Statz Friedrich von Fullen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Statz Friedrich von Fullen

Statz Friedrich von Fullen (born March 6, 1638 in Eystrup ; † July 20, 1703 in Dehlitz ) was a royal Polish and electoral Saxon secret war council .

Life

The von Fullen are a Westphalian family who turned to Lüneburg . Here in Eystrup (also Eißdorff) Statz Friedrich von Fullen was born as the son of Friedrich von Fullen (1592–1663) and Margareta Sophia von Münchhausen.

On June 20, 1660, Statz Friedrich von Fullen married the widow Anna Catharina von Anckelmann, who was seven years older than him and who owned the Markkleeberg manor , and thus settled in Saxony. He entered the Saxon military service, served under four electors ( Johann Georg II. , Johann Georg III. , Johann Georg IV. And August the Strong ) and made it up to the Privy Council of War. He was also an assessor at the Upper Court in Leipzig and Ober-Land-Commissar.

In 1675 he acquired the Störmthal manor . Here in 1693 he had the representative castle built with several large farm buildings and a spacious park. The park, zoo, seven fish ponds and a healing well were considered worthwhile excursion destinations for the citizens of Leipzig. In 1690 Statz Friedrich von Fullen succeeded in detaching Störmthal from the Magdeborn parish . A process had become necessary for this, which was decided in the last and highest instance at the electoral court in Dresden . With the branch churches Dreiskau and Kleinpötzschau , Störmthal was elevated to the status of mother church. In 1691, on his initiative, the first school was set up in Störmthal.

His wife Anna Catharina died in 1682. She had given birth to four children, three of whom died early. The son Statz Friedrich (1666-1704) was in the Saxon army major in the cuirassier regiment of Prince Lubomirski. In 1683 Statz Friedrich von Fullen married Anna Dorothea von Seidlitz, who outlived him by 12 years. With her he had three daughters who died in childhood and adolescence and the son Statz Hilmar von Fullen (* 1691), who took over the Markkleeberg and Störmthal estates and acquired Liebertwolkwitz . He was a royal Polish and electoral Saxon chamberlain and full professor of the upper court in Leipzig. He had a new organ built in the Störmthal church, at the inauguration of which Johann Sebastian Bach performed his cantata Höchsterwünschtes Freudenfest .

Individual evidence

  1. Johann Christian von Hellbach : Adels-Lexikon or handbook on the historical, genealogical and diplomatic, partly also heraldic news from high and low nobility, especially in the German federal states, as well as from the Austrian, Bohemian, Moravian, Prussian, Silesian and Lusatian nobility , first volume, AK, Bernhard Friedrich Voigt, Ilmenau 1825. p. 397
  2. ^ The Anckelmann family in Hamburg and Leipzig (PDF; 974 kB), p. 102
  3. a b c fill. In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Volume 9, Leipzig 1735, column 2313.
  4. ^ Ernst Heinrich Kneschke : New general German Adels Lexicon , Volume 3, Leipzig 1861, p. 408
  5. Evangelical Lutheran Church in Probstheida, Störmthal, Güldengossa and Wachau
  6. Title page of the original text print