Johann Friedrich Ludloff

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Friedrich Ludloff (born December 29, 1723 in Groß-Keula, Thuringia , † January 18, 1790 in Sondershausen ) was Princely Schwarzburg Secretary and Princely Landscape Councilor.

Life

Johann Friedrich Ludloff was the son of the Princely Schwarzburgisch-Sonderhausischen court goldsmith and the Royal Polish and Electoral Saxon and Princely Schwarzburg Postmaster Johann Friedrich Ludloff. 1743 he studied in Jena Jura and was subsequently Princely Secretary in Sondershausen.

In Sondershausen he used his own stagecoach for extra mail to compete with his brother-in-law, who had taken over his father's post office. The dispute ended with Ludloff's promotion. Approx. At the end of 1750 he was transferred to Clingen as Princely Secretary and Administrator and again to Sondershausen in 1753. He now held the title and office of Princely Schwarzburg secretary and Jechaburg monastery administrator; the former monastery of Jechaburg also included numerous forest areas in addition to the attached properties.

At the end of 1754 he was accepted as an extraordinary member of the Churfürstlich-Mayntzische Gesellschaft or the Academie of Useful Sciences .

Around 1754 Ludloff built a house in Sondershausen (Hauptstrasse 29), which was large for the time, and put on an art collection, including minerals , which after his death Christian Günther III. , Prince of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen, was purchased.

In 1771 he received the title of Princely Land Rentmaster and in 1774 Princely Land Councilor .

He was married twice, father of Friedrich Carl Ludloff and Gottlieb Friedrich Ludloff , grandfather of Gottlieb Wilhelm Ludloff , and had a total of 13 children.

literature

credentials

  1. ^ Karl Goedeke: Eighth book: From world peace to the French revolution 1830: Poetry of general education. Department VI . Walter de Gruyter, 2011, ISBN 978-3-05-005258-8 ( google.de [accessed December 25, 2017]).
  2. ^ Letter from Johann Friedrich Ludloff to unknown at Electoral Mainz Academy of Useful Sciences. Retrieved December 29, 2017 .