Georg Dietloff von Arnim-Boitzenburg (18 September 1679 – 20 October 1753) was a Prussian statesman and senior minister under Frederick the Great.
In 1710, he managed to pay off the co-heirs of the Boitzenburger estate, redeem pledged property and become the sole owner of the villages of Kröchlendorff (today part of Nordwestuckermark), Milow, Kuhz, Wichmannsdorf, Kleinow and Falkenwalde.
[1] Frederick II brought him back into civil service in 1749 and appointed him directing minister and vice president of the General Directorate.
[3][4] Together, they had ten children, including:[5] Arnim died on 20 October 1753 in Berlin and was buried in the St. Mary's Church in Boitzenburg, where a tomb commemorates him.
[1] Through his son Abraham, he was a grandfather of Friedrich Wilhelm von Arnim-Boitzenburg (1739–1801), the Prussian civil servant and Minister of State and War from 1786 to 1798 who was raised to hereditary Prussian count on 2 October 1786 by King Frederick William II.