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Von Anderten was the name of a family in Hanover , known since 1301 , who provided merchants , councilors and mayors in the city for several centuries . Like the noble von Windheim family or the patrician families Turk and Volger , the family was one of the respected families of Hanover, similar to the later Pretty Families .

history

Epitaph of a still unidentified master to the right of the portal of the Marktkirche in Hanover for Heinrich (Hinricus) von Anderten († 1682), “Patric. Hannov. ... "
Tomb for Heinrich (Henrich) Diederich von Anderten (1738–1816) and Clemens Ernst August Ludewig von Anderten (1772–1811) in the old St. Nikolai cemetery in Hanover

On March 30, 1301 Dietrich von Alten allowed the exchange of two houses in Anderten between the Marienrode monastery on the one hand and the "Henricum dictum Sigeringhe, civem in Anderten" (Heinrich called Sigering, citizen in Anderten) in front of Hanover. A Thidericus de Anderten and in 1317 a Henricus cognatus Henrici de Anderten were registered in the oldest Hanoverian civil register , which was started in the same year .

From the end of the 14th century to the beginning of the 16th century, the family provided the following mayors:

  • 1398–1424: Volkmer von Anderten ;
  • 1425–1460: Diderik von Anderten ;
  • 1477: Diederik von Anderten , from 1447 to 1493 also councilor of the city;
  • 1494–1501: Volkmer von Anderten .

Diederik's brother, Volkmar von Anderten († March 9, 1481), was the canon of Lübeck and in 1479 donated a collection of books, “of which (as part of the so-called council library) 19 manuscript volumes a. 44 incunabula have come down to us ”. The legacy was also linked to a scholarship that lasted for several centuries. Volkmar von Anderten's book collection, together with the donation from Konrad von Sarstedt, formed the basis of the Hanover City Library .

In 1596, the imperial nobility (as a letter nobility ) was confirmed for Joachim von Anderten , Princely Mindenscher Stiftsrat.

Between 1622 and 1624, the master mason Joachim Pape built the original building for Ludolf von Anderten and his son-in-law Georg Türcke in the (later so-called) house of the fathers on Leinstrasse near Mühlenstrasse .

When the universal genius Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was on a research trip from 1687 to 1690, his apartment and library in Hanover were moved from the Leineschloss to the widow Anderten's house in Leinstraße (today: Hannah-Arendt-Platz ) in his absence in 1688 , before ten years later another move to the Leibnizhaus took place.

Heinrich Diederich von Anderten (1738–1816) was Royal Hanoverian Councilor and secret chamber secretary. Like his son, Clemens Ernst August Ludewig von Anderten (1772–1811), royal Hanover chamber secretary, he was buried in the old St. Nikolai cemetery ; her tomb with the family coat of arms on the back has been preserved to this day. It shows three lion heads on crossbars and as grave symbols a sun and a fallen torch.

The Andertenhausen district in the Wietzenbruch district of Celle was named after Heinrich von Anderten's estate.

Honors

  • The garden path In der Wisch (in what later became Calenberger Neustadt ), which existed in 1800, was officially renamed Andertensche Wiese in 1845 . On the road between the (later) streets Brühlstrasse and Dreyerstrasse , according to the Hanoverian history sheets of 1914, "the land there [...] belonged to the city of Hanover's patrician family von Anderten".
Coat of arms of those of others

coat of arms

In green a silver bar covered with three red lion heads . On the helmet with red and silver covers a red lion head.

See also

literature

Web links

Commons : Modified  - collection of images, videos, and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i Helmut Zimmermann: Anderten ... (see literature)
  2. ^ Carl-Hans Hauptmeyer : Rule of the city council. In: History of the City of Hanover , Vol. 1: From the beginnings to the beginning of the 19th century , ed. by Klaus Mlynek and Waldemar R. Röhrbein , Schlütersche Verlagsanstalt and Druckerei, Hanover 1994, ISBN 3-87706-351-9 , pp. 170–174; here: p. 173
  3. Klaus Mlynek : Pretty families. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 310
  4. ↑ Date of death according to the grave slab in Lübeck Cathedral , compare Klaus Krüger: Corpus of medieval grave monuments in Lübeck, Schleswig, Holstein and Lauenburg 1100-1600 , Jan Thorbeke Verlag, Stuttgart 1999, p. 634 LÜDO187
  5. J. Busch: The Council Library ... (see literature)
  6. ^ Hugo Thielen: Sarstedt, Konrad (also Cord) from. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 535
  7. Helmut Knocke : House of the Fathers. In: Stadtlexikon Hannover , p. 273
  8. Gerd van den Heuvel: Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm. In: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon , p. 227ff.
  9. ^ Henrike Schwarz (text), Silke Beck, Klaus Bonk, Klaus Helmer, Claudia Wollkopf (editors): The St. Nikolai cemetery and the [[Neustädter Friedhof (Hanover) |]] , brochure of the state capital of Hanover, Department of Environment and Urban Green , March 2003, p. 23, or online ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) as a PDF document (2.4 MB).
  10. ^ Helmut Zimmermann: Andertensche Wiese. In: The street names of the state capital Hanover , Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung , Hanover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6 , p. 26