Julius von Hollen

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Julius Heinrich von Hollen , from 1866 Freiherr von Hollen (born November 8, 1804 in Hamburg , † February 28, 1879 in Schönweide, now part of Grebin ) was a German lawyer , landowner and member of parliament.

Life

Julius Heinrich von Hollen came from a middle-class Hamburg merchant family who came from Nesse near Bremen and was originally called van Hollen . He was the son of Levin Heinrich von Hollen (1767–1848) and his wife Anna Juliane, geb. Kalckmann. In 1813 his father acquired the Schönweide estate near Plön from the bankruptcy estate of Garlieb Amsinck , and was on September 14th, 1814 by King Friedrich VI. thus enfeoffed and in 1820 achieved the conversion of the property, the area of ​​which he enlarged to 1,778 hectares through acquisitions , into an allodial property .

After studying law, he was awarded a Dr. iur. PhD. In 1832 his father gave him the Schönweide estate as a gift. As a representative of the owners of aristocratic and other larger estates, he was a member of the Holstein Estates Assembly until 1854 . In 1842 he acquired the Görtz estate (today part of Heringsdorf (Ostholstein) ), which he kept until 1867, and in 1849 the Tüschenbek estate . In 1857 he had the Schönweide manor house rebuilt and expanded. The building known locally as Schönweide Castle was sold by the descendants in 1986 and destroyed by fire in 2000.

In 1855 he was elected to the Ritter- und Landschaft (Lauenburg) as the representative of the owners of the goods in the Duchy of Lauenburg that were once eligible for state assembly, the parliamentary representation of the duchy, which had been linked to Denmark in personal union since 1815 , to which he belonged until its end. In the course of the German-Danish War in 1864 he advocated the unification of Lauenburg with Prussia in the form of a personal union and while maintaining Lauenburg special rights.

On March 21, 1866, he received a diploma from the Prussian King Wilhelm I, and he was recognized as a nobility and was raised to the Prussian baron class for himself and his descendants.

family

On April 12, 1832, he married Sofie Caroline Marie Luise (1812–1885), b. Lueder, a daughter of the Hanover government councilor Carl-Wilhelm Lueder zu Wehnde ( Weende (Göttingen) ), who had acquired the Rethwisch estate (today Redewisch, part of Boltenhagen ) in 1817 . The couple had four daughters and six sons, including

  • Luise Henriette Auguste (born December 19, 1833) ⚭ Count Karl Ernst Felix von Platen-Hallermund (born August 3, 1810 in Marseille, † November 9, 1887), mother of Karl von Platen-Hallermund and Oskar von Platen-Hallermund
  • Heinrich Karl Georg Philibert (* August 22, 1835; † April 14, 1872) ⚭ Anna von Hymmen (1836–1927), a daughter of Eberhard von Hymmen .
  • Julie Jeannette Adolphine (* June 8, 1837) ⚭ 1865 Ernst Sigismund von Zeschau († September 1, 1870), captain
  • Karl Louis August Leopold (January 29, 1839 - May 1, 1895) Prussian district administrator and took over Tüschenbek ⚭ Countess Louise Platen-Hallermund (January 21, 1862 - June 17, 1936)
  • Albrecht Konrad Ernst Friedrich (* June 29, 1840; † August 6, 1896) ⚭ Maria von Restorff (* August 19, 1842; † February 27, 1930)
  • August Ludwig Adalbert Viktor (born February 25, 1842), Lord of Krakow
  • Sophie Amalie Luise katharina (* May 24, 1843) ⚭ Curt von Ammon († August 18, 1870)
  • Amandus Karl Georg Ludwig (born June 13, 1845 - † September 6, 1900), naval officer, most recently Vice Admiral ⚭ Luise von Stosch (* 1852)
  • Ida Karoline Luise Ulrike (* July 23, 1848) ⚭ 1869 Heinrich von Hadeln, captain
  • Gustav Karl Emil Beatus (* December 22, 1851; † November 7, 1917) cavalry officer, most recently General of the Cavalry ⚭ Countess Leontine Bernhardine Helene von Roedern (* February 11, 1863; † December 23, 1942)

Schönweide came to his grandson Ludwig Carl von Hollen (1866–1955), the only son of the eldest son Heinrich.

Awards

literature

  • Johannes von Schröder: Topography of the Duchy of Holstein, the Principality of Lübeck and the free and Hanseatic cities of Hamburg and Lübeck. Volume 2, Oldenburg i. H. 1841, p. 329

Individual evidence

  1. Royal Danish Court and State Calendar 1854, p. 157
  2. Henning Oldekop: Topography of the Duchy of Holstein: including the district of the Duchy of Lauenburg, the Principality of Lübeck, enclaves (8) of the Free and Hanseatic City of Lübeck, enclaves (4) of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. Kiel: Lipsius & Tischer 1908, p. 130
  3. Lost Monuments
  4. See Jürgen de Vries: Bismarck and the Duchy of Lauenburg: the incorporation of Lauenburg into Prussia 1865-1876. Neumünster: Wachholtz 1989 ISBN 978-3529021947
  5. Redewisch: History ( Memento of the original from July 12, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.gutshaus-redewisch.de
  6. Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the baronial houses 23 (1873), p. 294