Alexander von Westerholt
Count Alexander Ferdinand von Westerholt was a Bavarian statesman and scholar.
Early life
Westerhold was born in the Free Imperial City of Regensburg in 1763. He was the son of Johann Jakob von Westerholt, who had been born in Koblenz and had inherited the position of postmaster. In 1755, he became Hofmarschall for Alexander Ferdinand, 3rd Prince of Thurn and Taxis in Regensburg before becoming President of the Court Economy. He was also Electoral Treasurer of the Electorate of Trier and Cologne. He was raised Imperial vicar to the Imperial count by Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria in Munich in 1790.His paternal grandparents were Johann Karl Albert von Westerholt, who owned the Vilckrath estate in the Duchy of Berg through his mother.
Career
Westerholt was a Privy Councilor and statesman who served as vice president of the government during the Napoleonic Wars. He was also a scholar who served as chief librarian. He was based in Regensburg when it was the permanent seat of the Imperial Diet. In April 1803, Regensburg was mediatised to the new Principality of Regensburg before being ceded to the Kingdom of Bavaria by the Treaty of Paris in 1810. Letters between Westerholt and Jesuit theologian Johann Michael Sailer were published by the Regensburg diocese.Reportedly, he was a member of the Illuminati under the code name Montaigne/Themistocles.
Personal life
He married English born Countess Winifred von Jenison-Walworth, a daughter of Count Francis Jenison of Walworth who moved his family to the Electoral Palatinate. Among her siblings were Count Franz von Jenison-Walworth and Countess Susan von Jenison-Walworth. Together, they were the parents of:- Karl Theodor von Westerholt, who married his cousin, Harriet Caroline Octavia Spencer, daughter of William Robert Spencer, in 1819. Harriet, who had an illegitimate child with the 6th Duke of Marlborough before marrying him, died in 1831 and he married the wealthy Hungarian Countess Amalia von Jenison-Walworth, the former wife of his cousin, Count Franz Oliver von Jenison-Walworth, in 1831. Amalia was the older sister of Count Lajos Batthyány. After his second marriage to Amalia, he retired to Giebelbach near Lindau on Lake Constance.