Ludmilla Kunzmann

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Ludmilla Susanna Kunzmann, née Gottschald (* 1774 in Hirschenstand ; † December 12, 1843 in Sauersack ) was a top Bohemian trader , entrepreneur and partner .

Life

Ludmilla Kunzmann was the daughter of the local judge Jakob Gottschald (1731–1806) and his wife Anna Regina geb. Ullmann (1740-1830). She was born at Hirschenstand at number 26 and was baptized on February 24, 1774 in Neudek . Her godmother was Ludmilla Graser, the wife of Neudek's clerk Andreas Graser. Her father already traded in lace. Her brother Franz Anton Gottschald (1763–1813) founded his own top company in Hirschenstand.

In 1794 she married the lace dealer Joseph Kunzmann from Sauersack, who took over the company of her childless brother in 1812. The partner was the master miller Anton Karl Korb from Breitenbach , who had been married to her sister Theresia Gottschald since 1789. With great activity they managed the company founded in 1780 under the name kk priv. Spitzenfabrik Anton Gottschald & Comp. and expanded it further.

When her husband died in 1826, she took over the management of the company herself with the previous partners Anton Karl Korb and Felix Kerl . At the same time she was co-owner of the kk privileged bobbinet factory in Prague under the company "Breitfeld et A. Gottschald", with defeats in Vienna and Pest . In the schematic for the Kingdom of Bohemia from 1836, she and Anton Karl Korb are also listed as owners of several commercial buildings in Prague's New Town .

She died in Sauersack house number 24 in 1843. After her death in 1843/44, her youngest son Joseph Kunzmann was given the authority to manufacture white and black silks as one of three new partners, then twisted, lace, blond and silk tull embroidery as well as gauze embroidery. Her grandson was the top manufacturer, district chairman, mayor and honorary citizen of Neudek Karl Kunzmann .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Polytechnic Association for the Kingdom of Bavaria: Art and trade sheet of the Polytechnic Association for the Kingdom of Bavaria . Fleischmann, 1825 ( google.de [accessed July 12, 2017]).
  2. JB Schilling: Address book of the trading bodies and factories, the kais. Capital and residence city of Vienna, then several provincial cities for the year 1833 . 1833 ( google.de [accessed on July 11, 2017]).
  3. ^ Address book of the action committees and factories of the kaiserl. royal Capital and residence city Vienna then several provincial cities: for the year ... self-published, 1843 ( google.de [accessed on July 11, 2017]).
  4. Imperial and Royal Schematism for the Kingdom of Böheim for the common year ... Schönfeld, 1834 ( google.de [accessed on July 11, 2017]).
  5. Yearbook for manufacturers and traders, physicists, chemists, technicians (etc.) . Haase, 1844 ( google.de [accessed July 11, 2017]).