Ludwig von Wartensleben

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Ludwig Hermann Alexander Graf von Wartensleben (* July 7, 1831 in Berlin ; † September 1, 1926 in Rogäsen ) was a Royal Prussian Real Privy Councilor and major as well as a legal knight and honorary commander of the Order of St. John .

Life

Rogäsen manor around 1860,
Alexander Duncker collection

He comes from the Magdeburg noble family Graf von Wartensleben and was the son of the royal Prussian chamberlain and lieutenant general Gustav Graf von Wartensleben (1796–1886) and Elisabeth von Goldbeck and Reinhard (1803–1869). His older brother was the general of the cavalry Hermann Ludwig von Wartensleben .

Between 1872 and 1901 von Wartensleben was district administrator in the Jerichow II district . He was also chairman of the provincial parliament of the province of Saxony as well as the president of the Saxon provincial synod and assessor in the general synodal association. Between 1901 and 1913 von Wartensleben was a member of the Prussian House of Representatives for the German Conservative Party and since 1914 a member of the Prussian mansion .

He was married since 1856 to Mathilde Countess von Blumenthal (1837-1891), the daughter of the Prussian Lieutenant General Albert von Blumenthal (1796-1860). He was Fideikommissherr and was the owner of the Rogäsen manor with the Rogäsen manor house as a manor and about 650 hectares of land in the Fiener Bruch , on the Karower Platte and in Gränert .

Trivia

In 1905 Ludwig Graf von Wartensleben left the Hohenzollernstein , a memorial in honor of the arrival of the first Brandenburg prince from the House of Hohenzollern in 1412, on the estate on the old Heerstraße Brandenburg – Magdeburg at about the level of the historical border between the Archbishopric of Magdeburg and the Mark Brandenburg erect.

Honors

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Mann, Bernhard (edit.): Biographical manual for the Prussian House of Representatives. 1867-1918 . Collaboration with Martin Doerry , Cornelia Rauh and Thomas Kühne . Düsseldorf: Droste Verlag, 1988, p. 403 (handbooks on the history of parliamentarism and political parties: vol. 3)

literature

Web links