Leopold von Knobloch

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Leopold von Knobloch (born May 27, 1887 in Sudnicken , † November 29, 1968 in Hanover ) was a German administrative lawyer.

origin

His grandfather was the district administrator Arthur von Knobloch (* March 5, 1825, † February 15, 1901). His parents were the lieutenant Paul Arthur Harry von Knobloch and his wife Beatrice Dahse (born August 29, 1863), a daughter of the French consul Charles Dahse and Kate Fowler .

Life

Leopold von Knobloch studied law at the Georg-August University in Göttingen . In 1906 he became a member of the Corps Saxonia Göttingen . After completing his studies and legal clerkship, he passed the government assessor exam in 1913. He began his career in the Prussian civil service at the district office in Heydekrug. In autumn 1914 he became a flag junior in the cuirassier regiment No. 3, was deployed on the Eastern Front and was released from military service in October 1914 for health reasons. He then became a government assessor with the district administrators in Königsberg and Fischhausen and in 1915 with the government in Gumbinnen . In 1918 he was promoted to government councilor at the senior council in Königsberg.

In 1925 von Knobloch to District Administrator of the district Stallupönen appointed. In May 1934 he was put into temporary retirement by the National Socialist rulers. In the following July he was transferred to the government in Koenigsberg . Later he joined the Olsztyn government . During the Second World War in 1940 he was a member of the administrative staff of the French military commander . After the end of the war he came to Hanover via Rügen and Greifswald, where he died in 1968. He was married to Doris von Schleussner-Teistimmen.

The expellees district community Stallupönen-Ebenrode honored him with the appointment as district elder.

literature

  • 557. † von Knobloch, Leopold . In: Hasso von Etzdorf , Wolfgang von der Groeben , Erik von Knorre: Directory of the members of the Corps Saxonia zu Göttingen and the Landsmannschaft Saxonia (1840–1844) as of February 13, 1972 , p. 103.
  • Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of baronial houses, 1892, p.438

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kösener corps lists 1910, 85/580
  2. District of Ebenrode administrative history and district administrators on the website territorial.de (Rolf Jehke)