Mortimer von Maltzan

Prussian diplomat and Foreign Minister From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Count Joachim Karl Ludwig Mortimer von Maltzan (or Maltzahn), Freiherr von Wartenberg und Penzlin (15 April 1793 – 9 August 1843) was a Prussian diplomat and Foreign Minister from 1841 to 1842.

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Mortimer von Maltzan
Count von Maltzan
Foreign Minister of Prussia
In office
30 August 1841  21 March 1842
MonarchFrederick William IV
Preceded byHeinrich Wilhelm von Werther
Succeeded byHeinrich von Bülow
Personal details
Born(1793-04-15)15 April 1793
Lissa Castle in Leśnica, Breslau, Kingdom of Prussia
Died8 August 1843(1843-08-08) (aged 50)
Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia
SpouseCountess Auguste von der Goltz
Children7
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Early life

Graft von Maltzan[1] was born on 15 April 1793 at Lissa Castle in Leśnica, Breslau, Poland. He was the son of the Count Joachim Alexander Kasimir Maltzahn (1764–1850) and his wife Antoinie von Maltzahn (née Countess von Hoym) (1768–1799). After his mother's death in 1799, his father married Countess Ernestine Friederike von der Groeben (a daughter of Karl Ernst August von der Gröben).[2]

His paternal grandparents were Joachim Karl von Maltzahn, Baron of Wartenburg and Penzlin and Christine Charlotte Maximiliane Ernestine von Mudrach. His maternal grandparents were Count Karl George von Hoym and Antonie Louise Amalie von Dyhrn und Schönau.[3]

Career

Maltzan participated in the War of the Sixth Coalition as an officer in the Prussian Garde du Corps. Then he joined the diplomatic service. At first, he was a legation secretary in various embassies. Later he was the chargé d'affaires in Darmstadt and envoy to The Hague, Hannover and Vienna. Lastly, he had the rank of minister plenipotentiary.[4]

In 1841 Maltzan was made Prussian Foreign Minister. Karl August Varnhagen von Ense reproduced a report by Wilhelm von Humboldt, according to which King Frederick William IV was more satisfied with Maltzan than with any other ministers, and had complete trust and confidence in him.[5] Due to a severe mental illness, however, he was dismissed in 1842, not long before his death in Berlin in 1843.

Personal life

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Photograph of his son, Count August Mortimer Joachim von Maltzan, c.1876.

Maltzan married the Countess Auguste Marie Amalie Luise von der Goltz (1798–1837), a daughter of Count August Friedrich Ferdinand von der Goltz, the first Prussian Minister for Foreign Affairs,[6] and the former Luise Juliane von Schack. Together, they were the parents of:[7]

Countess von Maltzan died in 1837. He died on 9 August 1843 in Berlin.[2]

Descendants

Through his daughter Charlotte, he was a grandfather of Friedrich von Pourtalès (1853–1928), who was the German ambassador to Russia when World War I broke out.[11]

References

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