Martin Hieronymus Schrötteringk

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Martin Hieronymus Schrötteringk (born March 1, 1768 in Hamburg ; † August 19, 1835 there ) was a German lawyer , councilor and mayor of Hamburg.

Origin and family

Schrötteringk was a son of the Hamburg councilor Martin Wolder Schrötteringk (1728-1803) from his marriage to Anna Christina Sophie Strodt (1733-1814).

Schrötteringk married Amalia Klefeker (1790–1860), daughter of the finance clerk Hieronymus Klefeker (1757–1819), on April 25, 1806 and had nine children with her.

Live and act

After his school education at the learned school of the Johanneum and the Academic Gymnasium in Hamburg, Schrötteringk studied law at the University of Göttingen and graduated on May 2, 1791 with a doctorate in law .

After his studies he worked as a lawyer in Hamburg, became a judge at the Hamburg Lower Court in 1805 and was also President of the Lower Court from 1806 to 1807 . On September 9, 1807 he was elected councilor.

During the French period in Hamburg he administered the praetur until 1811 and then became a judge at the tribunal of the first instance of the department of the Elbe estuaries responsible for civil and criminal law . After the French withdrew, Schrötteringk took over his seat on the council and the praetur again.

From 1821 to 1827 he was, as the successor to Amandus Augustus Abendroth (1767-1842), bailiff in Ritzebüttel . Here in 1826 he had the Ritzebüttel cemetery and a crypt system built for the officials. His successor as bailiff Andreas Christian Wolters (1770-1827) remained the only bailiff who should find his final resting place in this crypt.

Returned to Hamburg in 1827, Schrötteringk became Weddeherr and landlord of the forest villages . In 1830 he became the second landlord of the Geestland , the oldest landlord was Amandus Augustus Abendroth.

On March 12, 1834, Schrötteringk was elected mayor as the successor to the late Johann Arnold Heise (1747-1834). However, he died the following year as a result of a blow from the river . A mayor's penny was minted on his death .

The closing plate of the former family vaulted grave was initially located in the area of ​​the open-air tomb museum at the Ohlsdorf cemetery .

Works

  • Dissertatio Inauguralis Juridica De Obaerato Tam Naturaliter Quam Civiliter Tali, An Et Quatenus Jure Hamburgensi Valide Contrahere Et In Judicio Agere Possit . Henning Martin Grape, Göttingen 1791, OCLC 634652977 .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Eberhard Kellers: Burial grove and crypt. The tombs of the upper class in the old Hamburg cemeteries . In: Workbooks on the preservation of monuments in Hamburg . Issue 17. Christians, Hamburg 1997, OCLC 231706403 , p. 84-91 .
  2. Eberhard KÄNDER: Burial grove and crypt , p. 126 (with inscription: "MH Schrötteringk JU Dr. the Senator Erb Burial to Eternal Days No 385" ). After 1997, the plate was moved from the original berth to another location that can no longer be determined (information from the Ohlsdorfer Friedhof Förderverein November 2016.)