Friedrich Karl Emanuel Hauke

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Friedrich Hauke
Friedrich Karl Emanuel Hauke by Alexander Molinari, 1806.
1806 Portrait by Alexander Molinari, 1806.
Born
Johann Friedrich Michael Hauck

(1737-10-04)4 October 1737
Mainz, Holy Roman Empire
Died18 June 1810(1810-06-18) (aged 72)
Warsaw, Duchy of Warsaw, Poland
OccupationAcademician
Spouse
(m. 1736)
Parents
  • Ignatz Marianus Hauck (father)
  • Marie Franziska Riedesel zu Eisenbach (mother)
FamilyHauke-Bosak

Friedrich Karl Emanuel Hauke (born Johann Friedrich Michael Hauck;

illegitimate (later acknowledged) daughter of Baron Georg Riedesel zu Eisenbach. Friedrich is a direct ancestor of the British and Spanish royal families. Three of his sons were elevated to the rank of count within Poland–Lithuania and the Holy Roman Empire
.

Career

Friedrich's brother, Peter Anton, was a canon at the Mainz Cathedral. From a young age, Friedrich worked as a secretary to the family of the Counts of Brühl, living alternately in Seifersdorf, in Saxony, and Warsaw. In 1782, Hauke and his siblings changed their family name from Hauck to the more phonetic Hauke.[1][2] In 1785 Count Alois Friedrich von Brühl moved permanently to Saxony, while the Haukes, whose children became attached to Warsaw, remained in Poland.[3] Friedrich first taught at the Crown Artillery School, then he ran an exclusive private school for boys, attended by the sons of the rich nobility. In 1807 he accepted the post of Professor of German and Mathematics at the Warsaw Lyceum, where he remained until his death.[4]

Marriage

In 1773, Hauke married

Johann Moritz Hauke, father of Julia, Princess of Battenberg (1825–1895). Through Julia, Friedrich is a direct ancestor of the British and Spanish
royal families. Friedrich and Maria Salomé's issue:

References

  1. ^ a b "The Hauke Family". www.wargs.com. Retrieved 2021-05-31.
  2. ^ a b Stanisław Łoza, Rodziny polskie obcego pochodzenia osiadłe w Warszawie i okolicach, I - III (Warsaw, 1932-35)
  3. ^ Stanisław Szenic, Cmentarz Powązkowski 1790-1850 (Warsaw, 1979)
  4. ^ Eugeniusz Szulc, Cmentarz ewangelicko-augsburski w Warszawie (Warsaw, 1989)