Birth Date: | 14 July 1750 |
Birth Place: | Copenhagen, Denmark |
Death Date: | 6 July 1825 (aged 74) |
Commands: | Akershus fortress |
Office: | First Minister of Norway |
Battles: | Swedish–Norwegian War |
Spouse: | Catharina von Oldenburg[1] |
Termstart1: | 2 March 1814 |
Termend1: | 20 August 1814 |
Successor: | Marcus Gjøe Rosenkrantz |
Predecessor: | Position established |
Successor1: | Carsten Tank |
Predecessor1: | Position established |
Office1: | Minister of Finance of Norway |
Termstart: | 2 March 1814 |
Termend: | 20 August 1814 |
Frederik Gottschalk von Haxthausen (14 July 1750 - 6 July 1825) was a Danish-Norwegian army officer, councillor of state, cabinet member and Norway's first minister of finance.
Haxthausen was born in Copenhagen, Denmark. His father was major-general Frederik Gottschalck Haxthausen (1705-1770) and Juliane Dorothea von Haxthausen (1719-1790). He enrolled at the Army Cadet Academy ast the age of six. He became fændrik im Prince Frederik's Regiment at the age of 11, became a junior lieutenant in 1763 and a senior lieutenant in 1881. He was sent to Norway in 1773 as a first lieutenant of Søndenfjeldske regiment, and rose to the rank of captain and company commander in 1779 and major in 1788. In 1789 he was appointed generalkrigskommissær, the officer in charge of national conscription, and in 1802 became the director of the War Academy (Krigsskolen). In 1806 he became the commanding officer of Akershus fortress, a charge he held until 1814.He spent the years 1808 - 1810 in Denmark as head of the war commissariate, but retained nonetheless all of his Norwegian posts. Haxthausen had a major influence on Prince Christian Frederick as viceroy (stattholder) of Norway from 1813, joined the interim government of Christian Frederick in March 1814, and on 19 May 1814 he became Minister of Finance in the first cabinet of independent Norway.
During the Swedish campaign against Norway in 1814 he served as a lieutenant general, but was wrongly accused of being a traitor, and on 19 August, 5 days after the Convention of Moss, his house and garden was attacked by a mob. Haxthausen had to flee the town and withdrew from all his positions. In 1816 an impeachment process cleared him.
After 1814, the Akershus fortress went out of operative military use, so that Haxthausen was the last operative commander of the fortress. He died in Christiania, 6 July 1825.
In 1879, a street of Oslo in the Frogner area close to his home was named after Haxthausen.