Adolf Heinrich von Arnim-Boitzenburg explained

Honorific Prefix:Graf
Adolf Heinrich von Arnim-Boitzenburg
Order:1st Minister President of Prussia
Term Start:19 March
Term End:29 March 1848
Predecessor:Office established
Successor:Gottfried Ludolf Camphausen
Order1:Interior Minister of Prussia
Term Start1:1842
Term End1:1845
Predecessor1:Gustav Adolf Rochus von Rochow
Successor1:Ernst von Bodelschwingh-Velmede
Order2:Foreign Minister of Prussia
Term Start2:19 March
Term End2:21 March 1848
Predecessor2:Karl Ernst Wilhelm von Canitz und Dallwitz
Successor2:Heinrich Alexander von Arnim
Birth Date:10 April 1803
Birth Place:Berlin, Prussia
Death Place:Boitzenburg Castle, Brandenburg, Prussia
Party:None
Parents:Friedrich Abraham Wilhelm von Arnim
Georgine von Wallmoden-Grimborn
Spouse:Countess Anna Caroline von der Schulenburg
Relations:Friedrich Wilhelm von Arnim-Boitzenburg (grandfather)
Johann Ludwig von Wallmoden-Gimborn (grandfather)

Adolf Heinrich Graf von Arnim-Boitzenburg (10 April 1803 – 8 January 1868) was a German statesman. He served as the first Minister-President of Prussia for ten days during the Revolution of 1848.

Early life

Arnim was born in the Prussian capital Berlin, the son of envoy Friedrich Abraham Wilhelm von Arnim (1767–1812) and his wife Georgine von Wallmoden-Grimborn (1770–1859), a daughter of the Hanoverian field marshal and art collector Johann Ludwig von Wallmoden-Gimborn and thereby presumably a granddaughter of King George II of Great Britain. His parents divorced when he was three years old.[1]

Having finished his studies in Berlin and Göttingen in 1825, he joined the Prussian Guards Uhlans regiment as a One-year volunteer and afterwards entered civil service at the Kammergericht.

Career

In 1830, he was appointed Landrat official in the Uckermark district. In 1833, he became Vice-president of the Pomeranian Stralsund government region. One year later, he assumed the position of President in the Aix-la-Chapelle (Aachen) region, from 1838 in Merseburg, Saxony. In 1840 he became governor (Oberpräsident) of the Grand Duchy of Posen.

In 1842 Arnim was called back to Berlin to be appointed Prussian State Minister of the Interior. Nevertheless, he resigned in 1845 because his plans for a constitution for Prussia were at odds with King Frederick William IV's romantic ideals. When the March Revolution broke out in 1848, his services were again in demand. From 19 March 1848, he acted as the first Prussian Minister-President and Foreign Minister. However, he again resigned within a few days after the king chose to place himself at the head of the national movement.

A member of the Provincial Brandenburg Landtag assembly since 1839, Arnim from 18 May to 10 June 1848 was a representative for Prenzlau in the Frankfurt Parliament and also was a member of the short-lived Erfurt Union Parliament in 1850. He belonged to the newly established Prussian House of Representatives from 1849 and later joined the House of Lords chamber of the Prussian Parliament.

Arnim is known to this day for his remarks as Prussian Interior Minister during the Vormärz era concerning Heinrich Heine's poem The Silesian Weavers. The verses were published in the Vorwärts! weekly newspaper after an 1844 riot in the Province of Silesia, which later also inspired the drama The Weavers by Gerhart Hauptmann. In a report to King Frederick William IV he described Heine's poetry as "an address to the poor amongst the populace, held in an inflammatory tone and filled with criminal utterances" ("eine in aufrührerischem Ton gehaltene und mit verbrecherischen Äußerungen angefüllte Ansprache an die Armen im Volke"). Subsequently, the Royal Prussian Kammergericht banned the poem, which in 1846 led to a prison sentence for a person who had dared to publicly recite it.

Personal life

He married Countess Anna Caroline von der Schulenburg (1804–1886), a daughter of Count Hans Günther Werner von der Schulenburg. One of his children was politician Adolf von Arnim-Boitzenburg, who was in 1880 for a short time president of German Reichstag.

Arnim died on 8 January 1868 at his Boitzenburg estate.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Biographien zur deutschen Geschichte von den Anfängen bis 1945, Berlin 1991, S. 27.