Max von Gietl

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Max von Gietl (born July 1, 1843 in Munich , † December 16, 1920 in Bayerisch Gmain ) was a German lawyer and Bavarian civil servant.

Life

Max von Gietl was the son of the long-time personal physician of the Bavarian Crown Prince and then King Maximilian II and his sons, Prince Ludwig and Otto , Franz Xaver von Gietl , and his wife Anna Maria, née Pasch. The painter Josua von Gietl was his brother. The sister Marianne (* 1846) married the sculptor Ferdinand Freiherr von Miller in 1873 .

Max von Gietl grew up in Munich. In 1861 he passed the Abitur examination at Munich's Maximiliansgymnasium , among others with Philipp Brunner , the later lawyer Hermann Dietz (1842–1920) and Georg Friedrich Knapp . He then studied law at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . From 1868 - after the state bankruptcy - he completed an internship at the Bavarian Foreign Ministry and at the Royal Bavarian Embassy in Florence, and in 1872 he worked as a ministerial secretary in the Foreign Ministry. In 1876 he was appointed government assessor. In 1879 he was promoted to Legation Councilor, in 1883 to Secret Legation Councilor II. Class, in 1889 to Ministerial Councilor and, from 1903, at the same time as Secretary General in the Foreign Ministry. In 1907 he received the title and rank of a Privy Councilor. With effect from January 1, 1910, he retired.

In 1873 he married Albertine Roesgen, the daughter of the Ministerialrat. The marriage had five children, Hedwig (* 1874; craftswoman), Otto (* 1878; Royal Bavarian Rittmeister), Ida (1881–1964; married to Hugo von Maffei ), Fritz (* 1883) and Berta (* 1887).

literature

  • Hermann Degener (Ed.): Who is it ?, 4th edition, Leipzig 1909.
  • Walter Schärl: The composition of the Bavarian civil service from 1806-1918 (Munich historical studies, department Bavarian history 1). Lassleben, Kallmünz 1955.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ * In Munich on February 5, 1814; † March 28, 1892 ibid., Daughter of the businessman Johann Josef Pasch and Elisabeth, née Anstretter
  2. ^ Annual report on the K. Maximilians-Gymnasium in Munich for the school year 1860/61