Waldemar von Wussow

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Waldemar Philip Paul Alexander von Wussow (born September 29, 1865 in Frankfurt (Oder) , † July 12, 1938 in Darmstadt ) was a German administrative lawyer and Minister of State of Saxony-Altenburg .

Life

Wussow was a son of the Prussian Lieutenant General Botho von Wussow and his wife Anna von Bernuth (1840-1917). He studied law at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin , the University of Lausanne and the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg . After he had passed his legal traineeship in Berlin in 1887, he became active in the Corps Vandalia Heidelberg . In 1893 he became a government trainee in Wiesbaden and in 1894 a government assessor in Essen. Wussow came to Detmold in 1896 as a councilor at the Princely Lippe Rent Chamber . In 1902 he became district administrator in Dillenburg . In 1911 he came to Kassel as a senior government councilor . On 1 July 1915 he was a Privy Councilor characterized and named old burg Saxony-Minister of State for Federal and agents. With the November Revolution he lost this office on November 9, 1918. He was the last minister of state for the duchy. During the First World War he was temporarily a member of the civil administration of the General Government of Belgium . He retired in 1918 and took up residence in Darmstadt.

literature

  • Friedrich Facius : The directing ministers of the Thuringian states 1815-1918 . In: Klaus Schwabe (Ed.): The governments of the German medium and small states. 1815–1933 (= German leadership classes in modern times. Volume 14 = Büdinger research on social history. Volume 18). Boldt, Boppard am Rhein 1983, ISBN 3-7646-1830-2 , p. 284.
  • The members of Vandalia zu Heidelberg as of September 29, 1935 , Berlin 1935, pp. 188f.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German States before 1945
  2. ^ Genealogical handbook of the nobility. Noble houses. A XI, 1971, Complete Series Volume 49, p. 510.
  3. ^ Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Nobeligen houses. 1903. Fourth year, Justus Perthes, Gotha 1902, pp. 944-945.
  4. Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 73 , 554