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Karl Friedrich David From Lindheim (1791-1862): Militär-dokumente Teplitz

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    Description

    Karl Friedrich David From Lindheim (1791-1862): Militär-dokumente Teplitz
    The description of this item has been automatically translated. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us.
    You offer up
    two documents from Teplitz
    (Bohemia, today: Teplice)
    by 1835.
    Handwritten completed form "on the orders of Sr. The King's Majesty ",
    signed
    by the colonel and adjutant wing of Friedrich Wilhelm III.
    Karl Friedrich David von Lindheim (1791-1862)
    , later Prussian
    General of the infantry, head of the military cabinet and since 1859 military governor of the Prussian province of Silesia.
    Concerns the court clerk Eduard Marquardt (b. 1810 in Wehlau / Königsberg) in Wehlau. Army Corps was served.
    Dated
    Teplitz, 9th October 1834 and 8. July 1835.
    Format:
    25.3 x 21.5 cm.
    A document with a damaged margin with remains of the seal.
    Status:
    Second letter with a corner crease. Paper slightly stained and creased. Please b
    Also note the pictures at the end of the item description!
    Internal note: light red folder
    over
    Karl Friedrich David von Lindheim (source: wikipedia) and
    Eduard Marquardt (source: documents from his estate):
    Karl Friedrich David von Lindheim
    (* 7. September 1791 in Koenigsberg; † 5. August 1862 in Bad Teplitz) was a Prussian general of the infantry, head of the military cabinet and since 1859 military governor of the Prussian province of Silesia. [1]
    Life
    Origin: Karl Friedrich David was the son of Johann Philipp von Lindheim (* 1747 in Gießen; † 13. February 1825 in Berlin) and his wife Katharina Luise Anna, born von Werner (* 1760). His father was a Prussian major a. D., last in the 4th East Prussian infantry regiment, knight of the order Pour le Mérite and postmaster von Graudenz. His mother was the daughter of the Hessian Lieutenant General Leopold Christoph Daniel von Werner (1712–1780) and his wife Christine Louise Roth (1725–1780). [2]
    Military career: Lindheim already resigned on 15. February 1802 as a private corporal in the fusilier battalion "von Stutterheim" of the 2nd East Prussian Fusilier Brigade of the Prussian Army. There he was born on 18. October 1805 Second Lieutenant and took part in the 1806/07 campaign against the French. He fought in the battles of Jena and Prussian Eylau and was in the battles near Lauenburg, Schippenbeil, Heilsberg, Braunsberg, Wachern and Königsberg. After the Peace of Tilsit, Lindheim first entered the 3rd East Prussian Infantry Regiment and in June 1809 in the fusilier battalion of 1. Guard regiment on foot. With this regiment he took part in the wars of liberation of 1813/15, first as a prime lieutenant, later as a staff captain and as a captain and company commander. For his achievements during the Battle of Großgörschen he received the Iron Cross II. Great and still fought at Bautzen, Dresden, Kulm, Leipzig and Laon. After the peace agreement, Lindheim rose to major and battalion commander. On the 30th March 1829 he became a wing adjutant of Friedrich Wilhelm III. Lindheim remained in this position even after his appointment as adjutant general of the king on 16. May 1834. At the same time as his promotion to major general on 13. June 1840 he became adjutant general of the new King Friedrich Wilhelm IV. appointed.
    Lindheim was then commander of the 12th in March 1846. Division appointed and on 27. March 1847 promoted to lieutenant general. The following year he gave up this command and was on 7. March 1848 as commander of the 11. Division appointed in Wroclaw. He was then commissioned on 10. September 1849 with the representation of the commanding general of the VI. Army Corps. The appointment to this position finally followed on 23. March 1852. In August 1853 he attended the major military exercises of the Russian Guards and Grenadier Corps at Krasnoye Selo. Finally, on 15. Promoted to General of the Infantry on October 14, 1856. June 1859 appointed military governor of the province of Silesia.
    Due to his poor health, Lindheim took a cure in Bad Teplitz and died while there. He was born on 9. Buried August 1862 in Erdmannsdorf.
    Honors
    The king appointed Lindheim on 18. September 1858 as chief of the 10. Infantry regiment. Since 1831 he was an honorary knight of the Order of St. John. [3] In addition, Lindheim was the holder of the following high orders:
    Russian Order of Saint Stanislaus II. Class on 27. November 1834
    Order of St. Vladimir III. Class on 30. September 1835
    Commander 1st class of the Ludewigs Order on 15. November 1835
    Russian Order of Saint Anne 1st Class on 26. September 1843
    Order of the Iron Crown 1st class on 21. June 1849
    Cross of Honor 1st Class of the Princely House Order of Hohenzollern on 29. April 1852
    Alexander Nevsky Order on 3. June 1852
    Order of the Red Eagle 1st class with oak leaves and diamonds on 23. April 1853
    Knight of the Order of the Black Eagle on 17. October 1861
    family
    Lindheim had on 26. December 1821 in Dessau with Amélie Agnes Leopoldine, née Countess von Waldersee (* 25. July 1799; † 16. October 1826 in Potsdam) married. She was the daughter of the writer Franz von Waldersee. After her death, Lindheim married on May 16. November 1835 Luise Alexandrine Dorothea, née von Borstell (* 7. September 1804 in Berlin; † 9. March 1889 ibid). She was the daughter of the Prussian Lieutenant General Emil von Borstell (1778-1856) and lady-in-waiting of Princess Elisabeth of Prussia. The marriages produced five children, including:
    Karoline (1782–1867) ∞ Karl Bernhard von Budberg (1810–1867), Prussian major general
    Friedrich Wilhelm Ludwig Heinrich Karl (* 18. July 1836 in Sanssouci; † 15. October 1897), Prussian major a. D. and director of Paket AG
    Eduard Marquardt
    , born in autumn 1810 as the son of the Accise cash register controller Marquardt in Wehlau (Königsberg), who died in 1813.
    The mother (still alive in Nov. 1838) was the daughter of a sergeant (veteran of the 7-year war) who was transferred to the military in 1806 and 1812; his property was "looted by the enemy". He served ins. 15 years in the military and died in 1828 (before September) aged 94 or 96.
    Eduard Marquardt attended the community school in Wehlau, after 5 1/2 years of attending 2 years great, then confirmation. He learned court clerkship (5 1/2 years as an apprentice and clerk in the court clerk in Wehlau).
    On the 1st November 1829 he began his military career at 3. Inf.-Regt., 11 Kp. - Heavy service due to the revolution in Poland: 1830/31 in the Füselier battalion of the 3rd IR: from Braunsberg to Graudenz and Thorn (7-month fortress service there, with a heavy 4-month "Grenz-Fordredienst" in the 11th Kp., Area "in and near Schilno"; served as Fourier on strenuous marches); gave up his military career in 1831/32 after 3 years of service as a non-commissioned officer (he wanted to serve 9 years in order to gain civil rights, his health / weakness did not allow that) and began as a private clerk in the office of the regional and municipal court in Wehlau, then as a court recorder in the same place.
    Stations as a court clerk:
    1834/1835 judicial clerk / regional and city court clerk in Wehlau
    6. January 1835 exam as civil and criminal recorder
    4. February 1836 swearing in as civil and criminal recorder in Koenigsberg
    1836 Supernumerarius in Königsberg
    March 1836 Representation of the sick Supernumerarius Sauter in the administration of the residents' office in Bischofstein
    March-May 1837 interim administration of the tax office in Bischofstein
    from 28. November 1837 successor to the sick main office assistant Ziegler in Könisgberg
    1837-40 in Königsberg, but interrupted by short-term representations in surrounding places:
    February-May 1838 temporary assistant at the main tax office in Friedland
    23. August 1838 to mid-November 1838 temporary help in Gumbinnen (back to Königsberg after the return of the chief tax inspector Albrecht from Berlin), then 4 weeks vacation in Wehlau due to illness (inflammation of the eyes).
    30. December 1838 to 21. February 1839 interim administration of the tax collector's office in Pobethen (4 weeks), then temporary assistance with the auditing of the Liebig accountant in Königsberg
    29. April to 2. July 1840 provisional administration of the main office control point in Tilsit.
    12. May 1840 promotion to office assistant; as such, he works in Königsberg on his return from Tilsit.
    At the end of 1840 he was denied a position as an auditor because he "has not yet had any invoices to revise on indirect taxes".
    His definitive appointment for the position of office assistant takes place in July 1841, there until at least Sept 1843.
    On 20. November 1843 he is promoted from assistant director to main office controller.
    Between March and October 1844 transfer to Neidenburg (main customs office controller)
    September 1848 transferred from Neidenburg as main office controller to Memel (start 10. November 1848).
    February 1850 return to Neidenburg as an official pensioner.
    In June 1854 he asked for a transfer from Neidenburg to Braunsberg, Gumbinnen or (preferably) to Tilsit in order to enable his children to go to school properly.
    Private: Around 1834 he becomes engaged to a Marie (daughter of a landowner who died in 1835), whom he hopes to marry in 1840. In October 1848 he had 5 young children (the youngest was born in September 1848); in June 1854 he mentions five daughters and his wife's new pregnancy.
    Military career: Lindheim already resigned on 15. February 1802 as a private corporal in the fusilier battalion "von Stutterheim" of the 2nd East Prussian Fusilier Brigade of the Prussian Army. There he was born on 18. October 1805 Second Lieutenant and took part in the 1806/07 campaign against the French. He fought in the battles of Jena and Prussian Eylau and was in the battles near Lauenburg, Schippenbeil, Heilsberg, Braunsberg, Wachern and Königsberg. After the Peace of Tilsit, Lindheim first entered the 3rd East Prussian Infantry Regiment and in June 1809 in the fusilier battalion of 1. Guard regiment on foot. With this regiment he took part in the wars of liberation of 1813/15, first as a prime lieutenant, later as a staff captain and as a captain and company commander. For his achie