Ludwig Wilhelm Adolf von Weise

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Ludwig Wilhelm Adolf von Weise , also Ludwig Wilhelm Adolph von Weise  (born March 25, 1753 in Ebeleben , † June 30, 1820 in Sondershausen ) was German Real Privy Councilor , Chancellor and Schwarzburgisch-Sondershausen Chamber President.

Life

Adolf von Weise received his school education from private teachers in Sondershausen. He then moved to the University of Göttingen to study .

Returned to Sondershausen, he was in 1775 by Prince Christian Günther III. taken into the Schwarzburg-Sondershaus service and was able to familiarize himself with all branches of administration.

Around 1810 he was appointed the Real Privy Councilor and Chief of the Privy Council in Sondershausen . He later also became chancellor . In 1814/1815 he was the authorized representative for Schwarzburg-Sondershausen at the Congress of Vienna . As part of his activities, he conducted preparatory talks for the 58th contract with Günter von Berg and later also for the Vienna Final Act.

He was married, two of his daughters were married to August Blumröder and his son Karl Friedrich Wilhelm von Weise later became President of the Chamber; he died in 1820.

Contract signatures (selection)

  • November 24, 1813: Treaty of Frankfurt (Prussia / Schwarzburg Principalities)
  • June 8, 1815: German Federal Act
  • June 1, 1816: 58th contract between Oldenburg , Anhalt and Schwarzburg on the leadership of the 15th vote in the German Association
  • June 15, 1816: State Treaty between Prussia and Schwarzburg-Sondershausen
  • 1833: various agreements on the customs union

Award

Trivia

It is reported that von Weise had lunch with Johann Wolfgang von Goethe several times between 1811 and 1812 .

literature

  • Research on Brandenburg and Prussian history , Volume 6, Duncker and Humblot, 1893, p. 142
  • Deutsche Revue , Volume 22, Parts 3–4, C. Habel., 1897, p. 247
  • Rudolf Friedrich Ludloff : History of the Ludolf-Ludloff Family , Roßteutscher, 1910, p. 106
  • Organization and internal structure of the German Confederation 1815–1819 , Walter de Gruyter, 2016, p. 222

Individual evidence

  1. Karin Schneider, Eva Maria Werner, Brigitte Mazohl: Europe in Vienna: Who is Who at the Vienna Congress 1814/15 . Böhlau Verlag Wien, 2015, ISBN 978-3-205-79488-2 ( google.de [accessed December 27, 2017]).
  2. ^ Martin Sellmann: Günther Heinrich von Berg 1765-1843 .: A Wuerttemberg civil servant and statesman in the service of the states of Lower Saxony at the time of the Enlightenment and Restoration. Holzberg, 1982, ISBN 978-3-87358-158-6 ( google.de [accessed December 27, 2017]).
  3. General repertory of the latest domestic and foreign literature: 1820, 3 . Cnobloch, 1820 ( google.de [accessed December 27, 2017]).
  4. ^ Michael Kotulla: German Constitutional Law 1806 - 1918: A collection of documents and introductions . Springer-Verlag, 2006, ISBN 978-3-540-29289-0 ( google.de [accessed December 27, 2017]).
  5. ^ Corpus Juris Publici Germanici Academicum, ed. by Dr. Adolph Michaelis (Selected documents and sources of public law of the German Confederation and the German Federal States) . Laupp, 1825 ( google.de [accessed December 27, 2017]).
  6. Alexander Miruss: Diplomatic archive for the German federal states: for the most part according to official sources . Renger'sche Buchhandlung, 1846 ( google.de [accessed December 27, 2017]).
  7. Ducal Saxony-Coburg Government and Intelligence Gazette: 1833 . Dietz, 1833 ( google.de [accessed December 27, 2017]).
  8. ^ New Nekrolog der Deutschen, 29th year 1851, 1st part (Nekrolog des Sohnes) . S. 200. Voigt, 1853 ( google.de [accessed December 24, 2018]).
  9. ^ Goethe encounters and conversations 1811-1812 . tape 8 . Walter de Gruyter, 2013, ISBN 3-11-026833-7 ( google.de [accessed December 27, 2017]).