Cabinet of the Grand Duchy of Baden (1806–1817)
The following list of the Baden Cabinet Council , which formed the state government of Baden until 1817, is still incomplete and the times given in the literature available here are partially imprecise:
literature
- Martin Furtwängler: Minister and Governments of Baden. In: Meinrad Schaab , Hansmartin Schwarzmaier (ed.) U. a .: Handbook of Baden-Württemberg History . Volume 5: Economic and social history since 1918, overviews and materials, complete index. Edited on behalf of the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg . Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 2007, ISBN 978-3-608-91371-2 , pp. 479-483.
- Peter Truhart: Regents of Nations. Systematic chronology of states and their political representatives in past and present; A biographical reference book. Part III / 1 = Regents of Nations Part III / 1 . KG Saur, Munich, London etc. 1986, ISBN 3-598-10491-X , pp. 2378-2379
References and comments
- ↑ Information according to the list by Peter Truhart. The leading minister of state has apparently been informally identified and listed here by Truhart, because in fact it was not an official position. In fact, one of the ministers usually stood out as primus inter pares , but there was only an official head of government in Baden since 1820.
- ↑ Information according to the list by Peter Truhart.
- ^ Karl Stiefel : Baden 1648–1952 , Karlsruhe 1979, Volume II, p. 1044
- ↑ In 1808, on Napoleon's orders, the management of military affairs was transferred to General Karl von Geusau, who had come from the Dutch service. See: Bernhard von Poten : Porbeck, Heinrich von . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 26, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1888, pp. 438-441.
- ^ Badische Biographien , Volume I, p. 299
- ↑ Badische Biographien , Volume II, p. 245: A privy councilor Fischer (without giving his first name) is mentioned as president of the Baden Ministry of War. The brief mention is part of the biography of Konrad Rudolf Freiherr von Schäffer. As a civilian, Privy Councilor Fischer was evidently responsible for the purely administrative-organizational part of the War Ministry, while the general command of the army lay with the Crown Prince and, from 1811, Grand Duke Karl