Johann Wilhelm tiles

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Johann Wilhelm tiles

Johann Wilhelm Fliesen (born June 17, 1766 in Kaiserslautern , † April 30, 1852 in Ansbach ) was a Protestant church lawyer and Bavarian civil servant .

Live and act

The tiles family from Kaiserslautern originally came from Kaub am Rhein . Its founder, Heinrich Wilhelm Fliesen, immigrated from there and in 1710 acquired the city's lion pharmacy. His descendants, the pharmacist, electoral Palatinate chief clerk , councilor and Reformed church councilor Heinrich Ludwig Fliesen (1712–1780) and his wife Charlotte Maria née. Umbscheiden (1731–1792) were the parents of Johann Wilhelm Fliesen.

From 1784 he studied political economy , later also law, at the University of Heidelberg and worked in his hometown from 1793–1797 as an administrative conductor or collector (collector) for the French government. When the territories left of the Rhine , which had been French since 1793 , were transferred, the General Council ( Conseil général ) of the previous Département du Mont-Tonnerre , under the provisional Austrian-Bavarian government, was converted into a war debt liquidation commission. It was the forerunner of the later Palatinate District Assembly . Johann Wilhelm Fliesen was a member of this body. At the same time, the mixed government appointed him the leading church council of the reformed consistory in Worms .

In 1816 the southern part of the previously jointly administered area on the left bank of the Rhine fell to the Kingdom of Bavaria as the Rhine District (later Rheinpfalz) ; The district capital became Speyer . The previous higher ecclesiastical authorities for the Lutheran and Reformed parishes in the state were united in a joint general consistory, which also tiles, now as a Bavarian civil servant. On behalf of King Max I Joseph of Bavaria , he led the successful Union Synod , which took place in Kaiserslautern from August 2 to 16, 1818. The Protestant Church of the Palatinate was created with the merger .

Johann Wilhelm Fliesen became director of the Speyer consistory of this united church and remained in office until 1832. Then he was transferred to Ansbach as a member of the government because the Palatinate consistory was to be restructured after the Hambach Festival that had just taken place . According to the government, he had not cracked down on clergymen who were involved in the rally.

Tiles, at the end of his career Regierungsrat was walked 1,836 retired and died in 1852 in Ansbach. His daughter Karoline Franziska Friederike (1799–1829) was married to the canton doctor Johann Georg Beutner (1788–1859).

literature

  • Viktor Carl: Lexicon of Palatinate Personalities , Hennig Verlag, Edenkoben, 2004, ISBN 3-9804668-5-X , p. 230
  • Gustav Adolf Benrath: Reformation - Union - Awakening: Examples from Church History. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2012, ISBN 3647101109 , p. 174; (Digital scan)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Yearbook on the history of the city and district of Kaiserslautern , Historischer Verein der Pfalz , Verlag Arbogast, 1996, p. 138 u. 139; (Detail scan)
  2. ^ Karl HL Welker: Andreas Riem: a European from the Palatinate , Thorbecke Verlag, 1999, ISBN 3799549064 , p. 26; (Detail scan)
  3. Yearbook on the history of the city and district of Kaiserslautern , Historischer Verein der Pfalz, Verlag Arbogast, 1996, p. 138 (detail scan)
  4. ^ Gustav Toepke : The register of the University of Heidelberg , 4th part, p. 333, Heidelberg, 1903; (Digital scan)
  5. ^ Neue Speyerer Zeitung , No. 6, of January 8, 1833; (Digital scan)
  6. ^ Royal Bavarian Intelligence Gazette for the Rezat District , Ansbach, year 1836, No. 36, from May 4, 1836; (Digital scan)