Wilhelm von Rosen

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Carl Wilhelm Ludwig von Rosen (born August 20, 1788 in Plön , Holstein ; † July 17, 1853 in Segeberg , Holstein) was the royal Danish chamberlain and bailiff of the Segeberg office .

Life

He came from a first time in 1662 in Stralsund official and officer's family mentioned Rose and was the son of the royal Danish Hofjägermeisters and Chamberlain Gottlieb von Rosen (1748-1835), royal Danish Real District Jägermeister and head forester in the Holstein Department of Schleswig-Holstein Forest District, and the Regitze von Holstein (1761-1829). He married on July 21, 1818 in Oldesloe Sophie Decker (born June 17, 1799 in Burg (Dithmarschen) , † May 13, 1868 in Copenhagen ), with whom he had at least four daughters, including Dorothee von Rosen , she was the lady-in-waiting of the Danish Queen , and had seven sons, including the royal Danish chief president Carl von Rosen (1819-1891), member of the Danish Reichstag , the royal Prussian government president Alfred von Rosen (1825-1912) and the royal Danish major in the general staff and sous-chief at the army high command Sigismund von Roses .

From February 11, 1818 until his death (1853) Rosen was bailiff of the Segeberg office. The family lived in the office building in Gieschenhagen (Hamburger Strasse) with a clerk, two male and three female servants. He supported the amalgamation of the Gieschenhagen area into Segeberg and promoted the city's economic boom. At his instigation, the teachers' college came to Segeberg. Since 1825 he has been working on behalf of the Danish government on the descriptions of the cities, offices and property districts of the duchies of Schleswig , Holstein and Lauenburg . In 1848, Rosen recognized the Provisional Government.

He was a member of the "Schleswig-Holstein-Lauenburg Society for Patriotic History".

On May 8, 1825, Rosen was the godfather of Constanze Esmarch , daughter of the Segeberg mayor and honorary citizen Johann Phillip Ernst Esmarch (1794–1875), cousin and later wife of the poet Theodor Storm , who also frequented Rosen's house.

Publications (selection)

  • Description of the office and the Bredstedt landscape in statistical and cameralistic terms , approx. 1830

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Areligen Häuser , Part B 1941, page 431, Verlag Justus Perthes, Gotha 1941
  2. ^ Regina Fasold (Ed.): Theodor Storm - Constanze Esmarch. Correspondence (1844–1846) , Verlag Erich Schmidt, Berlin 2002, page 579 ( digitized version )
  3. Ingwer Ernst Momsen: The general censuses in Schleswig-Holstein in Danish times (1769-1860). History of their organization and their documents , K. Wachholtz, 1974, page 134 ( excerpt )
  4. ^ Archives for State and Church History of the Duchies of Schleswig, Holstein, Lauenburg , Volume 1, Issue 1, Page XXXII, Society for Schleswig-Holstein History, Verlag Johann Friedrich Hammerich, Altona 1833 ( digitized version )