Johann Carl Gottlieb Arning

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Carl Gottlieb Arning (born June 5, 1786 in Minden ; † August 9, 1862 ) was a lawyer and Hamburg senator.

Arning received his doctorate in 1808. He then came to Hamburg and was juge suppléant at the Tribunal of First Instance during the French period . He then worked as a lawyer and was registered under number 17 in the Hamburg lawyer registry, which had been in existence since 1816. He was co-opted into the Hamburger Rath on April 15, 1835. It belonged to the council, which changed into the Hamburg Senate from 1860 until his death.

"Johann Carl Gottlieb Arning", collective grave Senators (III), Ohlsdorf cemetery

He was married to Henriette Wilhelmine Oppenheimer , a sister of Georg Friedrich Ludwig Oppenheimer . Henriette Wilhelmine Oppenheimer was born as the daughter of the Hamburg businessman and partner in the banking house Heckscher & Co. Jacob Amschel Oppenheimer (1778–1845) and his wife Esther, née. Heckscher, an aunt of Johann Gustav Heckscher , was born. Of Henriette Wilhelmine's sisters, Phillipine Adele (1807–1873) married Nicolaus Ferdinand Haller and Anna Emilie (1803–1885) Johann Christoph Fehling in 1831 ; they became the parents of Emil Ferdinand Fehling .

In 1816 he was accepted into the Hamburg Freemason Lodge Ferdinande Caroline to the three stars . The Arningkai in Hamburg were named after him.

The district court president Christian Arning (1824-1909) was his son, the dermatologist Eduard Arning (1855-1936), son of Carl Eduard Arning (1823-1906), was his grandson.

In the Ohlsdorf cemetery , the collective gravestone plaque of Senators (III) from the Althamburg Memorial Cemetery commemorates Johann Carl Gottlieb Arning, among others.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Gerrit Schmidt: The history of the Hamburg lawyers from 1815 to 1879, Hamburg 1989, ISBN 3-923725-17-5 , p. 317
  2. ^ August Sutor: The establishment of the commercial court in Hamburg , 1866, p. 136
  3. ^ Heinz-Jürgen Brandt:  Haller, Martin Emil Ferdinand. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 7, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1966, ISBN 3-428-00188-5 , pp. 553 f. ( Digitized version ).