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  1. Eulenburg nació en Wicken, en las cercanías de Bartenstein, 1 siendo hijo de Botho Heinrich zu Eulenburg (1804-1879) y Teresa, nacida von Dönhoff (1806-1882). 2 Estudió leyes en las universidades de Königsberg y Bonn . Eulenburg ejerció altos puesto en la administración prusiana y germana en Wiesbaden (1869-1872), Metz (presidente del ...

  2. Botho Wendt August Graf zu Eulenburg (31 July 1831 – 5 February 1912) was a Prussian statesman. Throughout the entire German Empire period he was, alongside Albrecht von Roon the only Minister President of Prussia not also to be Chancellor of Germany , with the two offices being practically synonymous.

  3. Botho Wendt zu Eulenburg Graf zu Eulenburg in Galauniform (um 1912). Botho Wendt August Graf zu Eulenburg (* 31.Juli 1831 in Wicken bei Bartenstein; † 5. November 1912 in Berlin) war ein deutscher Ministerpräsident und Innenminister in Preußen, Senior des Domstifts zu Brandenburg.

  4. Eulenburg (Adelsgeschlecht) Die Herren, Grafen und Fürsten zu Eulenburg (früher von Ileburg) gehören zum obersächsischen Uradel, der mit Conradus de Ilburg 1170–1197 urkundlich [1] zuerst erscheint, wonach mit Otto de Yleborch 1199 die ununterbrochene Stammfolge beginnt. Sie waren Ministerialen der Wettiner auf der Ileburg (heute ...

  5. Botho, count zu Eulenburg (born July 31, 1831, near Bartenstein, Prussia—died November 5, 1912, Berlin) was a Prussian statesman associated with the Conservative Party in imperial Germany. As Prussian minister of the interior (1878–81), Eulenburg formulated Chancellor Otto von Bismarck ’s laws against the Social Democrats and presented them to the imperial Reichstag .

  6. Eulenburg wanted his cousin Botho zu Eulenburg to be Caprivi's replacement, but Friedrich von Holstein was able to persuade Wilhelm not to appoint Eulenburg as chancellor. [46] However, Eulenburg managed to convince Wilhelm to appoint the aged Prince Chlodwig zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst , who was the German Empire's ambassador to France in 1881 when Eulenburg served in the Paris embassy, as ...

  7. Botho Sigwart zu Eulenburg. Sigwart Botho Philipp August zu Eulenburg, Count of Eulenburg (10 January 1884, in Munich – 2 June 1915, in Jasło) was the second son of Philipp, Prince of Eulenburg (1847–1921) and his wife Augusta, born Countess of Sandels (1853–1941) and a German late romantic composer who fell in the First World War. [1] [2]