Karl von Schrenck

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Karl von Schrenck on Notzing

Karl Freiherr von Schrenck (born August 17, 1806 in Wetterfeld , Upper Palatinate , † September 10, 1884 ibid) was a German administrative lawyer and member of parliament in Bavaria.

Life

As the son of the judge and Minister of Justice Sebastian Freiherr von Schrenck von Notzing , Schrenck attended the (today) Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich . After graduating from high school in 1823, he studied at the University of Landshut , which was relocated to Munich as the Ludwig Maximilians University in 1826 . In 1827 he became active in the Corps Palatia Munich with his brother Eduard .

After the exams he entered the Bavarian civil service. In 1845/46 he was President of the Rhine Palatinate on the left bank of the Rhine . In 1846/47 he succeeded his father as Bavarian Minister of Justice and in 1847 briefly as Minister for Church Affairs . King Ludwig I dismissed him because he had signed a memorandum against Lola Montez . In February 1847 he was the regional president in the Upper Palatinate . It was put up for disposal in April. In 1849/50 he was the district president in Lower Bavaria .

In the German Revolution of 1848/1849 he was elected to the Frankfurt National Assembly, of which he was a member from May 18, 1848 to May 7, 1849 in Café Milani . He spoke out against the election of Friedrich Wilhelm IV. As German Emperor . In 1866 he was the last President of the Bundestag . From 1850 to 1859 he was the Bavarian envoy to the Bundestag (German Confederation) .

From 1859 to 1864 he was Minister of State of the Royal House and Foreign Affairs , Chairman of the Council of Ministers, and Minister of State for Trade and Public Works. Under Ludwig II he was again an envoy to the Bundestag from 1864 to 1866 (at the time of the first wars of unification ). From February 1868 until the Reichstag election in 1871 , he sat in the Reichstag of the North German Confederation and thus in the customs parliament . At the time of the Franco-Prussian War he was ambassador to Austria-Hungary . In 1871 he retired.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Max Leitschuh: The matriculations of the upper classes of the Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich , 4 vol., Munich 1970–1976; Vol. 3, p. 262
  2. Kösener Corps lists 1910, 175 , 243
  3. a b c The members of the Frankfurt National Assembly 1848/1849 (BIORAB-FRANKFURT) ( Memento from December 4, 2013 in the Internet Archive )