Rudolf Karl von Freymann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rudolf Karl Wilhelm von Freymann adH Nursie (born April 14, 1860 in Narva , † July 11, 1934 in Riga ) was a Baltic lawyer , state politician and Imperial Russian stable master .

Life

From 1871 Rudolf Karl attended the "Classical High School" in Warsaw and in 1879 passed his school leaving examination. He studied at the Imperial University of Dorpat ( Imperatorskij Derptskij Universitet ) Law and graduated in 1884 with the legal state exam from, at that time he was a member of the Student Union Corporation Livonia . He did his military service with the mounted guards artillery in Saint Petersburg . On June 18, 1884 he was employed as an assistant in the 4th Department of the Senate and also worked in the Department of Codification at the State Council . This was followed by the appointment of Senate Secretary and in 1888 a position in the Ministry of Justice . Here he took on several functions, including being a table manager , editor and clerk . On January 19, 1902, he was appointed to the czar's petition office as assistant to the manager of the office, and in 1910 he took over the management of this office himself . He was appointed Senator of the Senate Department of Justice on January 1, 1914. He was a volunteer assessor of the St. Petersburg Evangelical Lutheran Consistory and in 1910 published the Evangelical Lutheran Church Law and explanations. On May 6, 1911 he was given the title of stable master.

After the October Revolution of 1917 he was a railroad worker, then one after the other for the Swedish mission, the German Commission for the Transport of Prisoners of War, the German Consulate General in Saint Petersburg, head of the Baltic Committee, member of the board of directors and secretary of the Consumers' Association of the Balts living in Saint Petersburg ( Petrobaltik), official of the Reich control (workers and farmers inspection), drawing teacher and draftsman at a museum in Detskoye (formerly Tsarskoye) Selo . He was then appointed from 1922 to 1926 as an advisor to the Latvian legation in Moscow . In 1926 he returned to Riga and worked as a lawyer in a law firm , at the same time he was legal advisor to the Italian legation. He died on July 11, 1934 in Riga and was buried in the family grave in Wenden .

Works

  • Svod Sakonow (Russian Imperial Code) 1887 edition, translated by Rudolf von Freymann. Reval 1901.
  • Editor of the Law for the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Russia (Reval 1910) [5]
  • The petition office SM of the Emperor of Russia, in: Baltic Monthly 1929

Awards

Memberships

  • Baltic Corporation Livonia Dorpat
  • Imperial Musical Society (Main Directorate)
  • Saint Petersburg Sportsmen Association (President)
  • Saint Petersburg Riding Club (board member)
  • Central Committee of the Association of October 17th (representative of the German group of the Association)

Origin and family

Rudolf Karl Wilhelm von Freymann came from the Baltic-Swedish noble family von Freymann (II. Line, House Nursie ). He was the son of Otto Woldemar Eduard von Freymann (1828–1871) and his wife Pauline Sophie Katharina von Stackelberg . His brother was the Russian major general Karl von Freymann (1861–1920). In his first marriage, Rudolf Karl was married to Anna Eleonore Lanting (1854–1919) from 1888. In 1924 he married Countess Helene Scheremetzen (nee Baroness Meyendorff ). This marriage was divorced in Moscow in 1925 . The daughters Elisabeth (Lita) Pauline (born October 25, 1888 in St. Petersburg), Nina (born June 6, 1891 in St. Petersburg) and Irene (born July 27, 1896 in Papula near Vyborg ) grew out of the first marriage .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Corporatioon "Livonia" Portrait of Rudolf v. Freymann [1]
  2. The Russian law firms were subdivided into "tables" (business areas), depending on the type of business transactions and the number of clerks. The "table head" was the head of a "table". (StGB 1845 § 435.) In: Baltic Legal Dictionary [2]
  3. ^ The petition chancellery SM of the Emperor of Russia, by Rudolf von Freymann. In: Baltic Monthly , Volume 60, 1929, page 516 ff [3]
  4. ^ Law for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Russia of December 28, 1832. Ed. By Rudolf von Freymann. Reval 1901. Reprint in: Source booklets for East German and East European church history Booklet 1/2: Church regulations of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. Church in Russia. Edited by Robert Stupperich. Ulm 1959.
  5. Baltic Monthly 1929, Vol. 60, H. 1–7 / 8–12 [4]