Simon Reichwein

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Simon Reichwein von Montabaur (Rychwyn, Rychuinus, Riquinus) or Dythemius (Ditemius) (* around 1501 in Montabaur ; † 1559 in Trier ) was a German humanist , doctor and scholar.

Life

origin

Simon Reichwein's parents were the aldermen and mayor of Montabaur Konrad (Cuno; Coene; Coeneman) Richwin (* before 1480; † 1535) and his wife Guitgin (Jutta). To an annuity amounting to 2½ guilders, which the Prior Andreas and the front of the Montabaurer aldermen Cuno Richwin and his wife in 1510 Prämonstratenser - monastery Arnstein had promised the monastery led 1535 a controversy with Simon Reich wine and his brothers.

Konrad (Coene) Richwyn (also: Sipges Conrad) from Westerburg is documented from 1506 to 1535 as a lay judge and city scholar in Montabaur in the Electorate of Trier . He was a son of Sipgyn (Sipigen; Sifrid) Richwin, Peter Weber's son, mentioned as town school in Westerburg from 1473 to 1503, and his wife Humut, who in 1491 acquired a third of the tithe at Montabaur and Dernbach . Konrad's brother Peter Richwin († 1538) had been provost of St. Severus in Gemünden since 1498 , his sister Irmina was with NN. Married. A Johann (hen) Rychwyn had leased the excise in Montabaur between 1491 and 1507 and was there in 1485, 1490 lay judge and 1498 mayor. Reynardus Rijchwijn de Westerborch enrolled in 1507 in Cologne, received in 1511 the altar of St. Anthony Chapel in Neustadt and was until 1540 a priest in Kirchähr , 1545-1549 canons in Gemünden.

A son of the Montabaurer mayor is mentioned in 1511 as a canon in Gemünden and chaplain of the Archbishop of Trier. Simon's brother Johann Richwini held a canonical in Gemünden until 1524, which he renounced in favor of Severus Richwini († after 1534). Simon and Jan (Johann) "Ditemius" (Reichwein) became teachers together in Diest around 1524 . The two brothers probably adopted the humanist name “Ditemius” or “Dythemius” after the Greek word δίδυμος dídymos for “twin” . Simons sister humility (* around 1505/10; † after 1590) of "Mont Thabur" was as a child in 1517 by the champion Anna of Heppenheim issue (Heppsen) († 1528) "zo a chore geweyelter sister " in the Premonstratensian - Monastery Beselich added ; other daughters of "Cuno Rychwin" are mentioned in the admission protocol. Humility Reichwein later became the prioress and in 1587 the administrator or last abbess (headmistress) of the monastery. Susanna Reichwin († after 1569) von Montabaur ("von Mundbaurn"), a sister or cousin of Simon, was married to the doctor Johann Dryander .

The father of the Reichwein siblings, mayor Conrat Richwin zu Montabaur, was in another marriage with Anna NN in 1535. married.

Study and work as a preceptor

In 1518 "Sijm [on] Rijchwijn al [ias] Dythemius de Montebuer" enrolled at the Artistic Faculty of the University of Cologne and studied there until around 1522/23. Reichwein belonged to the Montana Burse under the humanist Quirin op dem Veld von Willich († 1537). Beatus Rhenanus (1485–1547) prophesied that he would one day be a Ludimagister (teacher). In 1520, together with Heinrich Bullinger (1504–1575) and Gerardus Bucoldianus († after 1542) as “Symon Montebuir” under Arnold Haldrein (1484–1534), he passed the baccalaureate exam; because of poverty he only had to pay half the fee. From 1522 Reichwein was a master's degree and - against the wishes of his father, who already wanted to tie him to the Trier court at that time - the preceptor of the young Counts Anton von Isenburg († 1531) and Salentin von Isenburg († 1544), the sons of Count Salentin VI . von Isenburg-Neumagen-Grenzau (1492–1534) and Elisabeth von Hunolstein-Neumagen (* around 1476, † around 1536), who had previously been taught by Johannes Caesarius .

Diest and lions

In 1523 or rather 1524, Reichwein, who was staying with his students in Cologne at that time, was appointed rector of the newly founded “Collegium Humanitatis” in Diest for a salary of 100 Philippstalers annually . According to the employment contract, lessons should be based on the humanistic curriculum of the schools in 's-Hertogenbosch or Liège, which were led by brothers who lived together . Simon took up the post on September 1st, his brother Johann, who came to Diest with him as a teacher, on July 1st. Simon Reichwin held this position for almost three years, then moved to Leuven, "disgusted by meanness ( pertesus sordium )", and enrolled there in 1527 at the Collegium Trium Linguarum Lovaniense ( "Three-Language College" in Leuven), which was launched in 1517 at the suggestion of Erasmus was founded by Rotterdam (1465 / 69-1536). Here he met the humanists Konrad Goclenius (1455–1538), Rutger Rescius (1497–1545) and Johannes Campensis († 1538). Janus Cornarius (* around 1500; † 1558) stayed with Reichwein in Leuven for a few years until he fell out with his wife. In 1528, "Simon Rychuinus" reported to Erasmus, whom he had apparently already visited once in Basel , in a letter of the disputes that a certain "man from Gent" ("quidam Gandauus") - probably Joachim Maartens († after 1540) - with the Parisian theologian Noël Béda (1470–1537) led. In 1529 Reichwein was named “Dr. med. ” mentioned. Erasmus considered the young doctors “Simon Ricuinus, who ... exemplary behavior and intellectual agility” ( summa morum ingeniique dexteritas ) distinguished, or Joachim Maartens in Ghent, who recognized “talent, a certain accuracy and expressiveness” ( ingenium, exactum quiddam & excusum ) made it suitable to compose the renewed teaching of medicine ( res medicina restituenda ) longed for by Georgius Agricola based on knowledge of the ancient authorities and perception of mineral substances.

Personal physician at the Düsseldorf court

When an epidemic of the so-called English sweat broke out in Antwerp in 1529 and spread, Reichwein contributed to the medical examination De novo hactenvsque Germaniae inavdito morbo ἱδροπυρετοῦ (= About the new and so far unknown in Germany disease of “sweat fever” ), the Count Hermanns von Neuenahr (1492–1530) at. Reichwein demonstrated in his treatise the knowledge of the newer medical scholars Niccolò Leoniceno and Giovanni Manardo at the University of Ferrara . He gave a copy of the book to Erasmus. Reichwein was now the personal physician of Duke Johann von Jülich-Kleve-Berg (1490–1539) and lived in Benrath . He greeted Erasmus from "our" Jülich-Bergisch chancellor ( cancellarius noster ) Johann Ghogreve († 1554) and from councilor Konrad Heresbach (1496–1576), the tutor of Prince Wilhelm V (1516–1692). He stayed often in Cologne, but was not, as was sometimes suspected, a member of the Kurkölner Hof. Reichwein also had contacts with the Lower Rhine humanists Johann von Vlatten (1498–1562) and Petrus Medmann (1507–1584). In 1530 Medmann took a letter from Reichwein to Erasmus with him on a trip from Cologne to Strasbourg.

In a letter to Strasbourg in 1531, Erasmus protested against the rumor that he had secretly sent a letter to " Vulturius (= vulture )", meaning Gerhard Geldenhauer , to the doctor Simon Reichwein, so that he could arrange for the publication in Cologne before that Letter could reach its recipient. It was about the Epistola contra pseudevangelicos , which Erasmus had published in Freiburg at the turn of the year 1529/30 and which was soon reprinted in Cologne. Geldenhauer, too - probably in Strasbourg - ordered an unauthorized reprint of the Epistola in 1530 .

City doctor and personal physician in Trier and Koblenz

Reichwein was the city doctor in Trier from 1532/33 . In 1533 he treated the abbot Robert von Monreal († 1539) of the imperial abbey of Echternach and wrote health rules (a regimen sanitatis ) for him. In the same year he bought the house "Zum Horn" in the Brückergasse . The theology professor Ambrosius Pelargus , OP (around 1493 / 94–1561) became friends with him after being called to Trier in 1534. Reichwein succeeded Johann Dryander, who was appointed to the University of Marburg in 1535, in the function of personal physician to Archbishop Johann III of Trier . von Metzenhausen (1492–1540; ruled 1531) in Trier and Koblenz.

In 1537, "Doctor Simon Richwin" is said to have also been Markvogt of Diekirch ; however, it was probably about Johann Reichwein, who is mentioned in a wisdom from Erpeldingen and Marienthal (1585) as the former march bailiff of “Dieckirchen”. Perhaps “Margvogt Johann Richwin” († after 1546) was Simon's brother. In a legal dispute between the abbot Laurenz Bach († 1545) and the convent of the Arnstein monastery against the Reichwein brothers in Montabaur because of a pension of 2½ guilders per year from a recently burned down house in Montabaur and a second annuity claimed by the monastery The lawyer Peter von Eschbach (Espach) issued an arbitration award in 1537 on behalf of the Elector of Trier.

Medicus Simon Reichwein von Montabaur took in October 1538 in the entourage of Archbishop Johann III. von Metzenhausen took part in the Rhenish Electoral Congress in Mainz . In July 1540, Reichwein accompanied Archbishop Johann III. on his trip to the Hagenau Religious Discussion and treated him after a stroke he suffered in the summer heat on the way there at Thannstein Castle in Alsace ; Johann III. died there a day later.

In 1542/43 “Simon Rechwin” , doctor of medicine, and his wife Margarethe Kebisch bought vineyards in Trittenheim and Leiwen for 213 ½ rader gulden from Thies Simons and his wife Anna . As “Dr. med. Symon Richwin from Montabaur ”he granted Count Diedrich IV of Manderscheid-Schleiden (1481–1551) a loan in 1545. In 1550 he leased a vineyard "in Coblenzer maerken der Reinawen" (cf. today street name Rheinau ).

In 1547/48 and 1550/51 Reichwein accompanied the reform-loving Trier Elector and Archbishop Johann V. von Isenburg -Grenzau (1507–1556; ruled 1547) as a personal physician to the Reichstag in Augsburg . In 1553 he was commissioned to carry out the first Kurtrier pharmacy visit in accordance with Article 33 of the Reich Police Order of 1548. Archbishop Johann V spent the last years of his life after a stroke in 1553 at Montabaur Castle . Presumably, Reichwein also served the next archbishop, Johann VI. von der Leyen (around 1510–1567).

With Petrus Mosellanus (1493–1524), Ulrich Fabricius (1489–1526), Justinus Gobler († 1567), Christoph Eschenfelder the Elder. Ä († after 1546) and others, Reichwein belongs to the Kurtrier humanist circle around Koblenz . The grandfather of his wife Georg Kebisch († 1516) already owned feudal houses of the Archbishop of Trier in the Koblenzer Burggasse and lived there in the Virneburg house . Reichwein's father-in-law Ludolf Kebisch († before 1532) also lived mainly in Koblenz.

Engraving by Matthäus Merian from 1646, largely in the state of approx. 1548 after a drawing by Simon Reichwein

Reichwein conducted extensive correspondence, especially with Erasmus von Rotterdam and Sebastian Münster (1489–1552). During his time in Trier, he worked at the Cosmographia ” of Münster, which he met personally at the Diet in Augsburg in 1547/48. The description of the Eifel and the Eifel map from 1550 are ascribed to Reichwein as are the descriptions of Trier and Koblenz. The city view of Triers, based on drawings by Reichwein from 1548, was first printed in 1550. Matthäus Merian (1593–1650) copied it, and it determined the general view of Trier for 250 years. A picture ( pictura ) of the cityscape of Cologne marked with the year 1548 was also sent to Münster by his friend ( amicus ) " Simon Richwinus ".

Reichwein died a wealthy man, leaving the houses "to kettle", "For Horn" and the "Red House" in the Trier jumper alley (now Bridge Street opposite the Jüdemerstraße ), with whom he in 1532 by Archbishop John III., In 1542 by Archbishop John IV. Ludwig von Hagen (1492–1547; ruled 1540) and again in 1557 as the successor to his late wife Margarete Kebisch from Archbishop Johann VI. was enfeoffed. The two houses adjoining the “Rothaus” had been bought by Doctor Symon Reichwein von Monthabaur and given to the bishopric as male and female fiefs.

family

Reichwein had already been married in Leuven in 1528. In 1532 he had the house of his wife Margarethe Kebisch († between 1542 and 1550), a granddaughter of the Trier office secretary Georg Kebisch († 1516), remodeled in Trier. Margarethe Kebisch, who had no surviving children, was a daughter of Ludolf Kebisch from Trier and Koblenz.

After the Reichstag 1550/51 , Reichwein married the patrician Barbara Walter, daughter of merchant Lukas Walther (around 1463–1523) and (⚭ 1503) Apollonia Mielich (around 1475), on May 21 or June 3, 1551 in Augsburg in their second or third marriage -1550). The Protestant Walther family originally came from Donauwörth and was accepted into the Augsburg patriciate in 1538. After Reichwein's death, Barbara Walterin married the Trier city scholar Dietrich Flade (1534–1589), who was executed in 1589 as an alleged " sorcerer ".

Reichwein's brothers-in-law in Augsburg were Balthasar Eggenberger (1503–1569), Mayor Conrad II. Mair (around 1505–1565), Marx Walther (1509–1576), Hans Jakob Truchsess, Ambrosius Rentz (around 1515–1565) and pharmacists, mayors and Mock caretaker Matthäus Schellenberger (around 1518–1560)

Simon Reichwein's children, all from his marriage to Barbara Walter, were:

  1. Margaretha († after 1597), married to Maximin Pergener "von Andernach" († 1620), who presumably had a doctorate in law, was granted animal citizenship as a lay judge in 1578/79, was mayor of Trier eight times between 1589 and 1619 and was at the witch trial in 1589 participated against Flade. In 1613 he was one of the richest citizens of Tires, owned the houses "Zum golden Ring" and "Montzhof" and married Maria Ziegelein († after 1624). Margaretha's son:
    1. Otto Pergener (1583-after 1624), Dr. jur. utr., was electoral lay judge at the Trier high court and in 1622 dean of the law faculty.
  2. Johann Franz Reichwein von Montabaur (Montepaur) zu Grafing (* around 1552/55; † 1596), his family register with entries between 1569 and 1595 from Augsburg, Besançon, Bologna, Cremona, Dole, Florence, Fossombrone, Mainz, Naples, Orléans, Padua, Paris, Perugia, Rome, Siena, Speyer and Venice have been preserved, he himself was the owner of the register in 1572 in Orléans ("Joes Franciscus Reichwein") for Jakob von Bronckhorst (1553–1582) and in Padua in 1573 for Karel van Arnhem (1531– 1621), granted Duke Wilhelm V of Bavaria a loan of 4,500 guilders in 1582, regimental councilor and chief judge in Landshut in 1588 , princely Bavarian rentmaster in Burghausen from 1589 to 1596 , gravestone at the parish church of St. Jakob in Burghausen, married to Scholastika von Elsenheim († 1618 or 1633; buried in the monastery church of St. Peter and Paul the Franciscans in Landshut, demolished in 1808), daughter of Christoph von Elsenheim (* around 1520; † around 1589/90), Bavarian court advisor and curator of Traunstein, 1574 court chancellor. Max Fugger, Freiherr zu Kirchberg and Weißenhorn, keeper of Landsberg, was a brother-in-law of Johann Franz Reichwein, who also corresponded with Hans Fugger (1531–1598). Johann Franz Reichwein von Monthabaur, princely Bavarian councilor, was enfeoffed in 1590 by Archbishop Johann VII von Schönenberg with the Rothaus and two adjoining houses in Trier's Brückengasse.In 1597 Maximin Pergener sold on behalf of the widow of his late brother-in-law Johann Franz Reichwein von Montabaur, des Son of Simon Reichwein von Montabaur, the "Red House" to Georg Dierdorf. Johann Franz Reichweins descendants bequeathed the Elisabethinen - Monastery Azlburg in Straubing out the handwriting of Duke William V. His children were:
    1. Georg Philipp Reichwein (* before 1597, † after 1613 or 1637), before 1613 entry into the Jesuit order, perhaps identical with Father "Philipp Reichwein SJ" (1592–1637), who 1632 a. Ö. is a professor of logic at the University of Freiburg,
    2. Maria Jacobe Reichwein von Montepaur (* before 1597; † 1648 in Grafing), married around 1613 her "cousin" Baron Ludwig Finsinger called Widerspacher († around 1664) zu Grabenstätt and Prantseck ; He received the Grafing court mark in 1613, buried in the parish church of St. Maximilian, coat of arms "Reichwein" on the choir altar donated by Widerspacher in the St. Johanniskirche Grabenstätt ,
    3. Anna Barbara (* before 1597, † after 1613), married in 1613 to Johann Sebastian Renz, from a patrician family from Ulm , who was related to the Walter family, son of carer Johann Sebastian Renz and Sidonia von Gepeckh (Geböck), grandson of district judge Hieronymus Renz ( † 1588), 1611 to 1628 district judge of the county of Haag ,
    4. Scholastika (* before 1597, † after 1615) was a married woman from Raindorf, mentioned in the necrology of the Seligenthal monastery ,
    5. Mechtildta (Mathilde) Reichweinin (* before 1597, † after 1632), nun in the Seligenthal monastery.
    6. Leonore (* before 1597, † after 1597),
    7. Kunigunde (* before 1597, † after 1597),
  3. (uncertain) Johann Friedrich Reichwein (* around 1558; † after 1573), matriculated in Padua in 1573 as "Ioannes Fridericus Reichwein Treverensis" , otherwise not documented, probably a typo for " Joannes Franciscus " (No. 2), who was in Padua at the same time found.

A Johann Michael von Reichwein (* around 1645/50; † 1728) from Pressath , Liz. jur. utr., 1676 care administrator, ennobled in 1693, court chamber councilor and 1680 care commissioner of Wolfratshausen, was one of the successors of Johann Franz Reichwein as princely Bavarian rentmaster in Burghausen from 1715 to 1728, but was probably not related to him.

coat of arms

Coat of arms of Johann Franz Reichwein von Montabaur, 1573

Blazon : a silver sloping bar in blue, accompanied by two golden lilies. The coat of arms carried by the Reichwein zu Montabaur is shown in the St. Johanniskirche Grabenstätt (see above) and is also under the ancestral coat of arms of Caspar Dryander (1538–1612), a son of Susanna Reichwin von Montabaur, in the Evangelical Collegiate Church of St. Goar .

Appreciation

swell

  • Letter from Erasmus of Rotterdam to Louis de Berquin of December 23, 1528 from Basel. In: Percy Stafford Allen (ed.): Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami , Vol. VII 1527-1528 . University Press, Oxford 1928, Ep. 2077, pp. 539-541, esp. P. 540 ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Dedication letter from Erasmus von Rotterdam to Andreas (Andre) von Konritz († 1549/53) and Christoph von Konritz († 1557), sons of Heinrich von Könneritz , dated February 28, 1529 (or 1530) from Freiburg im Breisgau to Georg Agricola : Bermannvs, sive de re metallica . Froben, Basel 1530, p. 3f, cf. Pp. 65–67 ( Google Books ) = Percy Stafford Allen (Ed.): Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami , Vol. VIII 1529-1530 . University Press, Oxford 1934, Ep. 2274, p. 362f ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Letter from Petrus Medmann to Erasmus of Rotterdam dated April 2, 1530 from Strasbourg. In: Percy Stafford Allen (ed.): Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami , Vol. VIII 1529-1530 . University Press, Oxford 1934, Ep. 2304, p. 413f ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Letter from Erasmus of Rotterdam to "Eleutherius" ( Sebastian Franck ?) In Strasbourg on March 6, 1531 from Freiburg im Breisgau. In: Percy Stafford Allen (ed.): Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami , Vol. IX 1530-1532 . University Press, Oxford 1938, Ep. 2441, pp. 153–156, esp. P. 154 ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Letter from Erasmus of Rotterdam to Tilmann vom Graben (Tielmann Gravius) from [end of June?] 1531 from Freiburg im Breisgau. In: Percy Stafford Allen (ed.): Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami , Vol. IX 1530-1532 . University Press, Oxford 1938, Ep. 2508, p. 284f ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Letter from Ambrosius Pelargus to Erasmus of Rotterdam dated September 1, 1534 from Trier. In: Percy Stafford Allen (ed.): Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami , Vol. XI 1534-1536. Oxford University Press, Oxford 1947, Ep. 2966, pp. 39–41, esp. P. 41 ( digitized in the Internet Archive)

Works

  • Collaboration in Hermann von Neuenahr: De novo hactenvsque Germaniae inavdito morbo ἱδροπυρετοῦ, hoc est sudatoria febri, quem uulgo sudorem Britannicum uocant . Generosi Hermanni à Nuenare comitis, Præpositi Colonien [sis] Simonisque Riquini Medicæ rei expertissimi iudicium doctissimum, duabus epistolis contentum, dedication poem by Petrus Pherndorphius , Soter, Cologne 1529 ( digitized from the Bavarian State Library in Munich)
  • Letters to Erasmus of Rotterdam from January 1st, 1530 from the Jülich-Klevischen court and from March 29th, 1530 from Cologne. In: Johann Friedrich Burscher (Ed.): Spicilegium XVII autographorum illustrantium rationem quae intercessit Erasmo cum aulis etc. Klaubarth, Leipzig 1792, pp. III – VIII (3–8) ( Google Books ) = Percy Stafford Allen (Ed.) : Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami , Vol. VIII 1529-1530 . University Press, Oxford 1934, Ep. 2246, p. 312f, and Ep. 2298, p. 399f ( digitized and digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Regimen sanitatis ad abbatem Robertum de Monreal (German and Latin) of August 3, 1533 (Bibliotheque Nationale de Luxembourg, Hs. A-XXIX-1202 (A-XXIX-19b) (Liber 5) Missivenbuch des Ruprecht von Monreal , sheets 232, 117-121); The Instructio domini Symonis Rychwin, medicine doctoris pro domino, anno 1533 is printed in: Ernest Wickersheimer : Deux régimes de santé: Laurent Fries et Simon Reichwein à Robert de Monreal, abbé d'Echternach de 1506 à 1539 . In: Hémecht. Journal of Luxembourg History. Revue d'histoire luxembourgeoise . 10/1 (1957), pp. 59–71, esp. Pp. 69–71 ( digitized version of the Bibliothèque nationale du Luxembourg)
  • Collaboration in Sebastian Münster: Cosmographia. 2nd Edition. Heinrich Petri, Basel 1550 and later editions

literature

  • Carl Krafft : Communications from the register of the old University of Cologne at the time of humanism . In: Journal for Prussian History and Regional Studies. 5 (1868), pp. 467–503, esp. P. 496f ( Google Books )
  • Fritz Michel : The red house on Brückenstraße in Trier. A contribution to the architectural, family and constitutional history of the city of Trier . In: Trierische Chronik NF 5 (1908), pp. 33–41, 60–63, 94f, 109f and 171–174 ( digitized version of the State Library Center Rhineland-Palatinate Koblenz)
  • Leonard Keil: Humanists in the Trier Lands in the early 16th century. 3. Simon Reichwein . In: Trierische Chronik. 17 (1920/21), pp. 82–89 ( digitized version of the State Library Center Rhineland-Palatinate Koblenz)
  • Henry de Vocht: History of the Foundation and the Rise of the Collegium Trilingue Lovaniense, 1517-1550 , Vol. II. (Humanistica Lovaniensia 11). Librairie universitaire, Löwen 1953 (reprint Kraus, Nendeln 1976), pp. 387–389 ( PDF from Humanistica Lovaniensia. Seminarium Philologiae Humanisticae)
  • Ernest Wickersheimer: Deux régimes de santé: Laurent Fries et Simon Reichwein à Robert de Monreal , abbé d'Echternach de 1506 à 1539 . In: Hémecht. Journal of Luxembourg History. Revue d'histoire luxembourgeoise. 10/1 (1957), pp. 59-71. (Separate print: Saint-Paul, Luxembourg 1957) ( digitized version of the Bibliothèque nationale du Luxembourg)

Web links

  • Facsimile print Sebastian Münster, city ​​view of Triers after a drawing by Simon Reichwein
  • Woodcut from Trier in the Latin edition by Sebastian Münster: Cosmographiae Universalis from 1550 on Historic Cities after a drawing by Simon Reichwein

Individual evidence

  1. See document of January 2, 1514; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (holdings 27 Gemünden, Canons, No. 56).
  2. Debt deed of January 17, 1510; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (inventory 11 Arnstein, Premonstratensian, No. U 690).
  3. a b Acts of the legal dispute between the Arnstein monastery and the physicist Reichwein and his brothers in Montabaur on account of interest claims , 1535-1540, 1736; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (inventory 11 Arnstein, Premonstratensian, no. IVe 2; see no. U 867).
  4. a b certificate of arbitration dated August 3, 1537; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (inventory 11 Arnstein, Premonstratensian, No. U 867).
  5. Documents of January 18, 1503; Landeshauptarchiv Koblenz (inventory 53C025 Herrschaft Landskron, documents 1876).
  6. a b c Cf. especially documents of May 10 and September 24, 1535, issued in Westerburg; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (HHStAW inventory 339 Dominion Westerburg and Schadeck, City Westerburg, No. 382; inventory 27 Gemünden, Canons, No. 67 ( digitized )) and a .; Wolf-Heino Struck: The St. Severus in Gemünden, St. Maria in Diez with their predecessors, St. Petrus in Kettenbach, St. Adelphus in Salz . (Germania Sacra. NF 25), Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 1988, p. 165 ( digitized from Germania Sacra online).
  7. ^ Certificate of December 21, 1491; State Main Archive Koblenz (inventory 53C025 Landskron rule, document 1848).
  8. See Hellmuth Gensicke : Landesgeschichte des Westerwaldes. (Publications of the Historical Commission for Nassau 13) Self-published by the Historical Commission for Nassau, Wiesbaden 1958, p. 499 and p. 550; Wolf-Heino Struck: The St. Severus in Gemünden, St. Maria in Diez with their predecessors, St. Petrus in Kettenbach, St. Adelphus in Salz . (Germania Sacra. NF 25), Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 1988, pp. 164-166, 187, 199-202, 215 and 402.
  9. Cf. Hellmuth Gensicke: The excise for Montabaur and their income . In: Nassauische Annalen 72 (1961), pp. 198-206, especially p. 206; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (Premonstratensian Monastery Arnstein, U 517 and U 560).
  10. Wolf-Heino Struck: The monasteries St. Severus in Gemünden, St. Maria in Diez with their predecessors, St. Petrus in Kettenbach, St. Adelphus in Salz . (Germania Sacra. NF 25), Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 1988, p. 187.
  11. Not identical with the Kurkölner Rat Johann Richwin († 1552/56) von Broich. This Johann Richwin is referred to as "Richwinus" in letters from Philipp Melanchthon (1497–1560) in 1543 and 1545 , what Carl Krafft: Mittheilungen from the register of the old University of Cologne at the time of humanism . In: Journal for Prussian History and Regional Studies. 5 (1868), pp. 467-503, esp. SS 497, u. a. incorrectly refer to Simon Reichwein.
  12. Document of April 5, 1524; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (holdings 27 Gemünden, Canons, No. 62); Wolf-Heino Struck: The St. Severus in Gemünden, St. Maria in Diez with their predecessors, St. Petrus in Kettenbach, St. Adelphus in Salz . (Germania Sacra. NF 25), Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 1988, pp. 54, 187 and 190. A canon mentioned in 1507 seems to be another person of the same name.
  13. Cf. Leonard Keil: Humanists in the Trier Lands in the beginning of the 16th century. 3. Simon Reichwein . In: Trierische Chronik. 17 (1920/21), pp. 82-89, especially pp. 84f.
  14. "While" means "to dress with the nun's veil"; Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm: German Dictionary , Vol. XXVIII. S. Hirzel, Leipzig 1955, Col. 814. The acceptance of the veil through humility should take place at a later date.
  15. ^ Note of December 7, 1517 on a document dated June 24, 1517; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (holdings 13 Beselich, Premonstratensian women, No. U 90 a).
  16. Also Demoid Reichwyn, Demet Richerin, Demuth Reichwein, Demoidt Priorissen and others. Ä .; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (holdings 13 Beselich, Premonstratensian women, No. U 114; U 117 - U 119, U 122 - U 125).
  17. Also Demuth Reichwyn, Frau zu Beselich, u. Ä .; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (holdings 13 Beselich, Premonstratensian women, No. U 126 - U 126aa).
  18. Wolf Heino Struck: Sources on the history of the monasteries and monasteries in the area of ​​the middle Lahn up to the end of the Middle Ages. The monasteries Bärbach, Beselich, Dirstein and Gnadenthal, the Johanniterhaus Eschenau and the Klause Fachingen. Regesten (before 1153) -1634 . Historical commission for Nassau, Wiesbaden 1961.
  19. Oskar Hütteroth: The Althessian pastors of the Reformation time . 2nd edition NG Elwert, Marburg 1966, pp. 99 and 264.
  20. Documents between May 3, 1557 and June 30, 1569; Hessisches Hauptstaatsarchiv Wiesbaden (stock 166 Amt Gleiberg, No. U 260, U 338, U 387, U 431, U 441, U 462 and U 474); Hessisches Staatsarchiv Marburg (inventory 257 Samtgerichthof, No. E 27).
  21. For the following cf. Peter G. Bietenholz, Thomas Brian Deutscher (Eds.): Contemporaries of Erasmus: A biographical register of the Renaissance and Reformation. 3 volumes. University of Toronto Press, Toronto / London 1985–1987, passim .
  22. a b c d e f Letter from Reichwein of March 29, 1530 (Ep. 2298) to Erasmus ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  23. Also “Gerhard Bucoltz, Bucholds, Geraldus Bucoldus u. Ä. ”, probably from Bocholt near Liège ; later philologist and personal physician to King Ferdinand I (1503–1564).
  24. Epitaph on one of the cross pillars on the north side of Cologne Cathedral.
  25. "... in diversum me vocante parente, nam seine aulae Trevirensi me destinaret".
  26. 1529 in the entourage of the Archbishop of Trier Richard von Greiffenklau zu Vollrads at the Reichstag in Speyer , died as governor of Luxembourg.
  27. ^ Both young counts enrolled in Cologne on March 24, 1520.
  28. Peter G. Bietenholz, Thomas Brian Deutscher: Contemporaries of Erasmus , Vol. II. University Press, Toronto 1986, p. 228.
  29. Johannes Caesarius (ed.): Q. Horatii Flacci epistolae desumptis ex Landini commentariis , in gratiam illustrium discipulorum Antonii et Salentini comitum Isenburgicorum. Johannes Soter, Cologne 1522 (lost); see. Josephus Hartzheim: Bibliotheca Coloniensis . Thomas Odenthal, Cologne 1747, p. 165 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  30. a b Cf. Fidèle Jean Raymaekers: François Caroli, imprimeur à Diest, en 1525 . In: Société des bibliophiles de Belgique (ed.): Le bibliophile belge. (Bulletin du bibliophile belge 13), Vol. IV, F. Heussner, Brussels 1857, p. 362f, especially p. 362 ( Google Books ).
  31. ^ Leonard Keil: Humanists in the Trier Lands in the beginning of the 16th century. 3. Simon Reichwein . In: Trierische Chronik. 17 (1920/21), pp. 82-89, especially p. 83.
  32. ^ Leonard Keil: Humanists in the Trier Lands in the beginning of the 16th century. 3. Simon Reichwein . In: Trierische Chronik. 17 (1920/21), pp. 82-89, especially p. 84.
  33. ^ A b c Letter from Reichwein dated January 1, 1530 to Erasmus ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  34. Also: Ioachimus Marti (a) n (i) us [Gregorius] Gandavus, Joachim Martins u. Ä .; see. Peter G. Bietenholz, Thomas Brian Deutscher (Eds.): Contemporaries of Erasmus: A biographical register of the Renaissance and Reformation. , Vol. II. University of Toronto Press, Toronto / London 1986, p. 396; Georg Agricola: Bermannus (le mineur). Un dialogue sur les mines , ed. by Robert Halleux and Albert Yans. Belles Lettres, Paris 1990, p. 121.
  35. See letter from Erasmus of Rotterdam to Louis de Berquin of December 23, 1528 from Basel ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  36. ^ Dedication letter from Erasmus von Rotterdam to Andreas and Christoph von Konritz (Könneritz) of February 28, 1529 (or 1530) from Freiburg im Breisgau; Allen, Ep. 2274 ( digitized in the Internet Archive); see. Georg Agricola: Bermannvs, sive de re metallica . Froben, Basel 1530, esp. Pp. 64–67.
  37. cf. Götz-Rüdiger Tewes: Neuenahr (Nuenarius, de Nova Aquila), Hermann Graf von, d. Ä. In: Franz Josef Worstbrock (Ed.): German Humanism 1480–1520. Author's Lexicon , Vol. II / 2 (Mu – Rh) , Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, New York 2011, Col. 408–418, esp. Col. 414f ( Google Books , restricted view).
  38. Dedication, partially cut away, “ D. Erasmo Roterodamo Si. Ri. Legendu non… “in the copy of the University Library of Basel (Sign .: Le VI 21: 7).
  39. ^ Letter from Petrus Medmann to Erasmus of Rotterdam (Ep. 2304) of April 2, 1530.
  40. ^ Letter from Erasmus of Rotterdam to "Eleutherius" of March 6, 1531 (Ep. 2441) from Freiburg im Breisgau.
  41. Epistola Des. Erasmi Rot. Contra quosdam, qui se falso iactant Euangelicos . 2nd edition ( iam recens aedita ) Faber, Freiburg im Breisgau o. J. [1529] ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  42. Epistola D. Erasmi Rote. contra quosdam, qui se falsò iactant Euangelicos . Johannes Gymnich, Cologne 1530 ( Google Books ).
  43. Contra Qvosdam, Qvi Se Falso Iactant Euangelicos, Epistola Des. Erasmi Roterodami . o. o. o. J. [Egenolff, Strasbourg 1530] ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  44. ^ Robert (Ruprecht) von Monreal († 1539), son of Karl d. Ä. von Monreal († around 1507) and ⚭ around 1471 Maria von Malberg († around 1503), 1495 Präbende ( benefice ) and admission to the Echternach Abbey , 1506 to 1539 Abbot of Echternach.
  45. ↑ back memo of October 13, 1533; State Main Archive Koblenz (inventory 700,030 Dr. Leopold von Eltester, certificate 292).
  46. "The doctor Simon, a man of unique learning and humanity, whose last name I can't think of at the moment ( Simon medicus vir singulari eruditione et humanitate, cuius cognomen in praesentia quidem non succurrit )"; Letter from Ambrosius Pelargus to Erasmus of Rotterdam dated September 1, 1534 from Trier. In: Percy Stafford Allen, Heathcote William Garrod (ed.): Opus epistolarum Des. Erasmi Roterodami , Vol. XI 1534-1536 . Clarendon, Oxford 1947, Ep. 2966, esp. P. 41 ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  47. See Johann Dryander: Ein new Artzney vnnd Practicir Büchlin von allerley kranckheiten. Schumann, Leipzig 1538 (preface, unpaginated) ( digitized from the Bavarian State Library, Munich).
  48. See Joseph Kalbersch: Use and abuse of spiritual beverages , Vol. II, Joseph Anton Schröll, Diekirch 1854, p. 248, on the other hand "Margvogt Johann Richwin" (1546) in BI, 1854, p. 8.
  49. Cf. Mathias Hardt: Luxemburger Weisthümer as a review of Jacob Grimm's Weisthümern , V. Bück, Luxemburg 1870, p. 222; somewhat more precisely François Decker (ed.): Regesten des Archiv der Herren von Bourscheid , Vol. IV 1626–1657. With an addendum to parts 1 and 2. (Publications of the Landesarchivverwaltung Rheinland-Pfalz 61), Luxemburg 1993, p. 22 (No. 691a).
  50. From Montabaur, 1531 on the successor to the deceased Abbot Johann III. Bechel elected.
  51. Elector's Appeal Commissioner in Cologne.
  52. See Johann Nicolaus von Hontheim (edit.): Historia Trevirensis diplomatica et pragmatica , Vol. II. Martin Veith, Augsburg / Würzburg 1750, p. 676 ( Google Books ).
  53. See Landeshauptarchiv Koblenz (inventory 210 Trier, Benedictine monastery St. Eucharius - St. Matthias, documents 906 and 907; inventory 215 Trier, collegiate monastery St. Simeon, document 789).
  54. See Staatsarchiv Wertheim (inventory F-Rep. 103 Grafschaft Virneburg, No. 269).
  55. See Landeshauptarchiv Koblenz (inventory 1A, document 2253).
  56. Nikolaus Mameranus: Catalogvs Familiae Totivs Avlae Caesareae… vsq [ue] Augustam Rhetica [m], omniumq [ue]… Anno 1547. & 1548. praesentium . Henrich Mameranus, Cologne 1550, p. 64 ( Google Books ).
  57. ^ Karl Ludwig Philipp Troß (ed.): Des Count Wolrad von Waldeck diary during the Reichstag in Augsburg 1548 (library of the literary society in Stuttgart 59), Stuttgart 1868, p. 135.152.
  58. ^ Document of January 17, 1502; Historical archive of the city of Cologne (holdings 1 main document archive, U 3/15040) u. a.
  59. Cf. Dieter Kerber: Rule centers in the Archbishopric Trier. Courtyard and residence in the late Middle Ages . Residency research 4). J. Thorbecke, Sigmaringen 1995, p. 227f.
  60. See Sebastian Münster: Cosmographia . 2nd edition Heinrich Petri, Basel 1550, pp. 494 and 496 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich); New edition Sebastian Henricpetri, Basel 1588, S. dccvij – dccx (707–710) ( Google Books ); not yet involved in the 1544 edition, see p. cccxl f (340f) ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library, Munich).
  61. See S. Münster: Cosmographia . 2nd edition Heinrich Petri, Basel 1550, p. 495f ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library, Munich); New edition Sebastian Henricpetri, Basel 1588, S. dccxiij (718) ( Google Books ).
  62. See S. Münster: Cosmographia . 2nd edition Heinrich Petri, Basel 1550, pp. 80 and 482 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library, Munich); New edition Sebastian Henricpetri, Basel 1588, p. Dcxcvj (696) ( Google Books ).
  63. See S. Münster: Cosmographia . 2nd edition Heinrich Petri, Basel 1550, p. 500f ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library, Munich); New edition Sebastian Henricpetri, Basel 1588, S. dccxij (712) ( Google Books ).
  64. Picked up u. a. by Matthias Quad : Teutscher Nation Herligkeitt . Wilhelm Lützenkirchen, Cologne 1609, pp. 225 and 226 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  65. On Simon Reichwein's contributions cf. in detail Johann Baptist Keune : The oldest cityscapes of Metz and Trier . In: Jahrbuch der Gesellschaft für Lorhringische Geschichte und Altertumskunde 17/2 (1905), pp. 186–220, especially pp. 215–217 with annotation ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  66. See S. Münster: Cosmographia . 2nd edition Heinrich Petri, Basel 1550, p. 82, cf. P. 80 (Reichwein's letter of March 4, 1548 from Augsburg: " mitto typum urbis Trevirorum - I am sending a picture of the city of Treveri ") ( digital copy from the Bavarian State Library in Munich); New edition Sebastian Henricpetri, Basel 1588, pp. Cxiiij – xcvj (114–116) ( Google.Books ).
  67. See S. Münster: Cosmographia . 2nd edition Heinrich Petri, Basel 1550, pp. 501–503; see. New edition Sebastian Henricpetri, Basel 1588, p. Dccxiiij – dccxv (714f).
  68. Franziska Blum-Gabelmann: The "Red House" - the house "Zum Horn". A building ensemble in Trier . In: Yearbook for House Research. 41: 369-382 (1993).
  69. See Landeshauptarchiv Koblenz (holdings 700,030 Dr. Leopold von Eltester, documents 294, 295 and 297).
  70. Landeshauptarchiv Koblenz (holdings 700.030 Dr. Leopold von Eltester (1822–1879), document 292; cf. factual file 1107).
  71. a b Lehenrevers of June 23, 1590; State main archive Koblenz (inventory 1B Lehenhof, Reichwein (from Montabaur), document 1829).
  72. From Speyer, also Gregor Kibis u. Ä., in Trier chancellery since about 1469, after 1484 secretary, 1485 cleric, imperial and archbishop notary, 1501 Trier aldermen; not identical with the Canon Gregorius Kibis (Kebisch) († 1521) from Koblenz (his son?), 1502 Baccalaureate in Erfurt, Dr. jur. utr., curator and canon of the St. Kastorstift in Koblenz.
  73. See Alfred Hartmann (Ed.): Die Amerbachkorrespondenz , Vol. VII, Verlag der Universitätsbibliothek, Basel 1973, p. 258. Gregor Kebische and his wife Margarethe Jux had acquired the “Rothe Haus” from Heinrich Tristand in 1499; see. Adam Goerz (Ed.): Regesten der Archbischöfe zu Trier from Hetti to Johann II. 814–1503 , Fr. Lintz, Tier 1861, p. 310; Document dated November 19, 1499; State Main Archive Koblenz (holdings 700,030 Dr. Leopold von Eltester, certificate 285).
  74. Document of October 2, 1557; State Main Archive Koblenz (inventory 700,030 Dr. Leopold von Eltester, certificate 297).
  75. ↑ Fiefdom Reverse of the Red House of March 6, 1516 and January 2, 1520; Landeshauptarchiv Koblenz (inventory 1B Lehenhof, document 1281; inventory 700.030 Dr. Leopold von Eltester, documents 293).
  76. See Alfred Hartmann (ed.): Die Amerbachkorrespondenz , Vol. VII, Verlag der Universitätsbibliothek, Basel 1973, p. 258; Martin Crusius : Annales Suevici. Vol. III, Nikolaus Basse, Frankfurt am Main 1596, p. 680: “Nuptiae Augustanae. Doctoris Sigismund [sic!] Reichwein, May 21st [1551] cum Barbara Waltherina… “ ( digitized version of the University and State Library Düsseldorf).
  77. a b cf. Friedrich Warnecke: Augsburger Hochzeitbuch, containing the marriages that took place in the years 1484 to 1591 . In: Vierteljahrsschrift für Heraldik, Sphragistik und Genealogie 14 (1886), pp. 1–91, esp. P. 52 ( digitized version of the University and State Library Düsseldorf).
  78. ^ Daughter of Hektor Mülich (around 1425–1490), author of the Augsburg city chronicle from 1348 to 1487, and Anna Fugger (1444–1485).
  79. From the Austrian family Eggenberg , his brother Hans was accepted into the city patriciate in 1538 and member of the Grand Council from 1548 to 1564.
  80. From Memmingen, owned the tin trading monopoly for Bohemia in 1549.
  81. 1548 assessor at the city court, 1548 together with Conrad Mair by Anton Fugger (1493–1560) and his family as the executor of the Fuggerei Foundation Jakob Fuggers (1459–1525), 1556 member of the council, 1573 witness (councilor with the supervision of the armory and the foundry).
  82. From the Ulm patrician family Rentz.
  83. ^ Also Mattheus Schoellenberg, owner of the pharmacy "Zum Goldenen Hirschen" in today's Karolinenstrasse (later name: "Engel-Apotheke").
  84. Wolfgang Reinhard, Mark Häberlein: Augsburger Eliten des 16. Century. Prosopography of economic and political leadership groups 1500–1620. Akademie Verlag, Berlin 1996, passim.
  85. ^ Wolfgang Klose: Corpus Alborum Amicorum - CAAC. Descriptive directory of the family books of the 16th century (Hiersemanns Bibliographische Handbücher 8), Stuttgart 1988, p. 58; Gerhard Seibold: The album amicorum by Johann Franz Reichwein (around 1555–1596) . (Documenta Augustana 28). Wißner, Augsburg 2015.
  86. ^ Album amicorum by Jacobus van Bronckhorst van Batenburg, sheet 78r (Koninklijke Bibliotheek Den Haag, KB: 135 K 26).
  87. a b Cf. Christl Karnehm (arrangement): The correspondence of Hans Fugger from 1566 to 1594 , (Sources for the Modern History of Bavaria 3), Vol. II / 1 1574–1581 . C. H. Beck, Munich 2003, pp. 844, 859, 872 and 898; Vol. II / 2 1582-1594 . C. H. Beck, Munich 2003, pp. 1089 and 1093.
  88. Herr von Kernhem bei Ede , later Mayor of Arnhem.
  89. a b c Cf. Koninklijke Bibliotheek Den Haag (79 J 75 Carel van Arnhem 1570–1575, 1581, sheet 97); Anton C. Zeven: The Album Amicorum van Karel van Arnhem (1570-1575, 1581) . Wassenaar 2016, p. 49 ( digitized version ; accessed on October 27, 2016).
  90. a b cf. Die Bayer'sche Landbötin 111 (1834), p. 917; Frankfurter Ober-Post-Amts-Zeitung (1843), p. 2955.
  91. Gustav von Bezold, Berthold Riehl, Georg Hager (arrangement): The art monuments of the administrative region of Upper Bavaria , Bd. III. (The art monuments of the Kingdom of Bavaria 1.3). United Kunstanstalten, Munich 1905, pp. 2431 and 2647.
  92. See Landeshauptarchiv Koblenz (holdings 700.030 Dr. Leopold von Eltester, certificate 1197/3 + 4).
  93. Cf. Katharina de Faria e Castro: The national goods in the arrondissement of Koblenz and their disposal in the years 1803 to 1813 (Rheinisches Archiv 85), Ludwig Röhrscheid, Bonn 1973, p. 315.
  94. a b c See document of April 20, 1613; State Archives Munich (Schlossarchiv Teising U 1613 Apr 20).
  95. See Johann Josef Wagner: History of the Royal Bavarian Regional Court Traunstein , Vol. II. C. Wolf, Munich 1866, pp. 42/52 ( Google Books ).
  96. See Michael Wening: Historico-Topographica Descriptio , Vol. III. Straub, Munich 1723, p. 114 ( Google Books ).
  97. See Bavarian Academy of Sciences (ed.): Monumenta Boica. Volume XV, Munich 1787, p. 530 ( Google Books ).
  98. Cf. Gertrudis Kudelko (arrangement): From the diary of Abbess Magdalena Heidenbucher, O. S. B. von Frauenchiemsee, 1609–1650 . In: Studies and communications from the Benedictine and the Cistercian Order 28 (1907), pp. 122–142, 379–392, 559–576; 29 (1908), pp. 170-185, 476-488, and 653-666, esp. 28 (1907), p. 568.
  99. In 1557, only Johann Franz is mentioned as a son in the Koblenz state archives (inventory 700.030 Dr. Leopold von Eltester, document 297).
  100. Cf. Gustav C. Knod: Rhineland students in the 16th and 17th centuries at the University of Padua . In: Annals of the Historical Association for the Lower Rhine. 68 (1899), pp. 133-189, especially p. 150.
  101. Cf. Eberhard J. Nikitsch: Deutsche Insschriften 60, Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis I, No. 304; see. No. 296 ( digitized at www.inschriften.net).
  102. According to the editor Percy Stafford Allen; on the other hand James M. Estes, Charles Fantazzi (arr.): The Correspondence of Erasmus. Letters 2357 to 2471 . (Collected Works of Erasmus 17). University Press, Toronto 1974, pp. 242-247, esp. Pp. 242f ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  103. Also: Tileman o. Ä. (* Probably 1474; † after 1557), humanist name: Tillmannus de fossa alias de Colonia; Magister, friend of Erasmus, 1512–1544 secretary of the Cologne cathedral chapter.
  104. Not from Cologne; see. Alexander Dalzell, James E. Estes (arr.): The Correspondence of Erasmus: Letters 2204-2356 (August 1529-July 1530) . University of Toronto Press, Toronto 2015, pp. 110–112, esp. P. 112, note 11 ( Google Books ; limited preview); see. Pp. 194f, 255f and 276f.