- Adolf Heinrich von Arnim-Boitzenburg
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Adolf Heinrich von Arnim-Boitzenburg 1st Prime Minister of Prussia In office
19 March – 29 March 1848Succeeded by Gottfried Ludolf Camphausen Personal details Born 10 April 1803
Berlin, Prussia
Died January 8, 1868 (aged 64)
Schloss Boitzenburg, Brandenburg, PrussiaPolitical party None Adolf Heinrich Graf[1] Arnim-Boitzenburg (10 April 1803 – 8 January 1868) was a German statesman, and the first Prime Minister of Prussia.
After finishing his studies, he joined the Prussian civil service and soon became Landrat in the Uckermark. In 1833 he became Regierungspräsident in the Regierungsbezirk Stralsund. He later asusmed the same position in Aix-la-Chapelle and Merseburg. In 1840 he became President of the Province of Posen, and in 1842 Prussian Minister of the Interior. From 19 March 1848 to 29 March 1848 he was the Prussian Prime Minister.
From 18 May to 10 June 1848 he was a representative for Prenzlau in the Frankfurt Parliament. In 1850 he was a member of the Erfurt Union parliament, in 1854-1868 he belonged to various chambers of the Prussian Parliament and in 1839–1868 he belonged to the provincial parliament of Brandenburg.
Arnim is known to this day for his remarks as Prussian Interior Minister concerning Heinrich Heine's poem Die schlesischen Weber. In a report to King Frederick William IV he described it 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 Superior Court of Justice banned the poem, which led in 1846 led to a prison sentence for one person for reciting it.
Notes
Ministers President of Prussia Kingdom of Prussia
(1701–1918)Office established 1848 · Arnim-Boitzenburg · Camphausen · Auerswald · Pfuel · Brandenburg · Ladenberg · Manteuffel · Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen · Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen · Bismarck · Roon · Bismarck · Caprivi · Eulenburg · Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst · Bülow · Bethmann Hollweg · Michaelis · Hertling · BadenFree State of Prussia
in the Weimar Republic
(1918–1933)Free State of Prussia
in the Third Reich
(1933–1935)Hertzberg · Goltz · Hardenberg · Bernstorff · Ancillon · Werther · Maltzan · H. Bülow · Canitz und Dallwitz · Arnim-Boitzenburg · Arnim · Schleinitz · Auerswald · Dönhoff · Brandenburg · Eichmann · Arnim-Heinrichsdorff-Werbelow · Brandenburg · Schleinitz · Radowitz · Manteuffel · Schleinitz · Bernstorff · Bismarck · Caprivi · Bieberstein · B. Bülow · Bethmann Hollweg · Michaelis · Hertling · BadenCount Alexander von Dohna-Schlobitten · Count Karl August von Hardenberg · Count Friedrich von Schuckmann · Baron Wilhelm von Humboldt · Count Friedrich von Schuckman · Baron Gustav von Brenn · Gustav Adolf Rochus von Rochow · Adolf Heinrich von Arnim-Boitzenburg · Ernst von Bodelschwingh-Velmede · Alfred von Auerswald · Friedrich von Kühlwetter · Franz August Ecihmann · Baron Otto Theodor von Manteuffel · Ferdinand Otto Wilhelm Henning von Westphalen · Eduard von Flottwell · Count Maximilian von Schwerin-Putzar · Gustav Wilhelm von Jagow · Count Friedrich Albrecht zu Eulenburg · Count Botho zu Eulenburg · Robert von Puttkammer · Ludwig Herrfurt · Count Botho zu Eulenburg · Ernst von Koeller · Baron Eberhard Recke von der Horst · Baron Georg von Rheinbaben · Baron Hans von Hammerstein-Loxten · Theobald von Bethmann-Hollweg · Friedrich von Moltke · Johann von Dallwitz · Friedrich Wilhelm von Loebell · Bill Drews · Paul Hirsch · vacant · Carl Severing · Albert Grzesinski · Heinrich Waentig · Carl Severing · Franz Bracht · Hermann Göring
Categories:- 1803 births
- 1868 deaths
- People from Berlin
- Members of the Prussian House of Lords
- People from the Margraviate of Brandenburg
- Prime Ministers of Prussia
- Members of the Frankfurt Parliament
- German politician stubs
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