Leopold Conradi

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The former Palais Conradi in the Stuttgarter Schloßstraße, garden side with greenhouses

Johann Nepomuk Leopold Friedrich Conradi (born November 13, 1776 in Obergimpern , † February 14, 1839 in Stuttgart ) was a citizen of Württemberg and a merchant . He was managing director of the trading house Carl Feuerlein. The company's headquarters were in the Palais Conradi on Schloßstraße in Stuttgart.

Life and family

The brother-in-law Carl Willibald Feuerlein

Leopold Conradi is a son of the former court chamber renovator Conradi in Bretten .

In 1798, Leopold Conradi took over the management of the first indigo store in the south-west, in the Duchy of Württemberg , from his brother-in-law Carl Willibald Feuerlein (1770–1808), the founder of the trading house Carl Feuerlein in Stuttgart, who died early .

On November 19, 1804, Leopold Conradi married Wilhelmine Auguste Luise Feuerlein (born May 26, 1780 in Stuttgart; † July 6, 1861 in Stuttgart).

Relatives of the wife

The wife's mother: Auguste Feuerlein

Luise Feuerlein is a daughter of the government councilor Carl Friedrich Feuerlein (born March 5, 1730 in Mömpelgard ; † March 15, 1808 in Stuttgart) and his wife Auguste Elisabeth Franziska Johanna Feuerlein, née Fischer (born December 18, 1747 in Stuttgart; † 11. February 1823 in Stuttgart).

Luise's mother Auguste Feuerlein was probably an illegitimate daughter of Duke Carl Eugen von Württemberg and a maternal granddaughter of Sigmund Castenbauer (1677–1763), court musician and “ instrument administrator” of the Württemberg court orchestra in Stuttgart , and his wife Maria Barbara Scheiner (1683–1757) )

Among Luise Conradi's siblings is the former Lord Mayor of Stuttgart Willibald Feuerlein . Through her sisters Sophie, Emilie and Eleonore, Luise is related by marriage to Christian Gottfried Elben , the founder and publisher of Swabian Mercury , and Ferdinand von Pistorius , member of the state parliament .

children

The first building of the Stuttgart train station , built in 1847, with arcades at the entrance in Schloßstraße, around 1850. On the far left the former Palais Conradi.

In the marriage of Leopold and Luise Conradi, twelve children were born:

  • 1. Luise Auguste Leopoldine (born August 25, 1805 in Stuttgart; † January 3, 1890 ibid) ∞ Emil Elben
  • 2. Auguste Wilhelmine (born November 8, 1806 in Stuttgart; † September 15, 1858 ibid) ∞ Georg Ludwig Hartmann, businessman in Heidenheim and Stuttgart
  • 3. Marie Christiane Dorothea (born January 4, 1808 in Stuttgart; † June 15, 1839 in Grüntal ) ∞ Christian Immanuel Friedrich Klemm, pastor in Grüntal and Eberdingen
  • 5. Leopold Friedrich Carl Albert (* May 24, 1810 in Stuttgart; † April 3, 1861 in Aichach ) ∞ Friederike Gaiser, daughter of the school teacher Gaiser from Dettingen
  • 7. Emilie (born September 19, 1812 in Stuttgart, † January 27, 1880 in Nagold ) ∞ Heinrich Zeller, doctorate pharmacist and pharmacist in Nagold
  • 9. Gustav Adolf (born May 28, 1815 in Stuttgart; † April 26, 1871 ibid) ∞ Marie Anna Caroline Grieser, daughter of Professor Grieser from Munich
  • 10. Elise Auguste Emilie (* July 23, 1816 in Stuttgart, † November 22, 1871 in Stuttgart) ∞ Johannes Mährlen , historian and economist
  • 11. Sophie Charlotte (* December 7, 1817 in Stuttgart, † March 22, 1882 in Gera ) ∞ Alfred Weber, businessman and secret councilor in Gera
  • 12. Wilhelm August Leopold (born November 5, 1820 in Stuttgart; † October 11, 1860 ibid) ∞ Malvine Luise Auguste Wächter, daughter of the Privy Council and Professor Karl Georg von Wächter

Individual evidence

  1. Family data of the Martinszeller Family Foundation. ( Memento of the original from January 11, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.martinszeller-verband.de
  2. Peter Huber: Johannes Mährlen visionary in times of upheaval. Hohenheim Verlag, Stuttgart / Leipzig 2008, ISBN 978-3-89850-161-3 , p. 74, section "At the beginning of the Feuerlein family there are indigo and chocolate"
  3. Peter Huber: Visionary in times of upheaval. Johannes Mährlen, economist, social reformer and friend of Mörikes. Genealogy section, graphical representation. 1st edition. Hohenheim, Stuttgart / Leipzig 2007, ISBN 978-3-89850-161-3 . genealogy
  4. The coat of arms was awarded on June 15, 1551 to the ancestor Hans Feyerlein, mayor of Roth. Text of the coat of arms letter from Emperor Charles V : “Coat of arms letter from Emperor Charles V majesty. Hans Feyerlein granted. for the willing service he has done, to do himself and the rich man subserviently built and willing to do and should. We insist and want that now for the named Hanns Feyerlein, his marital heirs and the same heirs the prescribed coat of arms and cleinot have, lead and should use and enjoy theirs in all and all honest and honest things and done to Schimpff and Ernst, to Streyten and Kempffen, Insiegel, Pettschafften, Cleinoten and otherwise in all corners and places according to Irish emergency, will and willingly. "

literature

Web links