Karl von Steinaecker (District Administrator)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Karl Freiherr von Steinaecker , also von Steinäcker , (born June 12, 1778 in Klein Zarnow , † June 24, 1854 in Stolp ) was the royal Prussian chamberlain and district administrator of the Greifenhagen district .

Life

He came from the Rosenfelde line of the noble von Steinaecker family . His father Franz von Steinaecker (1780–1822) was the royal Prussian district administrator in the Pomeranian district of Greifenhagen and had bought the Rosenfelde manor located in this district in 1779; he also owned the Nipperwiese and Klein Zarnow estate. Karl von Steinaecker had two younger brothers who both embarked on an officer career.

Karl von Steinaecker rose to lieutenant colonel in the Prussian army and also became royal chamberlain . He inherited Rosenfelde and Nipperwiese and succeeded his father as District Administrator of the Greifenhagen district. From 1837 to 1845 he was elected by the knighthood of the district of Greifenhagen to the provincial parliament of the province of Pomerania (6th to 9th provincial parliament). He was also a member of the First United Diet of the Province of Pomerania in 1847 .

From April 1808 he was married to Karolina von Schöning (1782-1852), who came from the Pomeranian noble family von Schöning . The son of the same name, Karl von Steinaecker (1809-1893), who became a member of the Prussian manor house, emerged from the marriage . The daughter Veronika (* June 18, 1816, † December 28, 1873) married the politician Alexander von Buch in 1844 .

See also

literature

  • Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Freiherrliche Häuser for the year 1919. Justus Perthes, Gotha 1918, p. 940 ( online ).
  • Gothaisches genealogical paperback of baronial houses, 1879, p.819

Footnotes

  1. ^ Theodor Wengler: The Pomeranian Provincial Association. Directory of the members of the provincial assembly. Publications of the Historical Commission for Pomerania, Series V, Volume 44.Böhlau Verlag, Cologne / Weimar / Vienna 2008, ISBN 978-3-412-20109-8 , p. 22 ff.