Wilhelm Mutzenbecher

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gustav Wilhelm Mutzenbecher (born June 19, 1832 in Oldenburg ; † January 5, 1878 ibid) was a German administrative lawyer and state councilor in the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg .

Life

Wilhelm Mutzenbecher came from the Oldenburg branch of the Hamburg merchant family Mutzenbecher and was the second son of the Oldenburg regional president Friedrich Mutzenbecher . August Mutzenbecher and Adolf Mutzenbecher were his brothers. He attended the old grammar school until his Abitur in Easter 1850 and studied law at the universities of Heidelberg , Berlin and Göttingen until 1853 . In Heidelberg he became a member of the Corps Rhenania Heidelberg . After completing his studies, he joined the Oldenburg civil service as an auditor in the State Ministry.

In 1858 he became the managing counsel of the city of Oldenburg. In 1859 he switched to the judicial service and became an assessor at the higher court. In 1861 he went to Varel as a public prosecutor and returned to Oldenburg in 1867 in the same capacity.

In 1870 he was appointed senior judge and came as a judge at the Oldenburg Higher Appeal Court . From 1872 to 1874 he was a member of the school supervisory authority, the Evangelical High School College. In 1873 he was President of the Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Oldenburg . In 1874 he became a Privy Councilor of State in the Oldenburg State Ministry and joined the newly formed government of his brother-in-law Karl von Berg (1810-1894) on July 14 and became head of the Department of Justice and the Department of Churches, Schools and Military Affairs. In addition, he was Oldenburg's representative in the Bundesrat (German Empire) . After Berg's resignation in October 1876, he joined the new government of his brother-in-law Friedrich Andreas Ruhstrat (1818–1896) and held his ministerial office until his death in 1878.

family

Mutzenbecher married on September 16, 1864 in Varel Anna Henriette Hermine Sophie Onken (1844–1929), the daughter of the Supreme Court Director Gustav Onken (1806–1867) and his wife Helma nee. Hegeler (1822–1898). The couple had two daughters and a son.

Awards

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Kösener corps lists 1910, 119 , 461