Johann Ingenwinkel

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Johann Ingenwinkel (* 1469 in Xanten ; † July 22, 1535 ) was a canon and provost .

At the Roman Curia since 1496, he became protonotary in 1505 and abbreviator in 1517 . Under Popes Julius II and Leo X , he was one of the most important officials in the papal administration. He was a permanent assistant to Cardinal Giulio de Medici, who later became Pope Clement VII . Ingenwinkel had an unusually large number of benefices . He was provost in Xanten, Arnheim, Utrecht, Mainz, Bruges, Konstanz and Therauanne, at three monasteries in Cologne, dean of Soest, scholaster in Mainz, canon at two monasteries each in Utrecht and Cologne, in Emmerich, Rees, Münster, Bonn, Mainz, Mechlin, Antwerp, Douai, Deventer, Anagni and Veroli, as well as pastors in Bocholt, Dingden, Soest, Büren, Asbach, Cologne, Liège (three times), Rotterdam, Rome, Todi and Spoleto.

The papal chamberlain Johann Ingenwinkel was one of the advisors of the later Pope Hadrian VI. and was considered absolutely loyal to the Pope. For this reason, the Archbishop of Cologne, Hermann V. von Wied , had him imprisoned for several months during the charity dispute.

Footnotes

  1. Noack: Schedarium of artists in Rome. In: db.biblhertz.it. Retrieved January 8, 2015 .
  2. ^ Wilhelm Kohl: The cathedral monastery of St. Paul in Münster. Walter de Gruyter, 1982, ISBN 978-3-110-08508-2 , p. 868. Restricted preview in the Google book search

source

  • The pen from Xanten, Xanten 1986
  • Cardinal Johannes Gropper, Cologne 2003