Wilhelm von Saltzwedel

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Wilhelm v. Saltzwedel

Wilhelm von Wienskowski called von Saltzwedel (born April 16, 1820 on Gut Drosdowen , Oletzko district , East Prussia ; † July 29, 1882 in Danzig ) was a German administrative lawyer and landowner in Prussia. He was district administrator in Sensburg and district president in Gdansk.

Life

Saltzwedel's parents were the royal Prussian landscape director Reinhold von Wienskowski (1780–1863) and his wife Johanna von Saltzwedel (1788–1828). He was the youngest brother of the District President Gustav von Saltzwedel .

Saltzwedel married her first marriage on March 22, 1848 at Gut Kobulten in the Ortelsburg district Karoline (Lina) Vanselow (born September 8, 1825 at Gut Rosoggen , Sensburg district , † June 12, 1872 in Danzig), the daughter of the royal Prussian major Karl Vanselow , landlord on Kobulten, and Theophile von Bieberstein-Kasimirski. With her he had two daughters and four sons, including Traugott von Saltzwedel (1859–1940), who later became the secret councilor and senior building officer. Saltzwedel married his second marriage on July 28, 1873 in Königsberg i. Pr. Friedrike Burggräfin and Countess Dohna-Lauck (born December 22, 1832 Good Wessel courts at Heiligenbeil , East Prussia; † 8 April 1910 in Freiburg ), the daughter of the Prussian General Landscape director and politician Ludwig Viscount and Count Dohna-Lauck (1805–1895), landlord at Wesselshöfen, and Fanny Aronson. There are no children from this marriage.

In 1839 Saltzwedel became a member of the Corps Masovia . As a senior he founded a scientific circle in May 1841 "to stimulate intellectual interests". Later he was landlord on Bronikowen near Sensburg and from 1847 to 1867 district administrator of the district of Sensburg. During this time he is said to have ruled very presumptuously and left a mess when he left this post after 20 years of service as district administrator. In 1867 he was promoted to the Potsdam Regional Council. On October 12, 1871, he was appointed conductor of the first government department in Danzig. From 1878 Heinrich von Achenbach was, in addition to his function as senior president, also district president in Danzig. Saltzwedel actually ran the business during this time. From 1881 to 1882 he was officially the royal Prussian district president in Danzig until his death. Saltzwedel filed for transfer against the use in Danzig, in which he cited health reasons due to the adverse climate in Danzig. He died at the age of 62.

See also

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Father Reinhold von Wienskowski reached on September 15, 1806 in Berlin, at that time still as a Prussian lieutenant in the infantry regiment "von Courbière" (2. Posensches) No. 19, the Prussian name and coat of arms association with those of the " von Saltzwedel " as "Von Wienskowski gen. Von Saltzwedel" after adoption by his father-in-law, the royal Prussian lieutenant colonel a. D. Anton Ludwig von Saltzwedel . - The name was also used without a T ( Salzwedel ); Reinhold's descendants sometimes only used the name "von Saltzwedel". - Sources: Gotha 1928, p. 727 and Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Adelslexikon Volume XVI, p. 187, Vol. 137 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 2005, ISBN 3-7980-0837-X .
  2. German Gender Book , Vol. 40, Page 581.
  3. Genealogical Handbook of Nobility B Volume XIV (1981), page 535.
  4. Kösener corps lists 1910, 141/305
  5. ^ Rüdiger Döhler (ed.): Corps Masovia. The 175-year history of Königsberg's oldest and Potsdam's first corporation in the 21st century. Munich 2005, pp. 86 f., 96. ISBN 3-00-016108-2
  6. Bernhard Maria Rosenberg: The East Prussian representation in the Prussian state parliament 1842–1862, a contribution to the history of the emergence of parliamentarism in Germany. Studies on the history of Prussia , vol. 29, p. 99, Verlag Grote, Cologne a. Berlin, ISBN 3-7745-6426-4 ( excerpt )
  7. Patrick Wagner: Farmers, Junkers and officials. Local rule and participation in East Elbe in the 19th century . Wallstein Verlag, 2005, page 66, ISBN 3-89244-946-5 ( digitized version ).
  8. Patrick Wagner: Farmers, Junkers and officials . Page 37 ( digitized version ).