Julian von Hartmann

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Julian Wolfgang Matthias Bruno Hartmann (* 20th June 1842 in Muenster , † 6. March 1916 ) was a Prussian civil servant and President of the Government of the administrative district of Aurich and the governmental district of Aachen .

Life

Origin and education

Julian von Hartmann was the son of the Oberregierungsrat, Lieutenant Colonel zD , Albert von Hartmann (born March 5, 1805 in Paderborn; † March 12, 1865 in Münster) and Ottilia Katharina Julia Pauline, née. von und zur Mühlen (born June 29, 1812 in Münster; † October 21, 1845 ibid). After attending the Paulinum grammar school in his hometown, which he left in 1860 with passing the school leaving examination , he studied law at the universities of Bonn ( matriculation October 27, 1860), Heidelberg and Berlin . Upon graduation, he entered the Prussian judicial service as an auscultator on September 12, 1863 ( swearing in Münster, September 14, 1863). After passing the first state examination in law, he was appointed court trainee (February 18, 1865) and continued his training at the Münster Court of Appeal . But then he switched to the administration as a government trainee, where he was employed by the governments in Münster and Potsdam . After passing the second state examination and being appointed government assessor (June 24, 1865), he was initially charged with the deputy administration of the Zell district administration .

Career

Hartmann continued his professional development from August 28, 1868 as an unskilled worker at the Nienburg Office and from June 1, 1869 in Göttingen . During the Franco-Prussian War he found employment in the Büren District Office from November 1870 to May 1871 and then moved to the Prussian Ministry of the Interior in Berlin as an unskilled worker . Further posts: October 1871 Landdrostei Hildesheim , April 1872 Landdrostei Hanover and in June 1872 Oberpräsidium Hanover . There Julian von Hartmann received his appointment to the government council on July 25, 1878 and on March 26, 1885 the promotion to the senior president. Five years later he received on February 5, 1890 appointment to the provincial government in Aurich .

District President in Aachen

Hartmann only spent two years in East Frisia . On March 9, 1892, he took over the management of the royal government of Aachen as regional president . He stayed there until he retired on April 1, 1907. Before that, on June 19, 1902, he was appointed to the Real Secret Upper Government Council. In Aachen von Hartmann developed a lively administrative activity. Through his initiative, the city of Aachen was able to incorporate the city ​​of Burtscheid, which previously belonged to the Aachen district, in 1897, and the neighboring community of Forst in 1906 . Which caused the city to grow to around 150,000 inhabitants. At the Technical University he was the royal commissioner chairman of the technical examination office for site managers and through the Karlsverein he campaigned for the restoration of the cathedral . But he also set priorities outside of the seat of government. The expansion of the small railway network is called his work, as is the construction of the Urfttalsperre . He paid particular attention to the economic development of the Eifel district.

"[...] The Eifel, however, which suffers from unfavorable climatic and traffic conditions, requires constant, intensive care, and we have given it, I believe, with great success."

- Julian von Hartmann in 1907, on the occasion of his departure.

After his retirement, Hartmann moved back to Münster, where he also died in 1916.

Honors
  • 1893 Red Eagle Order III. Class with a bow
  • 1897 Red Eagle Order II. Class with oak leaves
  • 1905 Order of the Crown, 2nd class with a star
  • 1907 Star for the Red Eagle Order II class with oak leaves (when he left civil service)

family

The Catholic Julian von Hartmann married Ottilie von und zur Mühlen on May 15, 1877 in Heiligenstadt (* May 7, 1852 in Paderborn; † August 8, 1926 in Münster), daughter of the mayor Julius von und zur Mühlen (* October 2, 1815 in Münster; † June 14, 1900 in Münster) and Clara, b. von Hartmann (born November 25, 1820 in Büren in Westphalia, † June 19, 1886 in Münster). The Cologne Archbishop Felix von Hartmann was his younger half-brother. Her daughter Hildegard (1878–1910) had been married to the district administrator of the Malmedy districts (1894–1899) and most recently Aachen (1899–1919), Karl von Pastor , since 1898 .

literature

  • 150 years of government and administrative district Aachen. Contributions to their history. Aachen 1967, p. 324 f.
  • Eduard Arens, Wilhelm L. Janssen : History of the Club Aachener Casino. Aachen 3rd edition, edited by Elisabeth Janssen, Edith Müller-Lentz and Anton Sterzl, Aachen 2000, p. 200. No. 702.
  • Horst Romeyk : The leading state and municipal administrative officials of the Rhine Province 1816–1945 (=  publications of the Society for Rhenish History . Volume 69 ). Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-7585-4 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Horst Romeyk : The leading state and municipal administrative officials of the Rhine Province 1816-1945 (=  publications of the Society for Rhenish History . Volume 69 ). Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-7585-4 .
  2. Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of noble houses, 1941, Volume 2, p. 377
  3. ^ A b Eduard Arens , Wilhelm L. Janssen: History of the Club Aachener Casino.
  4. a b c d 150 years of government and administrative district Aachen. Contributions to their history.