Johann Peter Josef Bislinger

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Johann Peter Josef Bislinger (born April 24, 1760 in Düsseldorf ; † 1844 there ) was a German judge and minister.

Johann Peter Josef Bislinger was the son of a master baker and mason. In 1779 he became permanent secretary and librarian at the newly founded art academy in Düsseldorf . His brother Heinrich Theodor Joseph Bislinger (* 1746 in Düsseldorf) was a professor of painting at the art academy, another brother was the rector of the nunnery in Wachtendonk .

In 1781 he became a real councilor and counselor in the Duchy of Berg , in 1789 a lawyer in the law firm, and in 1795 a member of the war requisitions department. In 1779 he became a councilor, that is, a judge, at the court in Düsseldorf with the title of councilor. With the formation of the regional directorate, he became regional director in 1802 (in the first deputation).

In 1804 he became a member of the Privy Council and Higher Appeal Judge at the Jülich-Bergisches Higher Appeal Court . With the establishment of the State Council of the Grand Duchy of Berg in 1806, he became its member. In 1812 he became finance minister and head of the Imperial Commissariat.

With the end of the Grand Duchy of Berg , he was accepted into Prussian service. From 1814 to 1815 he was a member of the Düsseldorf Court of Cassation . From 1815 to 1821 he served as director of the 1st department in the Kleve government (with the title of Privy Councilor) and from 1821 to 1829 with the Düsseldorf government (from 1826 with the title of Upper Government Council). In 1829 he retired.

Johann Peter Josef Bislinger, who was married twice, was an art lover and was admitted to the Florence Academy of Fine Arts as an honorary member in 1782 . He owned an estate in Himmelgeist and was considered wealthy. He was awarded the Order of the Red Eagle .

His estate is in the state archive of North Rhine-Westphalia.

literature

  • Meent W. Francksen: State Council and Legislation in the Grand Duchy of Berg. Lang, Frankfurt am Main 1982, ISBN 3-8204-7124-3 , pp. 229-230

Individual evidence

  1. ^ State archive of North Rhine-Westphalia