Karl Sieveking (Ministerial Officer)

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Karl Sieveking (born June 8, 1863 in Hamburg , † May 2, 1932 ibid ) was a German lawyer , administrative officer and, most recently, Hamburg envoy and authorized minister in Prussia.

Life

origin

Karl came from a family originally from Westphalia (OWL). He was the son of Hermann Sieveking (born January 26, 1827 in Hamburg; † June 21, 1884 ibid), most recently Senate Secretary and owner of the " Hammer Hof " (in the east of Hamburg) and his wife Mary (actually Henriette Maria Elisabeth), daughter of the businessman Heinrich Johann Merck , (born February 1, 1835 in Hamburg; † October 2, 1907 there). Karl Sieveking was his grandfather.

Career

After attending the private school in Diercks, he attended high school in Wandsbek . After graduating, he studied law at the universities in Leipzig , Geneva and Berlin . He then worked as a trainee lawyer at the Wandsbek District Court and at the Altona District Court before he was accepted into the preparatory service in the Reich in 1886 .

In 1890 Sieveking became Imperial Government Assessor and worked as such at the Mayor's Office in Strasbourg until 1892 and in the Department of the Interior of the Ministry until 1898 . In the same year he became provisional and in 1899 district director in Rappoltsweiler . After the 1903 Privy Councilor and lecturer advice in the governor's office was appointed in Strasbourg, he became the secret 1906 Senior Government appointed.

From 1908 Sieveking was the governor's commissioner at the Federal Council and in 1911 was appointed the Alsace-Lorraine representative in the Federal Council.

Sieveking was Rittmeister d. R. at the Wandsbeker Hussars .

As the successor of those retired on October 1, 1913 Hanseatic Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Prussian court in Tiergartenstraße 17a who retired Karl Peter Klügmann the Senate of chosen Hamburg , Bremen and Lübeck Sieveking.

Until then, the Hanseatic envoy also had Lübeck's voice in the Federal Council . The Senate had decided that from now on Senator Emil Ferdinand Fehling would lead the vote there and the new Hanseatic Ambassador would take his place as the deputy there. Lübeck followed its sister cities. Hamburg appointed Senator Friedrich Sthamer after the death of Mayor Johann Heinrich Burchard and Senator Martin Donandt from Bremen after the death of Mayor Victor Marcus Senator Martin Donandt . In this way, closer ties with the Federal Council were also established for the Lübeck Senate.

When his predecessor died, Sieveking was not only in the Trust edge Eight present in Berlin, but also in the funeral ceremony in the lübeckischen Jakobikirche on June 22 1915th

When the three Hanseatic cities gave up the representation of their interests through a joint "Hanseatic envoy" after the First World War and the cities appointed a separate representative for this, Sieveking led the office as envoy of the Hanseatic city of Hamburg until he retired in 1920 and Senator Justus Strandes became his successor there.

Works

  • The German administration in Alsace , Verlag Georg Stilke , Preussische Jahrbücher, Volume 190, Berlin 1922.

Awards

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Senator Dr. Fehling, Lübeck's representative to the Federal Council. ; In: Vaterstadtische Blätter ; Born 1912/13, No. 47, edition of August 14, 1913, pp. 201-202.
  2. ^ Lübeck advertisements. 165th volume, Abend-Blatt No. 39, January 22, 1915.
  3. Hanseatic envoy a. D. Dr. Klügmann †. In: Father-city sheets. Born 1914/15, No. 17, January 24, 1915, pp. 65-66.