Karl Ignatz Freiherr von Schrenck (August 17, 1806 – September 10, 1884) was a Bavarian administrative lawyer and a deputy in Bavaria who served for a time as Minister-President of Bavaria.
Born in Roding, Germany, Schrenck the son of Judge and Minister of Justice Sebastian Freiherr von Schrenck von Notzing Schrenck attended the (present) Wilhelmsgymnasium Munich.[1] After graduating in 1823 he studied at the University of Landshut until 1826, when he moved to Ludwig-Maximilians University in Munich. In 1827 he became active with his brother Eduard in Corps Palatia Munich.[2]
After the exams he entered the Bavarian civil service. In 1845/46 he served as district president of Rheinpfalz, on the left bank of the Rhine. 1846/47 he was the successor of his father Bavarian Minister of Justice and 1847 briefly Minister of Church Affairs. Ludwig I. (Bavaria) dismissed him for signing a memorandum against Lola Montez. In February 1847 he was President of the Government in the Upper Palatinate. Already in April he was put to the disposition. In 1849/50 he was President of the Government of Lower Bavaria.[3]
In the German Revolution 1848/1849 he was elected to the Frankfurt National Assembly, to which he belonged from May 18, 1848 to May 7, 1849 in the Café Milani. He spoke out against the election of Frederick William IV to the German Kaiser. In 1866 he was the last president of the Bundestag.[3] From 1850 to 1859 he was a Bavarian envoy at the Bundestag (German Confederation).
From 1859 to 1864 he was Minister of State of the Royal House and of Foreign Affairs, Chairman of the Council of Ministers and Minister of State of Commerce and Public Works.[3] Under Ludwig II. He was from 1864 to 1866 (the time of the first wars of unification) again Bundestag Messenger. From February 1868 to the Reichstag election in 1871 he sat in the Reichstag of the North German Confederation and thus in the Customs Parliament. At the time of the Franco-Prussian War he was ambassador to Austria-Hungary. He retired in 1871.