Historical records matching Hans Hendrich Rode
Immediate Family
-
son
-
daughter
-
daughter
-
daughter
-
father
-
mother
-
brother
-
sister
About Hans Hendrich Rode
Hans Hendrich født 1767 i Halden prestegjeld https://media.digitalarkivet.no/view/7415/37676/51
Viet 1798 i Garnisons sogn, København https://www.sa.dk/ao-soegesider/da/billedviser?epid=17114961#203754...
_________________________
https://lokalhistoriewiki.no/wiki/Hans_Henrich_Rode
Oberst og General krigskommisær Hans Henrik Rode
Hans H. Rode var utdannet ved Landkadetakademiet i København og hadde fra 1783 til 1800 tjenestegjort ved hoffet og Kongens regiment. Til Norge kom han i 1809 som overadjutant for prins Frederik av Hessen. Han hadde da nådd oberstløytnants grad og blitt medlem av generalstaben.
I 1806 hadde Rode deltatt i krigene mot Napoleon. I Norge ble han igjen dratt inn i dette spillet, men nå også på politisk side. I mai 1813 deltok han på et møte han på et møte i regi av Christian Frederik, hvor angrep på Sverige ble diskutert. Året etter var han med på Notabelmøtet på Eidsvoll. Senere samme år ble han løst fra tjenesten i Danmark og satt inn i krigen mot Sverige. Å forlate Danmark var tungt for Rode som gjennom karrieren var blitt nært
knyttet til kongehuset i København. Det har for øvrig også vært hevdet at hans kone Charite Nicoline Rode (født Holst) var et uekte barn av arveprins Frederik. Likevel vendte han ikke tilbake, men ble boende på gården Hellerud ved Nordstrand frem til sin død.
http://www.eidsvoll1814.no/default.aspx?did=9051166&aid=9043784
Hans Henrik Rode (9 September 1767 – 29 December 1830) was a Danish-Norwegian military officer.
He was born in Frederikshald as a son of major Georg Frederik Rode and his first wife Vilhelmine, née Stockfleth.
He took a military education in Denmark, and became second lieutenant in 1784.
He was promoted to premier lieutenant in 1790 and captain in 1800, and in the same year he became aide-de-camp for the governor in Rendsborg, Prince Frederick of Hesse.
Rode was also a teacher at the military institute in Rendsborg from 1800 to 1808. He was promoted further to lieutenant in 1803, major in 1809 and lieutenant colonel in 1809. In 1809 Frederick of Hesse was appointed as commanding general in the southern part of Norway, and Rode followed him here.
Frederick of Hesse left Norway in 1813, whereas Rode stayed. He became a prominent figure in society, and participated in the Meeting of Notables in February 1814.
When the former Crown Prince Christian Frederick of Denmark was elected King of Norway by the Norwegian Constituent Assembly in May 1814, Rode was appointed chamberlain with the rank of colonel in the same month.
During the Swedish campaign against Norway of the summer, which would eventually oust Christian Frederick, Rode commanded a brigade—which did not see military action. Despite the change that occurred when Norway and Sweden formed a union, Rode remained a prominent figure.
Having become general commissary of war in October 1814, he remained so until his death at the farm Søndre Hellerud in December 1830
Oberst Rodes vei i Oslo er oppkalt etter ham.
Hans Hendrich Rode's Timeline
1767 |
September 9, 1767
|
Halden, Østfold, Norway
|
|
September 13, 1767
|
Halden
|
||
1800 |
March 23, 1800
|
København, Region Hovedstaden, Danmark (Denmark)
|
|
1806 |
February 9, 1806
|
||
1810 |
1810
|
Oslo, Oslo, Norway
|
|
1812 |
September 1, 1812
|
Frederiksberg, Frederiksberg, Capital Region of Denmark, Denmark
|
|
1818 |
1818
|
Kristiania, Oslo, Norge (Norway)
|
|
1821 |
March 20, 1821
|
Christiania, Oslo, Norge (Norway)
|
|
1830 |
December 29, 1830
Age 63
|
Hellerud, Aker, Oslo, Oslo, Norway
|
|
1831 |
January 10, 1831
Age 63
|