Anselm von Eyb

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Church of Our Women in Woringen : Epitaph Anshalm / Anselm von Eyb († 1477) with the arms of Eyb and von Möttelin

Anselm von Eyb , also Anshalm von Eyb , (* October 12, 1444 in Sommersdorf ; † January 6, 1477 ) was a German court official and lawyer at the Imperial Court of Justice. He came from the Frankish noble family of the Eyb family .

Life

Anselm came from the marriage of Ludwig von Eyb the Elder and Magdalena Adelmann von Adelmannsfelden. His siblings were the court master and military leader Ludwig von Eyb the Younger and the prince-bishop of Eichstätt Gabriel von Eyb as well as the two sisters Barbara and Mathilde. Anselm was married to Ursula Möttelin von Rappenstein, zu Woringen , since 1475 . He was a nephew of the writer Albrecht von Eyb .

From 1458 he studied law at the University of Erfurt and University of Pavia in Lombardy, where he received his doctorate in imperial law . In 1467 he renounced a canon pledge in Bamberg that had been acquired five years earlier. In 1471 he became an assessor at the Imperial Court of Justice of the Holy Roman Empire , at the same time he was in the court salary of Emperor Friedrich III. and had an imperial fiefdom and fiefdom from Duke Sigismund of Austria-Tyrol .

Anselm von Eyb took part in the pilgrimage of Count Eberhard von Württemberg to the Holy Land from May to November 1468 and received the accolade. His father Ludwig von Eyb the Elder and his brother Ludwig von Eyb the Younger were both knighted at the Holy Tomb in Jerusalem.

Fonts

  • Pilgrim Book , 1468

literature

  • Birkmeyer, Regine (ed.): Anselm von Eyb: Pilgerbuch (1468) , IN: “Eberhard im Bart and the pilgrimage to Jerusalem in the late Middle Ages” , Stuttgart 1998, pp. 173–194
  • Birkmeyer, Regine: “The trip to Jerusalem of the Franconian knight Anselm von Eyb in 1468” , IN: Yearbook for Franconian State Research 59 (1999), pp. 109–129

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Valmar Cramer: The order of knights of the Holy Grave from the Crusades to the present. , JP Bachem, Cologne 1952, p. 36
  2. ^ Entry Pilgerbuch, historical sources of the German Middle Ages
  3. Entry “Pilgrim's Book” in the manuscript census
  4. ^ Entry "Pilgerbuch" , Historical Bibliography Online, accessed on January 6, 2020
  5. Entry Anselm von Eyb on digihum - Digital Humanities, accessed on January 6, 2020