Johann Heinrich von Fuchs

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Johann Heinrich Fuchs , since 1716 von Fuchs (born December 26, 1664 in Monzingen , † July 11, 1727 in Berlin ) was a Prussian lawyer, secret chamber and finance council then vice-president and conducting minister in the General-Ober-Finanz-Kriegs- and Domain directory and heir to Wustermark .

Life

origin

His parents were Johann Jakob Fuchs (1641–1704) and his wife Maria Margaretha, née Kilburger (1642–1713).

Career

Fuchs studied in Heidelberg from 1685. There Heinrich von Cocceji became aware of him and when the French ravaged the country in the Palatinate War of Succession , he brought him to Frankfurt (Oder) as a full professor in 1691 . There he became a doctor of law in 1693 and went to Berlin as a councilor in 1696. Here in 1697 he became a member of the chamber judge and director of the criminal college. On November 20, 1716 he was ennobled , in 1719 President of the Supreme Court, in 1723 the Privy Chamber and Finance Council, Vice-President and Conducting Minister at the General Directory established at that time. He wrote several legal dissertations.

family

He married Catharina Margaretha Glöckner in 1696. The couple had several children:

  • Karl Jakob (1697–1756), President of the Halberstadt War and Domain Chamber
  • Heinrich Kasimir (1698–1726), second lieutenant
  • Maria Henrietta (1703-1723)
  • Conrad Ludwig (1705–1772), War, Domain and Tax Council ⚭ Maria Helene von Lüderitz (1721–1782)
  • Karl Friedrich (1750–1802), captain ⚭ Philippine Sophie Elisabeth Wanney, parents of Karl von Fuchs
  • Katharina Charlotte (1707–1726) ⚭ 1725 Karl von Roden

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ernst Fidicin: The territories of the Mark Brandenburg. Volume 3, p. 288.
  2. ^ Rolf Straubel : Biographical manual of the Prussian administrative and judicial officials 1740–1806 / 15 . In: Historical Commission to Berlin (Ed.): Individual publications . 85. KG Saur Verlag, Munich 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-23229-9 , pp. 288 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  3. ^ Genealogical handbook of middle-class families. Volume Eighteenth, 1910 p. 193. FN114