Clemens zu Pappenheim – Wikipedia

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Clemens Philipp Friedrich Albert Haupt Graf zu Pappenheim (Born December 14, 1822 in Würzburg, † November 8, 1904 in Munich) [first] was a royal Bavarian government official.

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He came from the Franconian noble family of the counts in Pappenheim and was the seventh of nine children of Albert Graf zu Pappenheim (1777–1860), Herr zu Pappenheim, and the Maria Antoinetta Freiin Taenzl von Tratzberg (1793–1861). As a child, he was brought up as a royal noble boy.

In 1846 he joined the new member Historical Association in Middle Franconia at. [2]

At least as early as 1864 to May 1869, Pappenheim was a district office (district manager) of Bad Tölz as the royal government council. [3] In May 1869 he was subordinate – as the government council of the Interior Chamber at the government of Lower Franconia in Würzburg [4] – moved as a bathroom commissioner in the Bad Kissingen state pool, [5] What he stayed for six years until 1875. His successor as a bathroom commissioner became Luitpold du Jarry’s baron of La Roche.

In Bad Kissingen Pappenheim was the successor to Joseph von Parseval and was able to conclude some projects that started his predecessor. On June 1, 1869, he opened the first construction phase of the new “Actienbad” (later called Luitpoldbad) with initially only 66 bathroom cabinets (bathing rooms). [6] On September 8, 1869, he unveiled the monument of the Bad Kissingen sculptor Michael Arnold in Parseval’s order Grieving Germania With the words: “From then on, Germanias Schwerd is only the symbol of their strength and the peace palm sinks on all German brothers!” [7] His successor as Kissinger Bad Commissioner became Luitpold du Jarry’s baron of La Roche in 1875.

After leaving the government service in 1875, Pappenheim acquired the Gut Falkenberg with a castle, which was located a few kilometers west of Grafing near Munich, now a district of Moosach in the Ebersberg district. Because of a lack of income from agriculture there, Pappenheim moved to the residence city of Munich. His funeral took place at the cemetery around the St. Gallus Church in Pappenheim.

On September 8, 1857, he had at Pappenheim Castle Hermione Countess von Paumgarten (Born August 28, 1836 in Leopoldskron near Salzburg, † October 4, 1914 in Munich) married, the daughter of the Hermann Graf von Paumgarten (1806–1846), Royal Bavarian Chamberlain and Multiple Goods, and the Mary Erskine (1806-1874) from the family of the Barone Erskine. [8] The couple had two sons and a daughter. [9]

  1. Gothaic genealogical court calendar , 1905, page 4 ( abstract )
  2. 15th annual report of the historical association in Middle Franconia , Volume 15, 1846, page IV ( Digitized )
  3. Schweinfurt Anzeiger No. 106 of May 5, 1869, page 427 ( Digitized )
  4. Schweinfurt Anzeiger We will 27. May 1869 ( Digitized )
  5. Kissinger Tagblatt of May 29, 1869, page 474 ( Digitized )
  6. The construction work had been interrupted by the German War of 1866 and its effects on the city. The fastest possible expansion of the construction was planned.
  7. House of Bavarian history: Monument to the fallen from July 10, 1866 in Bad Kissingen ( online )
  8. Gothailche’s genealogical paperback , 1905, page 1900
  9. Stem list Pappenheim (English) ( online )
  10. Valentin Grübel (editor): Statistical official & address manual for the k. Bayer. Lower Franconia and Aschaffenburg region , 1870, page 5 ( Digitized )
  11. Government sheet for the Kingdom of Bavaria No. 58, 1869, column 1520 ( Digitized )

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