Julius Heinrich Lüdke

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Julius Lüdke, photographer: Gebr. Siebe, Inh. Max Siebe, in Breslau

Julius Heinrich Lüdke (born June 16, 1817 in Brunn near Ruppin , † May 14, 1892 in Breslau ), also Luedke, was a German farmer , Prussian head of office , royal economics councilor and co-tenant and later director of the manor in Bujakow, district of Beuthen . From 1873 Bujakow belonged to the newly founded Zabrze district .

ancestry

Lüdke was the son of the royal Prussian chief bailiff Karl Friedrich Wilhelm Lüdke , tenant of the manor Brunn near Neustadt an der Dosse and then general tenant of the state domain Amt Alt-Landsberg , and his wife Eleonore Juliane Piefke (1788-1838), who was also called "Laura" who he married in 1806.

Direct ancestors are the Havelsberg canon Matthäus Ludecus and the electoral Brandenburg chancellor Johann Weinlob .

He was married to Ottilie Heinze, who died in 1852. The marriage had 3 children

Anna Euphemia Lüdke b. Gemander, photographer: Gebr. Siebe, Inh. Max Siebe, in Breslau

On October 9, 1854, in Belk, Silesia, he married Anna Euphemia Gemander (1826–1908), the sister of his co-tenant Anton Gemander .

Professional background

When Lüdke was born, his father was the leaseholder of the Brunn manor, which is located in what is now the municipality of Wusterhausen / Dosse . From 1823 the father had taken over the general lease for the Alt-Landsberg Royal Domain Vorwerk, which was part of the Alt-Landsberg Office, with the neighboring Wolfshagen and Neu-Werk ancillary works, along with a brewery and distillery and several family apartments.

The father Lüdke died in 1834. On the basis of a ministerial rescript of October 10, 1835, the widow was given the lease property with the assistance of her eldest son "Gustavus Germanus Lüdke"; but in 1836 a special contract was concluded with both of them for the specified time. After his mother's death in 1838, Gustav Germanus Lüdke held the office alone until 1863.

Julius Lüdke, the younger brother of the current tenant, emigrated to Silesia around 1842 and took over the management of the manor in Ponischowitz near Gleiwitz , which belonged to the von Zawadski family. From 1851 Lüdke was together with the later manor owner and bailiff Anton Gemander (1822-1889) tenants of the Bujakow estate in the Beuthen district . In 1854 he married his sister Anna Euphemia Gemander (1826–1908). The brother-in-law was the general representative of the zinc king and business leader in Upper Silesia Karl Godulla (1781-1848). The estate had a size of 3398 acres. Of this, 1601 acres were forest and 1467 acres were arable land.

In 1873 the "director" Lüdke was named as the authorized representative of the Bujakow estate, previously leased by him and his brother-in-law, which had a size of 3096 acres (1409 fields, 144 meadows, 1539 forests, 4 water). At that time the estate belonged to the Countess von Schaffgotsch born. Schomberg-Godulla , the heiress of Anton Gomulla.

As part of the Prussian district reform of 1872, Lüdke was appointed head of the district of Bujakow No. 3 for 6 years . The district consisted of the rural community Bujakow and the manor district Bujakow. Lüdke was then employed as a police officer who was responsible in his district for safety and order, good morals, health and compliance with the rules of the servants . The village of Bujakow is described in more detail in the Topographical Handbook of Upper Silesia.

Lüdke was also the chairman of the Bytom Agricultural Association . The purpose of such associations was mutual instruction and stimulation in the field of agriculture. Lüdke provided the rural cattle owners in Bujakow with a breeding animal free of charge because there were no breeding animal stations there.

Descendants

Brothers Karl, Paul and Hans Lüdke in 1894, photographer: Ph. Platz, royal court photographer in Ratibor

There were 4 children from the marriage:

family tree

Reference is made to the family tree of Florian Seiffert. Furthermore, when the article was first drafted, there was a handwritten compilation “Data about the Lüdke family”, which the Secret Government Councilor and Syndic of the Upper Silesian Principality in Ratibor Carl Lüdke  (1857-1927), the son of Julius Lüdke, had made.

References and comments

  1. Germany, Prussia, Brandenburg and Posen, church book duplicates 1794-1874 ", database with images, FamilySearch [1] , accessed September 23, 2017
  2. Matthias Bugaeus: funeral sermon for Germanus Luidtke. Stendal 1673. (Braunschweig City Archives, Vol. 95 No. 25)
  3. Karl Gähde: history of the town Landsberg. G. Schwetschke'scher Verlag, Halle 1857, p. 123, (Landesgeschichtliche Vereinigung für die Mark Brandenburg eV, library catalog Sign. 2913 -SM-) [2]
  4. To Gut Ponischowitz see website Paläste Schlesiens digitally accessed on August 18, 2016 [3] and Felix Triest, Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien, Volume 1, Breslau 1865 p. 527 ff, digital: [4]
  5. a b Felix Triest, Topographisches Handbuch von Oberschlesien, Volume 1, Breslau 1865 P. 371, digital: [5]
  6. ^ Goods address book Silesia 1873 / surnames / Lüdke, digital [6]
  7. Rolf Jehde, territorial changes in Germany and German administered territories 1874 - 1945: District Bujakow [7]
  8. ^ Official Journal of the District President in Opole: 1874, Second Extraordinary Supplement, Item 37, digital: [8]
  9. ^ Negotiations of the ... General Assembly of German Pomologists and Fruit Breeders and the German Pomologists Association, 1890, p. 29 digital (snippet): [9]
  10. Wiegandt & Hempel, Agricultural Yearbooks, Volume 12, Parts 2-3, 1883, p. 270, google snippet view digital: [10]
  11. ^ German Orthopedic Society, negotiations of the German Orthopedic Society, Volume 44, parts 1956-1957 p. 3, digital snippet view: [11]
  12. Family research Florian Seiffert, accessed on September 13, 2017, digital: [12]