Joachim Godske Moltke

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Joachim Godske von Moltke (25 July 1746 – 5 October 1818) was the Prime Minister of Denmark from 1814 to 1818. He was also father of Prime Minister Adam Wilhelm Moltke[1] and the son of Danish diplomat Adam Gottlob Moltke.[2]

Born(1746-07-25)25 July 1746
Marienborg Manor, Møn
Died5 October 1818(1818-10-05) (aged 72)
Quick facts Prime minister of Denmark, Predecessor ...
Joachim Godske von Moltke
Prime minister of Denmark
PredecessorFrederik Julius Kaas
SuccessorErnst Heinrich von Schimmelmann
Born(1746-07-25)25 July 1746
Marienborg Manor, Møn
Died5 October 1818(1818-10-05) (aged 72)
SpouseGeorgine von Buchwald
IssueAdam Wilhelm Moltke
FatherAdam Gottlob Moltke
MotherChristiane Frederikke von Brüggemann
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Early life

Joachim Godske Moltke was born on 25 July 1746. He was the son of Danish diplomat Adam Gottlob Moltke (1710–1792), the influential Lord Steward and companion of Frederick V of Denmark,[1] and Christiane Frederikke von Brüggemann (1712–1760), the daughter of Godske Hans von Brügmann, til Østergaard og Ulriksholm and Margrethe Wilhelmine von Hausmann.[3] Between his two wives, his father was said to have had 22 sons, five of whom became cabinet ministers, four who became ambassadors, two who became generals, and all of whom went into public service.[4]

Career

Moltke served as Prime Minister of Denmark from 1814 until 14 August 1818.[1]

Personal life

Moltke was married to Georgine von Buchwald (1759–1808), the daughter of Caspar von Buchwald and Sophie Charlotte von Hahn. They were the parents of: Adam Wilhelm Moltke (1785–1864).[1]

Moltke died on 5 October 1818.

Honours

In 1817, botanist Johann Georg Christian Lehmann published Moltkia, a genus in the family Boraginaceae with 6 accepted species from the south of Europe and western Asia.[5] Then in 1953, botanist I.M.Johnst. published Moltkiopsis, a monotypic genus of flowering plants from northern Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, belonging to the family Boraginaceae.[6] Both plants were dedicated after Joachim Godske Moltke.[7]

References

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