Julius Schmidlin

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Julius Schmidlin (born November 16, 1811 in Freudenstadt , † February 18, 1881 in Ellwangen (Jagst) ) was a Württemberg chief bailiff.

ancestry

Julius Schmidlin came from an old Württemberg family of so-called honesty . He was the son of the Württemberg Interior Minister Christoph Friedrich von Schmidlin and his wife Karoline Auguste Enßlin (* 1780, † 1832). His older brother Eduard von Schmidlin was later the Württemberg Minister of Culture. Julius also had five other brothers (including Karl Schmidlin ) and two sisters.

Life

Schmidlin studied law and political science at the University of Tübingen from 1829 to 1832 . In 1834 he passed the service examination at the Department of the Interior. From 1834 to 1836 he was an actuary at the Oberamt Waldsee and from 1836 to 1837 at the Oberamt Biberach . In 1837 he moved to the Ministry of the Interior in Stuttgart as an assistant. From 1839 to 1844 he was then assessor in the government of the Black Forest district in Reutlingen. In 1844 he was appointed senior bailiff at the Oberamt Leonberg , he headed this office until 1852. After that, he was government director in Ellwangen.

literature

  • Wolfram Angerbauer (Red.): The heads of the upper offices, district offices and district offices in Baden-Württemberg from 1810 to 1972 . Published by the working group of the district archives at the Baden-Württemberg district assembly. Theiss, Stuttgart 1996, ISBN 3-8062-1213-9 , pp. 503 .

Individual evidence

  1. Eberhard von Georgii-Georgenau: Biographisch-Genealogische Blätter from and about Swabia . Emil Müller Verlag, Stuttgart 1878, p. 840 f.
  2. Schwäbische Chronik , No. 203, August 28, 1869, p. 2511