Julius von Schleinitz

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Julius Karl Leopold Freiherr von Schleinitz (born July 22, 1806 in Blankenburg (Harz) , Duchy of Braunschweig-Lüneburg , † December 24, 1865 in Trier ) was a Prussian civil servant and politician.

Life

He came from an old Meissen noble family , which in the 16th century in the realm baron was raised, and was the second son of the Blankenburg district president and later Duke of Brunswick Minister Karl Ferdinand Freiherr von Schleinitz (1756-1837) and Barbara von Hochstetter (1768 1819). He was the brother of the ducal Brunswick State Minister Wilhelm von Schleinitz (1794-1856) and the Prussian State Minister Alexander von Schleinitz (1807-1885).

Schleinitz studied law and joined the Prussian judicial service in 1828 as an ausculator at the Berlin City Court . The usual preparatory service followed before he became an assessor at the Supreme Court in 1833 . In 1835 Schleinitz joined the administration.

In 1839 Schleinitz was Councilor in Kwidzyn and 1841 Counsel of the Government in Merseburg . In 1844 he moved to the Ministry of the Interior and in 1846 was appointed a secret councilor. At the beginning of the March Revolution of 1848 he was actively involved in enabling Prince Wilhelm to flee abroad.

In 1850 he was appointed district president of Bromberg and in 1864 of Trier .

Schleinitz was also a member of the Prussian National Assembly in 1848 . Between 1849 and 1851 he was a member of the first chamber of the Prussian state parliament and from 1856 to 1862 of the House of Representatives .

family

Schleinitz married on April 17, 1838 in Braunschweig Jenny Freiin von Schwedthoff (* May 25, 1802 in Braunschweig, † March 10, 1888), adopted daughter of the royal Prussian general of the infantry Otto August Rühle von Lilienstern . The couple had several children including:

  • Otto Julius Wilhelm (born April 26, 1839; † 1916), art historian ⚭ 1872 Klara Loth widowed fisherman (born November 9, 1834)
  • Alexandra (born September 5, 1842 - † February 14, 1901), writer
  • Adele (born January 21, 1845)

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Reinhold Wacker: The country on the Moselle and Saar with Eifel and Hunsrück. Structures and developments, 1815–1990. Verlag Spee, 1991, ISBN 3-87760-051-4 , p. 545. ( excerpt )
  2. ^ Klaus Helmut Rehfeld, Irene Berger: The Prussian administration of the administrative district Bromberg (1848–1871). Verlag Grote, 1968, p. 43. ( excerpt )
  3. ^ Ernst Heinrich Kneschke : New general German nobility lexicon . 1868, p. 198, mentioned in the family article ( digitized version ).
  4. ^ Gudrun Wedel: Autobiographies of women: a lexicon. P. 750f.
  5. ^ Schleinitz, Freiin Alexandra v. . In: Sophie Pataky (Hrsg.): Lexicon of German women of the pen . Volume 2. Verlag Carl Pataky, Berlin 1898, p. 244 f. ( Digitized version ).