Baron Alexander Andreevich Budberg ( German Alexander Paul Andreas Freiherr von Budberg-Bönninghausen ; 1853 - 1914 ) - member of the State Council for designation; Acting State Counselor (1891), Stalmeister (1900), Ober Jägermeister (1913). Brother Fedor Andreevich Budberg .
| Alexander Andreevich Budberg | |||||||
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| him. Alexander von Budberg | |||||||
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| Birth | 1853 | ||||||
| Death | April 11, 1914 | ||||||
| Kind | Budbergs | ||||||
| Father | Andrey Fedorovich Budberg | ||||||
| Spouse | Evgenia Eduardovna Totleben | ||||||
| Children | Edward, Maria, Inna, Vera, Elena | ||||||
| Education | Imperial St. Petersburg University | ||||||
Content
Biography
Born June 13, 1853 in the family of diplomat Andrei Fedorovich Budberg .
He graduated from the Faculty of Law of St. Petersburg University with a candidate ’s degree in 1875 and began serving in the Department of the Ministry of Justice . Having served in the army in 1876, in 1877 he continued his military service, having entered the Life Guards Hussars Regiment . Produced in a junker belt, and then in cornet, took part in the Russian-Turkish war ; for crossing the Balkans he was awarded the orders of St. Anne of the 4th century, St. Stanislav of the 3rd century, with swords and a bow. At the end of the war, from 1879 he served under the Ministry of the Interior in Odessa and Vilna.
Since 1882, he was a clerk in the Military Camp Chancellery of E.I.V., and since 1883, he was an assistant to the head of the office of the Imperial Main Apartment.
In 1887 he accompanied Emperor Alexander III on his trips around Russia, as well as to Germany and Austria-Hungary.
In 1891-1893 - assistant chief; in 1893-1895 - Head of the " Office of petitions , in the highest name brought" at the Imperial Headquarters; in 1895-1899 - Comrade General Manager; in 1899-1913 - Chief Executive Officer E.I.V. upon acceptance of petitions , to the highest name of those brought.
In August 1905, he was appointed a member of the Council of State ; took an active part in special meetings on issues related to the transformation of the Russian state system; was the author of one of the first projects of the Emperor’s Manifesto. Since 1906, after the transformation of the State Council into the upper house, he was among the members present.
Since 1908 - State Secretary of His Majesty . He consisted of a shtalmeister, hofmeister, chief jägermeister of the Highest Court (1914). He was awarded a number of higher Russian orders, including the Order of St. Alexander Nevsky .
He died on April 11, 1914 .
Since 1912 he lived in St. Petersburg at the address: Kolomenskaya street , house 15. He was the owner of the estate Klyastitsy .
Family
He was married to Countess Eugenia Eduardovna Totleben (1860-1954), the daughter of a military engineer, the hero of the defense of Sevastopol, General E. I. Totleben . Their kids:
- sons:
- Andrey (Andreas Eduard Gotthard); (07.09.1884-12.02.1905)
- Eduard (Eduard Victor Alexander); (02.02.1886—?)
- daughters, maids of honor Alexandra Fedorovna :
- Maria (Marie Victorine Helene); (11.29.1881—?), Married to Victor Karlovich Etter.
- Inna? (Eugenie Victorine Marie); (03/25/1883—?)
- Faith (1890—?) [1]
- Elena (Helena Elisabeth); 05/29/1891—?), The only one of the sisters who was not a maid of honor.
Notes
- ↑ Before her, 09.17.1888 was born, soon passed away Wera Marie Elisabeth.
Sources
- Budberg, Alexander Andreevich on the Chronos website
- Von Budberg nr 98. Tab. 12.
- Electronic library "People and Books". Budberg, Alexander Andreevich. (unavailable link from 13-12-2017 [615 days])
Links
- Baron Budberg Alexander Andreevich owned Klyastitsy (1853–1914)
- Budberg, Alexander Andreevich at the Rodovod . Tree of ancestors and descendants