Ernst Ludwig von Gerlach (7 March 1795 – 18 February 1877) was a Prussian politician, editor and judge. He is considered one of the main founders and leading thinkers of the Conservative Party in Prussia and was for many years its leader in the Prussian House of Representatives. Like his brother Leopold von Gerlach, he belonged to the circle that formed around the Neue Preußische Zeitung (New Prussian Newspaper), better known as the Kreuzzeitung, in the founding of which he also played a leading role.
Gerlach was born in Berlin in 1795 to a family of Prussian bureaucratic gentry,[1] the fourth child of the mayor of Berlin, Carl Friedrich Leopold von Gerlach. Among his brothers were Leopold von Gerlach, the later general and adjutant to the Prussian king, and the theologian and court chaplain Otto von Gerlach. Between 1810 and 1815 Ernst Ludwig studied law, with interruptions, at the newly founded University of Berlin, then later in Göttingen and Heidelberg. From 1813 to 1815 he fought in the War of the Sixth Coalition, during which he was wounded several times. He ended his service as an officer.
One of the most formative experiences in Gerlach's life was his friendship with, whom he met in Berlin in 1815. Encouraged in large part by the contact, he and his brother Leopold took active part in the Pomeranian religious revival movement of the 1820s. The religious imprint he received from Pietism in his youth accompanied him, his actions and thoughts throughout his life. His acquaintance with the young Otto von Bismarck also stems from the same time and circle.
Gerlach entered the Prussian judicial service in 1820 and became a Superior Regional Court Councilor in Naumburg (Saale) in 1823. After 1835 he was a Regional and Municipal Court Director in Halle and Vice President of the Superior Regional Court in Frankfurt (Oder), succeeding his late brother Wilhelm.
Gerlach also took a deep interest in theological matters, opposing the rationalist trends of his time. In 1827 Gerlach, Ernst Wilhelm Hengstenberg, August Tholuck and others founded the, (Newspaper of the Evangelical Church) which became the leading organ of the early conservatives during the Vormärz period. In 1830 he authored an anonymous article for it in which he subjected the philologist Wilhelm Gesenius and the theologian Julius Wegscheider to verbal attacks because of their rationalism. Ultimately neither professor lost his position, although the conflict damaged Wegscheider’s reputation.
He was a member of the "Wilhelmstrasse Club", which had set itself the task of reconstructing a Christian-Germanic state, and was a contributor to the (Berlin Political Weekly) which appeared from 1831 to 1841. In 1842 he became Privy High Councilor of Justice, and soon thereafter a member of the State Council and the Legislative Commission under Friedrich Carl von Savigny. In addition to providing expert opinions for the planned establishment of a Journalistic Court, Gerlach worked as a consultant for a planned reform of Prussian marriage law. In 1844 he became Chief President of the Superior Regional Court and Court of Appeals in Magdeburg, where, together with his brother Leopold, the consistory president and others, he fought the Friends of the Light, a rationalist Protestant group. He left the civil service in 1874.
The events of the revolutionary year 1848 strengthened Gerlach's willingness to become active in politics. In March of that year he faced hostility from revolutionaries in Berlin and Magdeburg because of his judicial service in Magdeburg, something that by his own admission only strengthened him in his stances.[2] In the summer of 1848 he advocated traditional conservative viewpoints in a well-received speech at the general assembly of the "Association for the Protection of the Interests of Landed Property and the Promotion of the Prosperity of All Classes", also called the Junker Parliament. He and his brother Leopold also played a significant role in the "camarilla" around King Frederick William IV. It was a group of influential politicians that tried to influence the King and government leadership towards their way of thinking. Along with Friedrich Julius Stahl and others from the same circle, he founded during the course of 1848 the (New Prussian Newspaper), which was later also called the Kreuzzeitung (Cross Newspaper) because of the iron cross on the title page. Hermann Wagener, a confidant of Gerlach, was given the editorship. Gerlach later wrote the monthly or quarterly "" (Review) for the paper, following traditional conservative lines.
In 1849 he became a member of the First Chamber of the Prussian Parliament, later called the House of Lords. As chairman of the recently formed Conservative Party, he again fought a tenacious battle alongside Stahl against radical liberalism and democracy and for the restoration of the "divinely ordained", pre-revolutionary order of the Ancien Régime. As a member of the Parliament of the Erfurt Union, he advocated the same views. In his political thinking, revolution and absolutism were equally devastating deviations from the ideal of a well-ordered state, meaning a Christian state corresponding to the will of God's creation. The development of his political views was influenced early on by the writings of Karl Ludwig von Haller and later through his acquaintance and close collaboration with Friedrich Julius Stahl.
In 1852 Gerlach was elected to the House of Representatives of the Prussian Parliament for the Köslin constituency and in 1855 became the founder and chairman of the conservative parliamentary group named after him, the "Fraktion Gerlach". Under the regency of Wilhelm I (beginning in 1858, following the stroke that left his brother Frederick William IV mentally incapacitated), he lost his parliamentary mandate as a result of an unprecedented electoral defeat of the Conservatives and resigned from the leadership of the Conservative Party. He continued to assert his political views as the author of the "" in the Kreuzzeitung.
On the basis of solidarity with its ruling princes, he fought against German unification, which came about in 1871. He opposed the 1866 Austro-Prussian War, as he did keeping Austria out of Germany and Prussia’s annexations in northern Germany, as for example in the pamphlet "The Annexations and the North German Confederation" (1866). A member of the Prussian Parliament beginning in 1873, he showed himself to be one of the fiercest opponents of the church laws of Bismarck's Kulturkampf (cultural struggle) and joined the Catholic Centre Party as a guest. He thus incurred the personal enmity of Otto von Bismarck, with whom he had been friends for decades and in whose political rise he and his brother Leopold had played no small part. Because of his essay (Civil Marriage and the Imperial Chancellor), charges were brought against him in 1874 at Bismarck's instigation for contempt of authority. Gerlach was subsequently fined and the distribution of the pamphlet banned, which served only to increase its sales. Gerlach then took voluntary leave as Court President in Magdeburg, which Emperor Wilhelm I granted him.
In 1877 he was elected member of the Reichstag for the Guelph Party for the electoral district of Hanover 4 (Osnabrück), joining the centrist parliamentary group as a guest member. On 18 February 1877, however, four days before the new Reichstag was sworn in, Ernst Ludwig von Gerlach died at the age of 81 as a result of a traffic accident,[3] which had occurred on the Schöneberger Bridge in Berlin on the evening of the 16th. He is buried at Cathedral Cemetery II in Berlin-Mitte.Historical scholarship’s verdict on Gerlach is quite ambivalent. The historian Hans-Joachim Schoeps emphasized above all Gerlach's basic religious motivation:
The estate of Ernst Ludwig von Gerlach today forms the core of the Gerlach Archive, the family archive of the Gerlachs, which Hans-Joachim Schoeps was able to acquire for the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in 1954. The focus of the holdings is the "Rohrbecker Archive", which contains Gerlach’s extensive correspondence (approximately 15,000 letters from almost 9,000 correspondents), as well as that of some relatives, various official and political documents, and his diaries (1815–1877). It is now housed at the University's Institute of Political Science and was newly indexed between 2012 and 2015. Since the completion of the cataloguing project in spring 2015, the archive's holdings have been fully catalogued in the Calliope Union Catalogue for Autographs and Bequests.