Ludwig Wilhelm zu Dohna-Lauck

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Burgrave and Count Ludwig Wilhelm zu Dohna-Lauck (born February 24, 1805 in Pultusk , New East Prussia , † March 10, 1895 in Berlin ) was a Prussian civil servant and politician.

Life

Ludwig Wilhelm zu Dohna -Lauck studied law at the Albertus University in Königsberg from 1823 to 1826 and was a member of the Pappenhemia . In 1828 he became a court trainee and in 1835 higher regional court assessor at the higher regional court in Königsberg . As early as 1831 he became the owner of the manor Wesselshöfen near Heiligenbeil , where he took over the office of landscape council from 1838. Since 1842 District Administrator in Insterburg , he was appointed Landscape Director in 1844 and General Landscape Director of the East Prussian General Landscape Directorate in 1853 . In 1845 he was a member of the Provincial Parliament of the Province of Prussia for the first time . In 1847 he was a member of the United State Parliament . From May 20 to August 7, 1848, he represented the constituency of Heiligenbeil in the Frankfurt National Assembly , where, as a non-attached MP, he usually voted with the casino parliamentary group . In 1849 he became a member of the Prussian House of Representatives , where he was also assigned to the right-wing center.

Dohna-Lauck was married to Fanny Aronson . From this marriage comes the daughter Friedrike Burggräfin and Countess zu Dohna-Lauck (born December 22, 1832 at Gut Wesselshöfen near Heiligenbeil , East Prussia; † April 8, 1910 in Freiburg im Breisgau ), who died on July 28, 1873 in Königsberg i. Pr. Married the future district president Wilhelm von Saltzwedel and became his second wife.

literature

  • Heinrich Best , Wilhelm Weege: Biographical manual of the members of the Frankfurt National Assembly 1848/49. Droste, Düsseldorf 1998, ISBN 3-7700-0919-3 , p. 127.
  • Bernhard-Maria Rosenberg: The East Prussian MPs in Frankfurt 1848/49. Biographical contributions to the history of political life in East Prussia. Grote, Berlin / Cologne 1970, pp. 45–48.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Genealogical handbook of the nobility , Adelige Häuser B Volume XIV (1981), page 535.