Sebastian Franz von Daxenberger

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Sebastian Franz von Daxenberger

Sebastian Franz Daxenberger , from 1851 Ritter von Daxenberger , (born October 3, 1809 in Munich , † January 22, 1878 ) was a German lawyer and politician. As a poet and writer he became known under the pseudonym Karl Fernau .

Life

Fernau was the son of the wealthy Munich coppersmith Matthäus Daxenberger and his wife Maximiliane, nee. Leuthner. After graduating from high school in 1827 at the (today's) Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich , he studied law in Munich, Göttingen and Berlin. In Munich he became a member of the Corps Isaria in 1828 . During his studies in Göttingen he became a friend of the Bavarian Crown Prince Max , who was also studying there and appointed him his secretary in 1835. In 1830 he was promoted to Dr. iur. PhD. Daxenberger accompanied the crown prince on his courtship trip to Berlin in 1842. In 1842 Daxenberger became a councilor, and in 1847 a senior church and school council. At the end of 1847 he was appointed to the State Ministry of the Royal House and Foreign Affairs. In 1849 he became a member of the Frankfurt National Assembly . He was raised to the personal nobility in 1851. In 1856 he represented Bavaria at the Danube Shipping Commission in Vienna. In 1866 he became the Bavarian State Councilor in the ordinary course.

family

Sebastian Franz von Daxenberger's sister was Regina Daxenberger (1811–1872). Her good looks prompted King Ludwig I (Bavaria) to include her in his beauty gallery.

Awards

Works

  • Dissertatio inauguralis observationes nonnullas ad titulum digestorum de servitutibus praediorum urbanorum continens, Göttingen 1830.
Works under the pseudonym Karl Fernau
  • Sendlinger Battle, 1835 (1844).
  • Mythical Poems, 1835.
  • Munich Hundred and One, 1840, 1841.
  • Ulrich Schwarz, 1841.
  • Beatrice Cenci, 1841.
  • Memories from Italy, 1845.
  • Female portraits, 1845.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Max Leitschuh: The matriculations of the upper classes of the Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich , 4 vol., Munich 1970 1976; Vol. 3, p. 275.
  2. Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 109 , 229.