This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (December 2008) |
Hans Adolf Erdmann von Auerswald (1792 – September 18, 1848) was a Prussian general and politician.
Biography
editAuerswald was born in Faulen, West Prussia[1] where the family possessed the estates of Plauth and Tromnau.
He entered the Prussian army in 1813 and by 1848 had become a major general. Three precincts had elected him to the Frankfurt parliament where he joined the conservatives, but he did not participate in the party leadership or the debates. On September 17, 1848, a gathering on the Pfingstweide in Frankfurt led by Franz Zitz had, on account of the parliament's decision regarding the truce of Malmö, declared the members thereof traitors to the fatherland, freedom and honor. The result was the uprising on the next day where a mob went looking for Reichsminister Hekscher and Prince Felix Lichnowsky. Auerswald had ridden out with Lichnowsky, and by the Friedberger Gate, the mob discovered them. They tried to flee. At the Bethmann villa, Auerswald was killed by a pistol shot.
References
edit- ^ Kleineres Brockhaus'sches Konversationslexikon (in German). F.A. Brockhaus. 1854. p. 306.
- Ferdinand Freiherr von Meerheimb, “Auerswald, Hans Adolf Erdmann von” in Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, Band 1 (Leipzig, 1875), S. 650–651. (in German)