<font face="Times New Roman">Trixum Template TF01</font>

Pension invoices Gut REELSEN (Bad Driburg) 1810-13, vd SCHULENBURG-OEYNHAUSEN


Description


 

See more pictures below! –



 

They bid on three bills from 1810-1813 out of Reelsen (today district of Bad Driburg, LK Höxter).


 

Pension bills of Guts Reelsen, which is owned by the Electoral Palatinate colonel Ferdinand Ludwig von der Schuldburg-Oeynhausen (1745-1824) located. The year of his death is sometimes given as 1825.



He led a wild life, became a fugitive after the kidnapping of a young Viennese countess, embezzled funds, and later left his wife to live in London, where he was fatally run over. -- Biography see under the pictures!


 

Issued by Reelsener Pastor Nicolas Roger as representative of the Count of Debt Castle-Oeynhausen.


 

Respectively with personal confirmation through the wife, Mary Françoise Gräfin von derschulenburg-Oeynhausen, b. Vincens de Causans (* 1773 in Paris; gest. 16. October 1828 ibid.), who met him on the 1st married in June 1797. She was a daughter of Field Marshal Jean Joseph de Vincens de Causans (1725-1780), marquis de Causans, and Françoise Madeleine, née. de Louvel (approx. 1730-1786), as well as a sister of the French Major General Jacques Joseph de Vincens (1751-1824), Marquis de Causans.


 

1.) "Reelsischen account for the year from St. John's Day 1810 to ditto 1811."

Scope: Front page + 8 bewritten pages (32.3 x 20.2 cm), four of which are only half written.

In the end, Reelsen dated, 30. August 1811; confirmed "correctly found Countess v.schulenburg Oeynhausen."


 

2.) "Reelsische invoice for the year from St. John's Day 1811 to Thu 1812."

Scope: 7 describede pages (34.3 x 20.8 cm), two of which are only half described.

In the end Reelsen dated, 15. July 1812; confirmed "seen and correctly found Countess v.schulenburg Oeynhausen."


 

3.) "Reelsian invoice for the year from St. John's Day 1812 until ditto 1813."

Scope: Front page + 6 bewritten pages (33 x 20.5 cm), three of which are only half written.

thread binding defective/very loose; the first sheet solved.

The confirmation was made in French: "vu et vérifié et trouvé les comptes {???} Ctesse deschulenburg oeynhausen."

Also the notes at the end are in French.


 

With numerous names of the subjects and a list of their taxes; but also about repairs etc.


 

Each without cover.


 

Condition: Paper slightly stained, with slight edge damage. biPlease also note the pictures at the end of the item description!

 

Internal note: Oeynhausen 7426 beige


Pictures

 

Mobile-friendly galleries at TRIXUM.DE

About the owner Ferdinand Ludwig von der Schuldburg-Oeynhausen (Source: Julius Graf von Oeynhausen: History of the von Oeynhausen Family, 3. Part, Frankfurt am Main 1889, p. 448f.):

 

Ferdinand Ludwig, 1745-1824, son of Count Ludwig von der Schuldburg-Oeynhausen (1701-1754), was born in July 1745 in the field camp near Verona, after his father's death under the guardianship of his mother (née. Countess Maria Anna von Kottulinsky exp. Princess of Liechtenstein, 1707-1788) and raised by Count Joseph Balthesar von Wilczek, was at the Theresianum in Vienna in 1762 and a real chamberlain in 1765. He became ambassador to Copenhagen in 1769 and to Stockholm in 1770. He committed the folly of kidnapping Countess Marie Ernestine Esterhazy (*1754, married 1770), née Countess Starhemberg, in Vienna in the summer of 1774 and as a result was declared a fugitive and declared the loss of his Oberwaltersdorf and Tribuswinkel estates. In 1776, on the recommendation of his father, Count Wilhelm zur Lippe, he entered the Portuguese service, where he was lieutenant colonel of a regiment until 1777, then went into the Dutch service as a colonel and was 21st. Jan. 1785 Electoral Palatinate Colonel of the Infantry General-Leib-Adjutant, from which position he resigned in 1797. After his marriage, he lived for some time on his Reelsen estate, where he had built new buildings in 1787, but later left his wife and lived primarily in London on the money from the Kendal legacy, which he had illegally collected from the English Bank. He was eventually run over in the streets of London and died as a result on the 30th. March 1824.

He married in Reelsen on January 1st. June 1797 Marie Françoise de Vincens, Comtesse de Causans, sister of the French Major General Jacques Joseph de Cincens, Marquis de Causans, from an old French émigré family living in Steinheim. She was formerly the canoness of the S. Luisenstift in Metz. She initially lived in Reelsen, later with her son in Paderborn and moved to Paris in 1828, where she died about ten years later. She had an only son Ferdinand Ludwig Friedrich Franz von derschulenburg-Oeynhausen (1798-1860).

Ferdinand Ludwig, 1745-1824, son of Count Ludwig von der Schuldburg-Oeynhausen (1701-1754), was born in July 1745 in the field camp near Verona, after his father's death under the guardianship of his mother (née. Countess Maria Anna von Kottulinsky exp. Princess of Liechtenstein, 1707-1788) and raised by Count Joseph Balthesar von Wilczek, was at the Theresianum in Vienna in 1762 and a real chamberlain in 1765. He became ambassador to Copenhagen in 1769 and to Stockholm in 1770. He committed the folly of kidnapping Countess Marie Ernestine Esterhazy (*1754, married 1770), née Countess Starhemberg, in Vienna in the summer of 1774 and as a result was declared a fugitive and declared the loss of his Oberwaltersdorf and Tribuswinkel estates. In 1776, on the recommendation of his father, Count