Samuel Christoph von Tetzloff

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Samuel Christoph von Tetzloff (born March 12, 1738 in Gingst ; † 1810 ) was a councilor in Swedish Pomerania .

Life

Samuel Christoph Tetzloff was the son of Johann Jacob Tetzloff (1707–1752), pastor and provost at the St. Jacob Church in Gingst on Rügen , and Barbara Catharina Buschmann. In 1761 he became chancellery and in the same year protocol secretary to the Swedish government in Stralsund . In 1773 he was expedition secretary and later became liege secretary .

In 1788 he became a councilor in the Swedish Pomeranian government. In 1794 he took part in the visit to the University of Greifswald . In 1795 he chaired a commission to investigate the unrest that broke out in Greifswald , to which the lawyers Georg Christian Sonnenschmidt and Emanuel Friedrich Hagemeister also belonged.

In 1797 he was raised to the Swedish nobility. The introduction took place in 1798 with the number 2158.

During the occupation of Swedish Pomerania by French troops at the end of 1807, von Tetzloff and his son, the secretary Gustav Bernhard Christian, the district president Nikolaus Philipp von Thun and the government councilor Heinrich Christian Friedrich von Pachelbel-Gehag were arrested, brought to France and taken to Fort de Joux held. Allegedly, her behavior towards the French authorities and the forbidden correspondence to Sweden were the reasons for the arrest.

family

Samuel Christoph Tetzloff was married to Dorothea Charlotta Kempe, a daughter of the wholesaler Johann Friedrich Kempe and Sophia Kruse. The two had two daughters and two sons. The older son Gustav Bernhard Christian was secretary to the Swedish government in Stralsund.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Bernhard Schlegel: Slägten Kempe. Stockholm 1876, p. 3 ( digitized version )
  2. ^ Otto Francke: From Stralsunds French times: A contribution to the history of this city. Siegmund Bremer, Stralsund 1870, p. 48 ( Google books ).