You are bidding on one Marriage settlement (Augsburg 1848) and aBirth certificate (Munich 1887) from the Family (of) Illing.


With aSignature and seal desBavarian lawyers, representatives and businessmen Philipp Franz Kremer (1765-1854), grandfather of the bride.


The marriage contract (with eight signatures and six seals) about the marriage between the royal Bavarian First lieutenant in the engineer corps (in garrison in Germersheim) Johann Illing (*24. December 1813, died. 27. November 1876) and Miss Josephine Kremer (*15. August 1822; gest. 24. July 1856), daughter of the merchant and magistrate Mathaeus / Matthias Kremer (* 1792) in Augsburg, owner of a Materials, paint & food store and Son of Philipp Franz Kremer, and Babette, b. Emperor.


Johann Illing married Helene Grimm (* 21. May 1833; gest. 31. January 1914).


A son from his first marriage was the colonel and chief of general staff in the 1st. AK Franz Sales Philipp Illing, later Knight of Illing (*14. March 1852; gest. 31. December 1902), married to Maria Christiane Luise, née. Grain. The couple got two sons:

1.) the royal Prussian lieutenant Hans Illing (*23. November 1889; dropped on the 22nd August 1914 in France)

2.) the royal Bavarian lieutenant colonel in the infantry body regimentOskar Illing (* 21. August 1887; dropped on the 30th July 1916 in air combat in France), of which the birth certificate (Munich 1887) is available.


The family gravestone of Johann Illing, his two wives, his son and his children is still on it today Old South Cemetery in Munich.


The marriage contract (three pages in the format 38 x 24 cm) dated Augsburg, the 10th September 1848. -- The location is not specified in the dating; However, it becomes clear in the passage: "The validity of the current marriage contract from a formal point of view can only be assessed according to the laws applicable in Augsburg as the place of conclusion."

The contract establishes a “community of acquisitions,” meaning that all property brought into the marriage remains the property of each spouse.

The bride brings a dowry of 10,000 guilders into the marriage.


Signed of the bride (without a seal) and of the bridegroom (with a seal); also from the following witnesses:

-the bride's father Mathaeus Kremer

-the mother of the brideBabette Kremer, b. Kaiser (as the only witness without a seal)

-theBavarian lawyer, member of parliament and merchant Philipp Franz Kremer (1765-1854), grandfather of the bride

-Captain Joseph Schmauß

-Assessor D{???}is [[name difficult to read]]

-Baron Joseph von Sartor.


The birth certificate (38 x 22.8 cm) of Oscar Valentin Robert Illing dated Munich, the 22nd August 1887; However, the extract was issued by the registry office in Munich I on the 18th. April 1900 (probably on the occasion of his confirmation).


Condition: Documents folded. The marriage contract is stained, with tears and severe damage to the edges. The birth certificate is browned and slightly stained, with slight damage to the edges. bplease note the pictures too!

Internal note: Engelhardt folder light red


About the grandfather Philipp Franz Kremer (source: wikipedia):

Philipp Franz Kremer (*3. November 1765 in Würzburg; † 3. September 1854 in Augsburg) was a Bavarian lawyer, member of parliament and businessman.

Life:The son of the couple Felix Kremer, innkeeper at the White Swan, landowner and wine merchant in Würzburg, and Gertrud, née Riautz, attended the Schillingsfürst educational center (Convict) after the Würzburg Latin school, then studied poetry and rhetoric, physics and mathematics as well as law in Würzburg and Jena and completed his doctorate in philosophy. After his father's death, he switched to commercial training, which he completed, among others, at the trading and banking business Pilgram & Söhne in Munich and at companies in Trieste and Lyon. In 1790 he settled in Augsburg and opened a materials store. In 1794 he acquired the Philippine Welser House. From 1793 he was an assessor at the city court of the Free Imperial City of Augsburg and, as a deputy, responsible for the “Rottwesen” (packing and transport on the trade routes). On the 9th In February 1806, Kremer traveled to Munich with other Augsburg notables to “express the highest respect of the entire merchant community” to the king. After the handover of Augsburg by the French city commander to the Bavarian handover commission on January 4th. March 1806. He was a member of the “Royal Bavarian Exchange Court” and was elected to the municipal council and confirmed in this position in 1816. The Augsburg merchants elected him as assessor of the trade committee and as “parlor master” to the board of directors.

Kremer initially served as 1st in the Augsburg citizen military. Major of the Staff; In 1811 he was appointed “lieutenant colonel” of the National Guard III. Class by King Maximilian Joseph of Bavaria.

From 1818 (re-elected in 1824 and 1830) to 1836 he served as II. “bourgeois” mayor in Augsburg. He was a member of the exclusive social club “Harmonie”, which was founded in 1808 “to promote social interaction between educated men of Allen classes”. class. In 1818 he was elected to the leadership of the “Polytechnical Association” for Augsburg. In 1819, the Augsburg magistrate, led by Kremer, turned against the policies of the First World War. Mayor Johann Nepomuk von Caspar and prevented his re-election in 1821. In 1822 the government council and city commissioner Dr. Wirschinger Kremer received the Golden Civil Merit Medal in the name of the King. In 1824 he organized the visit of King Maximilian Joseph of Bavaria to Augsburg and was the 2nd Mayor - together with his wife as maid of honor - guest at the royal luncheon. He also played a key role in King Ludwig I's stay in Augsburg in 1829.

From 1825 to 1834 he was a member of the Bavarian Parliament (state parliament; Chamber of Deputies) in Munich for the Upper Danube District. At the state parliaments of 1825, 1827, 1831 and 1834, he presented, among other things, the draft for a new exchange process and submitted proposals for trading in foreign government securities, restricting freedom of trade, fair trade and hawking and the reduction of commercial patents to Jewish companies.

After bankruptcy proceedings, he passed his company on to his eldest son Matthias in 1828 as a business for “material, color and spice goods” and limited himself to speculative and commercial transactions.

In 1791 Kremer married Maria Josepha Ott from Roßhaupten, daughter of an electoral fish master. Of the 18 children of this marriage, only six survived (until 1833): Matthias (* 1792), who took over his father's trading business, Anton Felix (* 1795); he became a victim of the cholera epidemic in Augsburg in 1854¸ Josephine (1822–1856), married to the officer Johann Illig; Philipp Franz Alois (1823–1885), ran a glove factory together with his brother Emil (* around 1834/35), and Emanuel (* around 1840), who died in 1860 as a law student.

Like his son Anton Felix, Philipp Franz Kremer also fell victim to the cholera epidemic that claimed over a thousand lives in Augsburg. He was born on the 6th. Buried in September 1854 in the Catholic cemetery of the city of Augsburg.

Life:The son of the couple Felix Kremer, innkeeper at the White Swan, landowner and wine merchant in Würzburg, and Gertrud, née Riautz, attended the Schillingsfürst educational center (Convict) after the Würzburg Latin school, then studied poetry and rhetoric, physics and mathematics as well as law in Würzburg and Jena and completed his doctorate in philosophy. After his father's death, he switched to commercial training, which he completed, among others, at the trading and banking business Pilgram & Söhne in Munich and at companies in Trieste and Lyon. In 1790 he settled in Augsburg and opened a materials store. In 1794 he acquired the Philippine Welser House. From 1793 he was an assessor at the city court of the Free Imperial City of Augsburg and, as a deputy, responsible for the “Rottwe