Count Friedrich Wilhelm von Quadt zu Wykradt und Isny (23 December 1818 – 24 October 1892) was a Bavarian politician and diplomat.
Quadt was born in Isny on 23 December 1818. He was the son of Count Wilhelm Otto Friedrich Albert von Quadt zu Wykradt und Isny and Maria Anna, Countess von Thurn-Valsassina.[1] His elder brother, Bavarian Reichsrat Otto von Quadt-Wykradt-Isny, married Countess Marie von Schönburg-Forderglauchau (a daughter of Alban von Schönburg-Forderglauchau).
He attended high school in Kempten before attending the University of Munich.
He served as interim chargé d'affaires in St. Petersburg, Hanover and Paris.[2] In 1848 he was a member of the Pre-Parliament. From 1860, he was Bavarian Envoy in Hanover, from 1867 in Brussels, and from 1868 to 1870 in Paris. In 1871, he was the Bavarian envoy at the peace negotiations in Brussels and signed the protocol to the peace treaty with France in Berlin.
He was a Centre Party member of the German Reichstag from 1874 to 1877 for the constituency of Middle Franconia and from 1881 to 1884 for the constituency of Swabia.
On 31 January 1854, he married Sophie van der Mark (1818–1856), widow of the Count of Panisse-Passis and daughter of Jean Baptiste Agapit van der Mark and Marie Françoise Amélie Lanchère de la Glanderie. Before her death in 1856, they were the parents of:
He married, secondly, to Marianne, Countess of Rechberg and Rothenlöwen (1834–1910), daughter of Count Albert von Rechberg (president of the First Chamber of the Estates of Württemberg) and his wife and cousin, Countess Walpurga Marie Julie von Rechberg (1809-1883), in Donzdorf on 1 June 1858. Together, they were the parents of:
Count Quadt died on 24 October 1892 at Schloss Moos in Lindau on Lake Constance.[4] His widow died there in 1919.
Through his daughter Elisabeth, he was a grandfather of Joseph-Ernst Graf Fugger von Glött (1895–1981), a representative of the Christian Social Union of Bavaria who was a member of the Bundestag of Germany between 1949 and 1953 and a member of the Landtag of Bavaria from 1954 to 1962.[5]