Ludwig Rose

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Ludwig Rose (born April 28, 1819 in Grabow , † November 15, 1886 in Döhlau, Osterode district ; full name: Karl Ludwig Johann Rose ) was the owner of the manor and a member of the German Reichstag .

Life

Ludwig Rose came from an old family of distillers and brewers in the small town of Grabow in western Mecklenburg. He was born as the youngest or one of the youngest children of the brewer, distiller and innkeeper Christian Rose (* 1771) and his wife Dorothea Margaretha, b. Bruges (* 1781), born. At the time of his birth, Rose had nine older siblings. An older brother, Christian Rose (1803–1877), was later a member of the Mecklenburg constituent assembly of representatives from 1848/49.

Ludwig Rose attended the Friedrich-Franz-Gymnasium (Parchim) , but left it without a high school diploma. On January 5, 1842 , at the age of 22, he enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich for the subject of architecture. He lived in Schwerin for a long time . From 1860 he was a farmer in East Prussia , where he bought goods in Döhlau in the Osterode district and was also a member of the district council.

Between April 1883, when he won the mandate in a substitute election on April 6, 1883 because of the departure of Leo Becker , and his death he was a member of the German Reichstag for the Reichstag electoral district of Königsberg 8 and the German Conservative Party .

Individual evidence

  1. To the family - see: BRAUER, Felix: Ein Mecklenburgisches Brauergeschlecht . In: Mecklenburgische Monatshefte. Schwerin Vol. 8 (1932), 2, pp. 87-90. ( Digitized ; PDF; 1.1 MB).
  2. 00028 Ludwig Rose, matriculation book 1841–1884 in the matriculation database of the Academy of Fine Arts Munich. http://matrikel.adbk.de/05older/mb_1841-1884/jahr_1842/matrikel-00028 (accessed on 04/12/14)
  3. ^ Fritz Specht, Paul Schwabe: The Reichstag elections from 1867 to 1903. Statistics of the Reichstag elections together with the programs of the parties and a list of the elected representatives. 2nd Edition. Carl Heymann Verlag, Berlin 1904, p. 6.

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