Max von Prollius

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Max Ludwig Proculus von Prollius (born July 31, 1826 in West Bruges , † February 15, 1889 in Berlin ) was a German landowner, administrative lawyer , state minister and envoy.

Life

Max von Prollius was the son of the Privy Councilor Ludwig von Prollius auf Stubbendorf (near Ticino) and his wife Melusine, née. from Müller from Westenbrugge. The Prollius family was raised to the nobility by Emperor Franz II in 1794 and had owned Stubbendorf since 1802.

From 1844 Max von Prollius studied law at the University of Göttingen , where he became a member of the Corps Hannovera , then in 1845 at the University of Heidelberg , where he joined the Corps Vandalia , and from 1847 at the University of Rostock .

On April 19, 1852, he joined the judicial service of Mecklenburg-Schwerin as an interim assistant worker cum voto consultativo ( with an advisory vote ) . On July 19, 1853 he was delegated to the chancellery and in 1854 to the law office in Güstrow. On January 21, 1856 he was appointed to the Justice Council at the Justice Chancellery in Schwerin. In 1864 he inherited the Stubbendorf family estate from his father. In 1867 he lived with his family in Schwerin . As the Grand Ducal Mecklenburg-Schwerin secret council, he was appointed extraordinary envoy and plenipotentiary minister at the Royal Prussian Court in Berlin on June 14, 1875 and at the same time first plenipotentiary for both Mecklenburg's Federal Council in Berlin.

From his marriage to Julie von Bülow (⚭ 1856 in Schwerin), who came from Ludwigslust , he had five sons, Jasper, Adolf, Hellmuth, Ludwig and Georg, as well as three daughters. His second son Adolf von Prollius (1861–1942) also became a diplomat and was envoy of the German Empire in Bangkok and Venezuela (1911–1920) from 1906–1910. The third son Hellmuth von Prollius (1862–1921) took over the estate from 1900 and was head of the monastery in Dobbertin from 1917–1919 .

literature

  • Heinrich F. Curschmann: Blue Book of the Corps Hannovera to Göttingen. Volume 1: From 1809-1899. Göttinger Hannoveraner Association, Göttingen 2002, p. 152, no. 449.
  • The members of Vandalia zu Heidelberg as of September 29, 1935. [Berlin 1936].
  • Antje Krause, Andreas Wagner: Interesting and worth knowing about the history of Stubbendorf. Norddeutsche Hochschul-Schriften-Verlag, Rostock 1996, ISBN 3-929544-34-2 .
  • Grete Grewolls: Who was who in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The dictionary of persons . Hinstorff Verlag, Rostock 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301-6 , p. 7821 .

Individual evidence

  1. Gustav von Lehsten: The nobility of Mecklenburg since the state constitutional hereditary comparison (1755). JG Tiedemann, Rostock 1864, p. 205.
  2. See the entry of Max von Prollius' matriculation in the Rostock matriculation portal
  3. ^ August Johann Carl zur Nedden: Contributions to the history of the Grand Ducal Justice Chancellery in Schwerin. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Antiquity 45 (1880), pp. 177–262 ( full text ), here p. 249
  4. ^ Government Gazette for Mecklenburg-Schwerin. No. 26, 1864, ZDB -ID 704327-2 , p. 159.
  5. s: Announcement concerning the appointment of an authorized representative to the Federal Council. 19 September 1875 ; s: Announcement regarding the appointment of the authorized representatives to the Federal Council .
  6. Also Jaspar (1859–1933), administrative officer and most recently honorary member of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology and member of the Deed Book Commission, cf. Grete Grewolls: Who was who in Mecklenburg and Western Pomerania. The dictionary of persons . Hinstorff Verlag, Rostock 2011, ISBN 978-3-356-01301-6 , p. 7820 .
  7. Tobias C. Bringmann : Handbuch der Diplomatie 1815-1963. Foreign heads of mission in Germany and German heads of mission abroad from Metternich to Adenauer. Saur, Munich 2001, ISBN 3-598-11431-1 , p. 92; Date of death there according to Kösener corps lists under Bremensia .