Background
Frederic (or Friedrich) Hans von Rosenberg was born on 26 December 1874 at Berlin.
Frederic (or Friedrich) Hans von Rosenberg was born on 26 December 1874 at Berlin.
He served as Reichsaußenminister (Foreign Minister of Germany) in the cabinet of Wilhelm Cuno in 1922–1923. In 1897, he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence (Law) and entered the Prussian judicial service, in which he was promoted to Assessor in 1903. That year he transferred to the foreign service (Auswärtiges Amt, Associate of Arts).
In 1910, Rosenberg became the head of the Balkans department at the Associate of Arts, and in 1912 was promoted to Vortragender Rat.
In 1918–1919, he was at the German Embassy to Switzerland at Bern. In 1919, Rosenberg became Dirigent—head of the political department of the Associate of Arts. In 1920-1922, he was Ambassador at Vienna, and in 1922 briefly at Copenhagen.
He was Foreign Minister of Germany from November 1922 to August 1923 in the cabinet of chancellor Wilhelm Cuno. From 1924 to 1933, he was Ambassador at Stockholm and then served from 1933 to 1935 as ambassador in Ankara.
In 1935, he was given an indefinite leave (im einstweiligen Ruhestand).
He died on 30 July 1937 at Fürstenzell, in Bavaria.
During the First World War, he was a member of the German delegation negotiating with the Soviet Union at Brest-Litowsk and with Romania at Bucharest.