Maximilian Reinhold Karl von Güldenstubbe

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Maximilian Reinhold Karl von Güldenstubbe (born October 20, 1850 in Arensburg , † December 13, 1931 in Dorpat ) was a district court assessor and poet in Arensburg on the island of Ösel .

Life

Maximilian Reinhold Karl attended grammar school in Arensburg and studied law at the University of Dorpat from 1869 to 1873 . He then became archivist at the Estonian Control Court in Dorpat, which was responsible for state control and auditing. From 1875 to 1883 he was an assessor at the regional court in Dorpat and then a notary at the regulatory court. After adopting the Russian court system, he was penniless and received no salary. He turned to literature and wrote poems and stories .

family

Family coat of arms of the von Güldenstubbe (1882)

The Baltic-Swedish aristocratic family Güldenstubbe was based on the Livonian island of Ösel. His father was the deputy country marshal , district administrator and president of the consistory and head of the church, Karl Gustav von Güldenstubbe (1798-1867), who was married to Johann Appolonie, born Pilar von Pilchau (1820-1880). Maximilian von Güldenstubbe married Lucie Elisabeth von Bock (* 1862) in 1892, their descendants were:

  • Whale run Anna Charlotte von Güldenstubbe (* 1893)
  • Karl Gustav von Güldenstubbe (1894–1945), justice of the peace , married to Irmgard Alwine Kroll (* 1895)
  • Inga Hortensia von Güldenstubbe (* 1896)
  • Ada Hilda Mathilde von Güldenstubbe (* 1897)
  • Bertha Eleonore von Güldenstubbe (* 1899)
  • Sigrid Klara Marie von Güldenstubbe (* 1902)
  • Ernst Gustav von Güldenstubbe (* 1904) Dipl.-Ing. in Berlin , married to Gertrud Viktoria Wilhelmine Stein (* 1904)
  • Wilhelm Maximilian von Güldenstubbe (* 1906), paper manufacturer, Annemarie von Brevern (* 1905)

Works

In the Lexicon of German-Language Literature of the Baltic States and St. Petersburg: The following works are listed from the Middle Ages to the present :

  • Hubert. A story from the time of the Reformation, Leipzig, 1905
  • Heaven and Earth. Seven poems, Leipzig, 1907
  • The struggle for happiness. In: Grotthuss 1894/95, p. 206 / p. 243

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The Ordnungsgericht was the first instance in Livonia in an administrative district in police matters, Christian Heinrich Nielsen, Der Proceß-Form in Liefland, Verlag Gauger, 1807, original from Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, digitized July 20, 2010 [1] , accessed on October 1 2017
  2. Carola L. Gottzmann, Petra Hörner, Lexicon of German-Language Literature of the Baltic States and St. Petersburg : From the Middle Ages to the Present [2]