberation of 1813/14 and then initially became a hunting squire in Mecklenburg-Schwerin services. With the character of a chief forest master, he entered the court of the Hereditary Grand Duke Paul Friedrich and later became his house marshal after he took office in 1837. After the death of the court marshal von Levetzow in 1843 he took his place and remained head of the grand ducal court until 1863, from 1858 as chief court marshal. In 1863 he became chief steward and retired after the death of Grand Duchess Anna in 1865.

After the death of his mother's brother, the Prussian chief steward of Schilden, owner of the Goldenbow , Friedrichshof, Albertinenhof and Gosau estates in 1850, his brother and heir, Herr von Schilden auf Rodenwalde and Marsow, left the named and with him during his lifetime property combined into a family entailment, which according to the law of male primogeniture should be passed on.

Jaspar von Bülow was considered a frank and faithful advisor to the prince . For many years he acted as the second commissioner in the Mecklenburg state parliaments.

Since 1824 he was with Henriette, geb. married by Jasmund, who had been the court lady of the Hereditary Grand Duchess Alexandrine before the marriage . Jaspar von Bülow and Alexander von Bülow were their sons. His daughter Ina (* January 12, 1827) married Count Carl von Bassewitz-Leventzow (* February 16, 1821 - October 5, 1900), Count Carl von Bassewitz-Levetzow was his grandson.

literature

  • Ludwig von Hirschfeld: Friedrich Franz II. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot 1891, p. 182f.

Individual evidence

  1. Hirschfeld (lit.), p. 183
  2. ^ Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the count's houses 1871, p.59