Julius von Sparre

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Julius Karl Philipp Theodor von Sparre (born June 30, 1783 in St. Goar ; died after 1851 in Dresden ) was a Prussian landowner and from 1822 to 1845 district administrator of the Wetzlar district .

Life

Julius von Sparre, a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church , was a son of the bailiff Johann Christoph Wangemann and his wife Christiane Caroline Antonie Wangeman, née Ludovici. Until 1810 he still had his father's name Wangemann, from then on he called himself “Sparre von Wangenstein” and after being accepted into the Rhenish nobility register in 1830 “von Sparre”. On April 26, 1818, in Schwarzenfels , he married Luise Eleonore Henriette Freiin von Plessen (died in Kassel in 1848 ), daughter of Baron Caspar von Plessen from Osnabrück and his wife Friederike Wilhelmine Louise Freiin von Plessen, née von Hager.

After studying the law at the universities of Marburg ( enrollment April 26, 1801) and Göttingen (enrollment on October 19, 1802) as a lawyer for the State Council of the Kingdom of Westphalen worked, he served as Julius Wangemann and from 1810 Julius Sparre of Wangenstein worked as an assessor at the criminal court of the Fulda department from 1807 to 1813, based in Kassel.

In 1814 Julius Sparre von Wangenstein took part in the Wars of Liberation as a volunteer before buying the Rhine island of Oberwerth near Koblenz from Albert von Mees for 40,000 guilders on July 23, 1814  . Until it was resold on June 5, 1835 to Franz Simon Pfaff von Pfaffenhofen for 35,000  Reichstaler , he owned the 210-  acre estate, the former abbey , which he leased for 1,500 Taler annually. In 1818 von Sparre joined the newly established Royal Prussian Government in Koblenz as an unskilled worker , where he was appointed government assessor in February 1820.

In the succession of the first district administrator of the Wetzlar district, Friedrich Felix Furkel , who had retired on July 1, 1822, and his successor, Karl Ernst von Ernsthausen , who was appointed as his representative on August 8, 1822 and when he took office on October 1, provisional to the new district administrator in Appointed in Wetzlar, Julius remained in this position after his final appointment with the highest cabinet order (AKO) from January 20, 1823 until his suspension on December 16, 1845. Julius von Sparre was subsequently convicted by the Westphalian Higher Regional Court on January 28, 1848 and finally resigned from civil service. Only after this slogan could the district office in Wetzlar be filled. Until then, it was represented by Rudolph von Dewitz and Carl Diesterweg .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Horst Romeyk : The leading state and municipal administrative officials of the Rhine Province 1816–1945 (=  publications of the Society for Rhenish History . Volume 69 ). Droste, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-7700-7585-4 , p. 755 f .
  2. ^ Johann Christian von Stramberg : Rheinischer Antiquarius , Department II, Volume 2 (1851), pp. 254 and 258.
  3. Allgemeine Anzeiger und Nationalzeitung der Deutschen , Gotha, Beckersche Buchhandlung, No. 207 of August 2, 1834, Col. 2507 f., Exhibition of the property for sale from 1834.