Ludwig Röder of Diersburg

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Ludwig Röder of Diersburg

Baron Ludwig Röder von Diersburg (born November 8, 1822 , † August 19, 1881 ) was a German administrative lawyer in Hesse.

Life

He came from the second branch of the younger branch of the older main line of the Roeder von Diersburg dynasty founded in Ortenau and was the son of the Grand Ducal Hessian Colonel Ludwig Philipp Freiherr Roeder zu Diersburg and his wife Elisabeth nee. Seitz. He was married to a daughter of the Giessen tobacco manufacturer Ferdinand Gail.

Röder von Diersburg studied law from 1841 at the Justus Liebig University in Giessen , where he became a member of the Corps Starkenburgia . After serving in the military, he embarked on an administrative career. From 1859 to 1866 he was district council (district) of today in Marburg risen circle Biedenkopf in the Grand Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt belonging to the province of Upper Hesse .

After the German War , in which Hessen-Darmstadt fought on Austria's side , the Grand Duchy had to cede the Biedenkopf district to Prussia , among other things, in accordance with the peace treaty of 1866 . As a grand ducal Hessian official no longer opportune here, Röder von Diersburg initially got the position of the district council in the district of Schotten . In 1871 he succeeded Julius Rinck von Starcks as provincial director of the province of Upper Hesse with its administrative headquarters in Gießen . In the same capacity he moved to Rheinhessen (province) in 1877 with the administrative seat in Mainz ; he held this position until his death.

literature

  • Ludwig Hauff: The history of the wars of 1866. Munich 1867
  • Karl Huth: Administrative history of the district Biedenkopf. Biedenkopf, district committee of the district 1957.
  • Ernst Heinrich Kneschke (ed.): New general German nobility lexicon. Leipzig 1867
  • Court and State Handbook of the Grand Duchy of Hesse 1869 . Darmstadt 1869.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Kneschke, Ernst Heinrich (Ed.): New general German nobility Lexicon. 7th volume. Leipzig 1867, p. 545
  2. ^ Kösener corps lists 1910, 57 , 105.
  3. Court and State Handbook of the Grand Duchy of Hesse 1869. Darmstadt 1869, p. 275