Ministry of the Royal Family (Prussia)
In Prussia, the Minister of the Royal Family was responsible for the administration of the crown estates and the safeguarding of other royal rights.
Legal Status
Until the March Revolution, the Ministry of the Royal Family was officially part of the State Ministry. Due to its special responsibilities, the respective office holders rarely participated in government meetings.[1] After 1848, the Minister of the Royal Family was formally a court authority associated with the Office of the Chief Chamberlain. It was no longer part of the Prussian State Ministry.[2]
Responsibilities
The ministry was responsible for, among other things, the Herald's Office, the archives of the royal house, the administration of family estates, and the family trust. In addition to the civilian secret cabinet, it also served to handle clemency cases and was responsible for carrying out royal orders that were not the responsibility of the government.[3]
Ministers of the Royal Family
Name | Term Began | Term Ended | Image |
---|---|---|---|
Wilhelm zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Hohenstein | 1819 | 1851 |
|
Ludwig von Massow (interim) | 1851 | 1851 | |
Anton Graf zu Stolberg-Wernigerode | 1851 | 1854 | |
Ludwig von Massow (interim) | 1854 | 1856 | |
Ludwig von Massow | 1856 | 1858 | |
Alexander von Schleinitz | 1861 | 1885 | |
Otto zu Stolberg-Wernigerode | 1885 | 1888 | |
Wilhelm von Wedel | 1888 | 1907 | |
August zu Eulenburg | 1907 | 1918 |
Residences
Originally, the minister resided in the Berlin City Palace, and the administration was temporarily distributed among other royal or other properties. With the purchase of the palace at Wilhelmstraße 73 in 1858, the ministry acquired a single office building for the first time.