Andreas Tegge

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Andreas Tegge (born March 14, 1568 in Hamburg ; † August 15, 1650 ibid) was a German officer and senior citizen of Hamburg .

Life

In 1619 Tegge became the first citizen captain of the 2nd company in the Sankt Petri regiment of the Hamburg Citizens Guard , which was newly founded after the outbreak of the Thirty Years War .

In 1620 a deputation of 60 citizens was elected by the Hamburg city council. These so-called sixties worked out a new Accise and Licent order. In addition, every year in Easter week they discussed the shortcomings and infirmities that were reported to the senior elders and finance citizens during the year , and brought the guilty to account. Tegge was one of those sixties in 1621 .

On August 21, 1621 he was elected provisional assistant to the Hiobs Hospital , which was then called the Pockenhaus . The eight provisional officers were elected by the Senate for life and took turns on the board for one year each. In the years 1627, 1636–1637 and 1643–1644 Tegge was head of the smallpox house .

In 1625, Tegge Jurat became part of the main church of Sankt Petri. On May 17, 1626, he was elected civil judge at the lower court .

In 1626 Tegge was a member of the deputation, which was supposed to raise the necessary means, money and soldiers to recapture the Ritzebüttel office belonging to Hamburg . Previously, the military leader Christian Wilhelm von Brandenburg had taken the Ritzebüttel Castle and imprisoned the bailiff Hans Schaffshausen (1556–1638). Only after several warships sailed down the Elbe from Hamburg to Ritzebüttel did the occupiers withdraw.

On August 25, 1630, Tegge was elected a treasurer and on March 21, 1631, for the deceased Jürgen Schrötteringk (1551-1631), elected senior citizen in the parish of Sankt Petri. In 1636 he was President of the College of the Elderly, and in 1648 he was sworn on a corpse . When he died two years later, Johann Moller (vom Adlerklau) (1594–1655) was his successor as senior elder.

Tegge donated a colored window with the portraits of the apostles Peter and Paul to the main church Sankt Petri . However, this window fell victim to the Hamburg fire in 1842.

family

On January 11, 1608, he married Anna Busch (1588–1655) and had six children with her. His son Barthold (1617–1661) died as a Hamburg merchant in Stockholm .

The lawyer and council secretary , Bernhard Tegge (1561-1606), was a brother of the senior elder.

literature

  • Friedrich Georg Buek : Andreas Tegge . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 79 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  • Herwarth von Schade : On the harmony and welfare of this good city: 475 years of senior citizens' council in Hamburg . Convent, Hamburg 2003, OCLC 53903206 , p. 379 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Citizen Capitain . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 445–451 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  2. Directory, like the Colonel Lords and Colonel Citizens, as well as the Capitains in each regiment and company, followed one after the other from A. 1619 to 1741 . In: Joachim Dietrich Evers (ed.): Memoriae Hamburgenses, sive Hamburgi, et virorum de Ecclesia, reque publica & scholastica Hamburgensi bene meritorum elogia & vitæ . tape 8 . Hamburg 1745, OCLC 634258029 , p. 190 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  3. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Combing . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 433-435 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  4. Friedrich Georg Buek: The Hamburg upper elders, their civil activity and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 50–51 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  5. Jonas Ludwig von Hess : Das Hiobs-Hospital . In: Hamburg described topographically, politically and historically . 2nd revised and enlarged edition. Second part. Brüggemann, Hamburg 1811, OCLC 314680251 , p. 172–197 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  6. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Smallpox House or Hospital St. Job . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 426-427 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  7. Nicolaus Staphorst : Head of the Smallpox House . In: Historia Ecclesiae Hamburgensis diplomatica, that is Hamburg church history, made up of credible and mostly unprinted documents . The First Part, Volume Four, which contains the stories of the fifteenth century. Theodor Christoph Felginer's widow, Hamburg 1731, OCLC 643633206 , p. 808 ( digitized from the pages of the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek [accessed on February 26, 2015]).
  8. ^ Rudolf Gerhard Behrmann: Domini Jurati Ecclesiae S: Petri et S: Pauli . In: An attempt at a history of the Church of St. Petri and St. Pauli . Hamburg 1823, OCLC 166061574 , p. IX ( digitized from the pages of the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek [accessed on February 26, 2015]).
  9. ^ Daniel Heinrich Jacobj : Directory of the citizens deputy to the lower court since 1623 . In: History of the Hamburg Lower Court . Gustav Eduard Nolte, Hamburg 1866, OCLC 175023910 , p. 229 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  10. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Hans Schaffshausen . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 52–55 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  11. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Genealogical and biographical notes on the mayors of Hamburg who have died since the Reformation . Johann August Meißner, Hamburg 1840, OCLC 166067441 , p. 139–140 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  12. Friedrich Georg Buek: The Hamburg upper elders, their civil activity and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 54–55 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  13. ^ Johann Gustav Gallois : History of the City of Hamburg. With lots of illustrations and maps . W. Oncken, Hamburg 1867, OCLC 162985059 , p. 296–297 ( digitized from the pages of the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek [accessed on February 26, 2015]).
  14. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Johann Moller . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 98 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 26, 2015]).
  15. Rudolf Gerhard Behrmann: Attempt a history of the Church of St. Petri and St. Pauli . Hamburg 1823, OCLC 166061574 , p. 38 ( digitized from the pages of the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek [accessed on February 26, 2015]).
  16. ^ Anna Busch in the catalog of the German National Library (accessed on February 26, 2015).
  17. Barthold Tegge in the catalog of the German National Library (accessed on February 26, 2015).