Aschen Schönewitz

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aschen Schönewitz (also: Aschen von Schönewitz ; * in the 16th century ; buried July 31, 1595 in the Calenberger Neustadt near Hanover ) was a ducal bailiff .

Life

After Duke Heinrich Julius came to the government by succession in 1589 , he soon pledged the “ Neustädter Vogtei” to Aschen von Schönewitz against a loan of 2000 thalers .

Schönewitz was - now as Vogt of Calenberger Neustadt - the first to dispute the citizens of Hanover for their place on the "mountain" near the former Jewish pond . He refused the Hanoverians the previously often carried out removal of the sand from the mountain on which the "Papegöyen-Bohm " had previously stood. In order to emphasize his claim in the name of the sovereignty, Schönewitz had the “sand or sturgeon kahre” taken away from a Kärrner and pushed into the Jewish pond, where the vehicle remained visible to all as a warning for a long time.

After Schönewitz's death, his widow, a sister of Jürgen von der Lippe , administered the bailiwick of Calenberger Neustadt until she married the successor of her late husband Fritz Molinus in 1604 , "who got into some disagreement with the old town [Hanover]."

literature

  • Wilhelm Florin: The disputes of the city of Hanover with the ducal officials because of the impairment of their privileges, Part I .: The disputes about the economic rights and jurisdiction powers of the city / (The Vogt of the Neustadt Friedrich Molins), in ders .: The princely absolutism in its effects on the constitution, administration and economy of the city of Hanover (= Hannoversche Geschichtsblätter, New Series Volume 7, Issue 3/4), pp. 245–250
  • Johann Kaufmann: Inheritance register of the offices of Ruthe and Koldingen from 1593 (= publications of the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen , Volume 34) (= Sources on the economic and social history of Lower Saxony in modern times , Volume 1), Hildesheim: Lax, 1973, p 20, 30; limited preview in Google Book search

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Otto Jürgens : Hannoversche Chronik (= publications on Lower Saxony history , Volume 6), on behalf of the Association for the History of the City of Hanover, ed. by O. Jürgens, Hanover: Verlag von Ernst Geibel, 1907, p. 183; limited preview in Google Book search
  2. ^ A b Karl Friedrich Leonhardt : The beginnings of Hanover and the Calenberger Neustadt , in: Hannoversche Geschichtsblätter , 30th year (1927), pp. 146-240; here: p. 167; limited preview in Google Book search
  3. ^ R. Hartmann : History of the royal city of Hanover from the oldest times to the present , revised reprint of the original edition from 1880, Barsinghausen: Unicum Verlag, 2013, ISBN 978-3-8457-0308-4 , p. 183; limited preview in Google Book search