Levin Adolph von Hake

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Levin Adolph von Hake (* December 21, 1708 in Diedersen ; † April 25, 1771 in Hanover ) was Royal Prime Minister, Privy Councilor, Court Judge and Consistorial President in Kurhannover and heir to the family estates in Emmerthal- Ohr, Diedersen , Buchhagen and Dassel .

Life

He came from the Hake family . His parents were Hermann Ludwig von Hake († September 17, 1739) and his wife Dorothea Sophie von Mengerssen .

He was brought up at home with his brother Christoph Achatz and came to the University of Halle in 1728. There he lived with Privy Councilor Böhmer. He was a talented student and when the famous lawyer Nikolaus Hieronymus Gundling died, Hake immediately gave him a Latin funeral speech, which was later printed. He finished his studies in 1731 and began his Grand Tour through Europe on June 24, 1732 . after his return he was hired on December 13, 1733 as Assessor extraordinarius at the court in Hanover and on February 27, 1734 also passed his exam in Celle. He passed a very good exam and was appointed auditor in the court chancellery on March 5, 1834. On September 10, 1735 he was now court advisor to the law office. All of his jobs were undoped until October 8, 1736, his first salary was now 720 thalers. On June 19, 1739 (introduced on September 8, 1839) he was appointed to the Ober-Appellations-Rat in Celle and on May 4, 1740 to the court judge at the court in Hanover. He received only 1000 thalers a year. on July 5, 1854, he succeeded Johann Peter Tappen as consistorial president, which resulted in 300 thalers more salary. On December 24th, 1754 George II was appointed to the Privy Council. His salary was now 3,635 thalers. The king ordered that after his death - this took place on October 25, 1760 - 10,000 thalers in gold should be paid out to Hake for loyal services. For the money he buys a silver dinner service .

After the Seven Years' War he succeeded Gerlach Adolph von Münchhausen as minister and privy councilor . On December 7, 1770 he became Prime Minister and Gross-Voigt, but died soon afterwards at the age of 63.

An epitaph adorned in relief has survived from him , which is in the chapel of the manor in Ohr, which has been in the family's possession since 1307.

family

On February 26, 1741, he married Renate Sophie von Alvensleben (* August 30, 1720; † June 10, 1798), a daughter of Minister Rudolf Anton von Alvensleben . The couple had several children including:

  • Sophie Eleonore Dorothea (born November 26, 1741 - † February 6, 1793), in the aftermath of a car accident
  • Hedwig Caroline (January 30, 1743 - March 7, 1777)
  • Florine Frederike (January 12, 1744 - October 3, 1813)
  • Christian Ludewig (1745–1818), Minister of State, Oberhofbau- und Gartendirektor in Herrenhausen ∞ Wilhelmine von Wallmoden
  • Adolph Christian (1747-1825), General of the Infantry ∞ Amalie Ernestine von Kipen († April 17, 1825)
  • Ernst Franz Karl (born April 10, 1751; † April 6, 1813), Landdrost von Ratzeburg
  • Anna Louise Charlotte (July 8, 1753 - April 29, 1754), died of peeling
  • Juliane Christian Luise (* July 23, 1757 - † January 26, 1767), died of peeling

literature

  • Continued new genealogical-historical news, 1771, p. 273
  • New Nekrolog der Deutschen 1825, pp. 1479f
  • Carl Eduard Vehse: History of the German courts since the Reformation, Volume 20 1830, p. 277
  • Carl Eduard Vehse: History of the Courts of the House of Braunschweig in Germany and England, parts 1–2, 1853, p. 36
  • Gottfried Achenwall: State wisdom according to its first principles , 1761, digitized
  • Johann Stephan Pütter: autobiography: for the grateful jubilee of his 50 year professor in Göttingen , Volume 2, 1798, p. 541
  • Johann Carl Fürchtegott Schlegel: Church and Reformation History of Northern Germany , 1832, p. 447
  • Carl Wolff: The Art Monuments of the Province of Hanover , Volume 1, Issue 3, 1899, p. 81
  • Georg Dehio: Handbook of German Art Monuments , Volume 6, 1949, p. 312
  • portrait
  • Friedrich August Gustav Adolf von Hake, History of the Baron Family von Hake in Lower Saxony , p.246ff
  • Levin Adolph von Hake . In: Marcelli Janecki , Deutsche Adelsgenossenschaft (Hrsg.): Yearbook of the German nobility . First volume. WT Bruer's Verlag, Berlin 1896, p. 787-792 ( dlib.rsl.ru ).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Christoph von Dreyhaupt, Johann Friedrich Stiebritz: Pagus Neletici Et Nudzici or diplomatic-historical description of the Saal-Creyses, Volume 2, p. 123
  2. Magazine for Hanover Law, Volume 3, 1853, p. 186
  3. ^ Genealogical-historical news, Volume 7, 1740, p. 750
  4. New genealogical-historical news of the most distinguished events that take place at the European courts, Volume 55, 1755, p. 1028
  5. Gottlob Friedrich Krebel, Gottlieb Schumann: M. Gottlieb Schumanns genealogisches Hand-Buch 1758, p. 164
  6. ^ Siegmund Wilhelm Wohlbrück, Hellmut Kretzschmar: Geschichtliche Nachrichten von dem Geschlechte Alvensleben, Volume 3, 1829, p. 319