Julius von Oven

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Julius Adalbert von Oven (born May 16, 1829 in Wetter (Ruhr) , † May 31, 1889 in Berlin ) was a German administrative officer.

Life

origin

Julius von Oven came from a noble family on the Lower Rhine . His father was the Prussian government and consistorial councilor Karl Heinrich Engelbert von Oven, his mother Charlotte nee. Brügelmann. His brother was Karl von Oven , district administrator of the district of Schlochau (1865–1875) and district of Duderstadt (1885–1900).

Career

After graduating from high school in Düsseldorf, Julius von Oven studied three semesters of law and camera studies at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg on August 29, 1846 . In 1847 he became a member of the Corps Saxo-Borussia Heidelberg . In the summer of 1848 he switched to forestry and worked at the Oberförsterei Kleve (June – September 1848) and then until May 1849 at the Oberförsterei Himmelpforten (Arnsberg district). On March 24, 1849, he passed the forest ranger exam in Oeventrop. On June 2, 1849, he enrolled at the University of Berlin for law and cameralia, but was dispensed from the 6th semester.

In 1850/51 Von Oven did military service as a one-year-old volunteer in the cuirassier regiment "von Driesen" (Westphalian) No. 4 , and from 1853 as an officer in the Prussian 4th heavy Landwehr rider regiment.

On May 14, 1850, he passed the test as an ausculator at the Naumburg Court of Appeal (“according to regulations”). On May 18, 1850, he was appointed ausculator at the Münster district court and on June 26, 1850, he was appointed ausculator at the Münster district court. On June 14, 1852, he passed the examination to become a trainee lawyer at the Münster Appellate Court (“according to regulations”); on June 18, 1852, he was appointed court ausculator and shortly thereafter appointed court of appeal trainee. On October 11, 1852, he passed the examination for government clerk at the Münster district government; on October 13, 1852 he was appointed government advisor.

In 1854 he moved to the Arnsberg district government as a government official and in 1854 took over the administration of the Wittgenstein district. On January 4, 1855, he was transferred to the Potsdam district government.

On March 21, 1855, he was appointed district administrator of the Wittgenstein district , relieving him of the statutory examination . He was given leave of absence from June 21, 1859 to October 15, 1859 (representation is provided by the Count of Ledebur-Wicheln). In the summer of 1860 there was another leave of absence to learn the Polish language on his estate in Obornik and to run for the vacant district office; however, this failed. Von Oven was again on leave from February 1, 1861 to October 10, 1863. On November 10, 1863, the official instruction was given to take over the district office in Wittgenstein again.

On June 29, 1867, Julius von Oven was initially provisional, and from April 1, 1868 he was the first district administrator of the Dill district . Von Oven was in a closed institution from autumn 1885 to summer 1886; In 1886 he was only temporarily in charge of the administration of LR Dillenburg. On October 6, 1886, he was transferred to temporary retirement due to illness. On November 10, 1886, he was discharged from civil service due to illness with a pension on request on March 1, 1887.

Most recently he lived in Berlin .

family

Julius von Oven married Sophie von Bodelschwingh (1833–1868) on April 22, 1855 at Haus Velmede near Weddinghofen , the daughter of the district president in Arnsberg, then Minister of State Ernst von Bodelschwingh . Her brother-in-law was the Protestant pastor Friedrich von Bodelschwingh , founder of the Bethel institutions near Bielefeld.

The later General of the Infantry Burghard von Oven came from his marriage to Sophie von Bodelschwingh .

honors and awards

literature

  • Bärbel Holtz (edit.): The minutes of the Prussian State Ministry 1817–1934 / 38. Vol. 4 / II. In: Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences (Hrsg.): Acta Borussica . New episode. Olms-Weidmann, Hildesheim 2003, ISBN 3-487-11827-0 , p. 621. ( Online ; PDF 1.9 MB).
  • Walther Hubatsch (Ed.): Outline of German Administrative History 1815-1945 , Vol. 8: Westfalen, Marburg 1980, p. 329
  • Klein, Thomas: Senior officials of the general administration in the province of Hessen-Nassau and Waldeck, 1867–1945 , Darmstadt / Marburg 1988, pp. 186–187.
  • Wegmann, Dietrich: The leading state administrative officials of the province of Westphalia 1815–1918 , Münster 1969, p. 314
  • LAV Münster: District Findbuch Wittgenstein , p. 12

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Adelige Häuser B Volume XXIII, Page 29, Volume 121 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 2000, ISSN  0435-2408 , p. 249.
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k Siegen-Wittgenstein district archive: information from November 26, 2015
  3. a b Jürgen Kocka, Wolfgang Neugebauer: The Protocols of the Prussian State Ministry 1817-1934 / 38, Volume 4, Part 2 , Olms 1999
  4. ^ A b c d Dietrich Wegmann: The leading state administrative officials of the province of Westphalia, 1815-1918 , Aschendorff 1969, p. 314
  5. ^ Entry by Karl Heinrich Engelbert von Oven / Charlotte Sophia Brügelmann on heidermanns.net , accessed on November 29, 2015
  6. Kösener corps lists 1910, 120 , 345
  7. ^ Secret State Archives of Prussian Cultural Heritage Holdings I. HA Rep. 125, No. 3615
  8. District of Wittgenstein administrative history and district list on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke)
  9. ^ Wolfgang Leesch: The administration of the province of Westphalia, 1815-1945 , Aschendorff 1993, p. 230
  10. Dillkreis administrative history and district administration list on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke)
  11. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 66 , 352
predecessor Office successor
Bruno von Schrötter / Jost come. (1855) District Administrator of the Wittgenstein District
1855–1867
Wilhelm von Schroetter