Johann Jacob von Lüdecke

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Johann Jacob von Lüdecke (born July 17, 1682 in Halle (Saale) , † June 29, 1750 in Hohenthurm ) was a Brunswick State Councilor .

Johann Jacob von Lüdecke was the son of the later Prussian and Brunswick-Lüneburg Privy Councilor and Chancellor Urban Dietrich von Lüdecke and Clara Elisabeth, née. Mathesius .

Life

Lüdecke disputed in 1700 at Halle under JF Schneider de finibus, jurisprudentiae naturalis regendis and in 1702 under Samuel Stryk de principe testatore . In 1701 Henckelius published the Dissertatio politico-moralis de metu comparationis, ad C. Cornelii Taciti Annl. lib. I. cap. LXXVI the authors Johann Franz Buddeus and Johann Jacob Luedecke. In his youth he traveled a lot, worked as a legation secretary in Spain for a long time and later worked in the royal Brunswick service in Wolfenbüttel . He knew many languages ​​and had a select library, especially of historical books. He died at Hohenthurm Castle .

family

His first marriage was Anna Elisabeth Wlömer in 1711 . The couple had the following children:

  • Gebhard Levin (1715–1794)
  • Augusta Christiane (1720–1795), married to Friedrich August Wilhelm von Pawlowski.

In his second marriage he married Sophia Jurina Henriette von Helmolt in 1727 . The couple had the following children:

  • Johann Carl (1732–1786)
  • Georg August (1735–1807), married to Sophie Charlotte Damm,
  • Auguste Elisabeth (1737-)
  • Urban Dietrich (1739–1788).

literature

Remarks

  1. On his reading as a young man on the basis of the loan books of the Herzogliche Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel cf. Gerhard E. Strasser: The reading intentions of Wolfenbüttel teachers and students in the 17th and 18th centuries . In: Wolfenbüttel notes on book history . Volume 34, 2009, Issue 1/2, pp. 77–80. However, he takes over from Mechthild Raabe ( Die Fürstliche Bibliothek zu Wolfenbüttel and their readers . Wolfenbüttel 1997, pp. 150–151) the certainly incorrect year of birth 1689 and therefore attributes the reading of a student to Lüdecke between the ages of 9 and 13.

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