Difference between revisions of "Everard, Charles"

From Business Encyclopedia of the Oldenburg Monarchy
Jump to: navigation, search
m
Line 1: Line 1:
Called "Baron de Wachter" or the German name :Carl Eberhard Wachter (1746-1825)
+
Called "Baron de Wachter" or the German name: Carl Eberhard Wachter (1746-1825)
  
 
Envoy extraordinary of his Danish Majesty to the Courts of Metz and Munich, and the Circles of the Upper Rhine and Swabia, resident at Frankfurt am Main. ([https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C3209232 British High Court of Admiralty.  
 
Envoy extraordinary of his Danish Majesty to the Courts of Metz and Munich, and the Circles of the Upper Rhine and Swabia, resident at Frankfurt am Main. ([https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C3209232 British High Court of Admiralty.  

Revision as of 14:45, 3 October 2019

Called "Baron de Wachter" or the German name: Carl Eberhard Wachter (1746-1825)

Envoy extraordinary of his Danish Majesty to the Courts of Metz and Munich, and the Circles of the Upper Rhine and Swabia, resident at Frankfurt am Main. ([https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C3209232 British High Court of Admiralty. He was of the most influential personalities in the transmission of the Strict Observance and German Freemasonry of the 18th century. Originally a laywer from Stuttgart with a passion for politics. He also worked outside of his homeland in Masonic networks. On the recommendation of Landgreve Karl von Hessen-Kassel Danish Chamberlain and Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Denmark for Southwest Germany. As such, he exercised extensive diplomatic activity. During the French Revolution as a diplomat in Paris, he was persuaded by Queen Marie Antoinette to initiate relief operations for that wavering royal house. (FreimaurerWiki).

1777 - Visited the Comte d'Albanie as a deputy of the united Templar lodges of Germany. Described as in favor of the idea of "Strict Observance" with the masonic lodges and against the new Swedish system. (Paul Kleber Monod: Jacobitism and the English People, 1688-1788, p. 303)

1783 - Filed a claim against the British at the capture of St Eustatius 1781-2-3 through Battier, John Ralph. (British High Court of Admiralty)