Barthel Lauterbach

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Bart (h / t) el (von) Laut (t) erbach (the elder) (* 1515 in Löbau ; † 1578 in Gersdorf ; long name: Bartholomaeus von Lauterbach on Gersdorff and Leitenthal [meaning Leutenthal ]) belonged to the electoral prince Saxon service nobility . He was court and chamber councilor to the electors Moritz and August of Saxony , and from 1549 to 1577/78 rent master / land rent master and chief magistrate of Nossen and Chemnitz .

As official Schösser Lauterbach took over the abandoned Benedictine Chemnitz , which had been until 1546, managed by his former abbot Hilary for the new owner, the Saxon electors. In the period that followed, Lauterbach converted the monastery into a hunting lodge, and there was also the administrative office for the Chemnitz office. In 1547 Lauterbach was sent off with three colleagues, two of them for the Thuringian regions, to visit and inventory the Ernestine offices taken over from Johann Friedrich I during the Schmalkaldic War . As a result, a visit to all Albertine offices was carried out, which then led to the so-called Moritz inheritance books due to Lauterbach's commitment . Even if he did not write all of them himself, his inheritance books served as a model and he was repeatedly consulted personally.

His son was the Heldrungen official governor Johann Lauterbach (* 1550, † around 1616), who acquired Noschkowitz Castle in 1587 .

After Lauterbach's death on the Gersdorf manor, a memorial was erected for him in the parish church in Etzdorf , which is very close to the Weesensteiner Tafel. The partially restored epitaph of Barthel Lauterbach (also Lauterbach epitaph ) has been hanging in Meißner Dom since 2005 .

literature

Tablet for the epitaph in Meissen
  • Cornelius Delater: Like Barthel Lauterbach ... 1549 from the Jurs. Moritz ... was enfeoffed with the Vorwerke Gansdorf bei Roßwein.
  • Johannes Herrmann, Günther Wartenberg : Political correspondence of the Duke and Elector Moritz of Saxony. Vol. 3. (= treatises of the Saxon Academy of Sciences in Leipzig. Philological-historical class. ) Akademie-Verlag, 1978.
  • Peter Vohland: The restoration of the Lauterbach epitaph . Pp. 121-127. In: Yearbook State Palaces, Castles and Gardens. No. 13, 2005.

Individual evidence

  1. Different life dates: year of birth 1514, year of death 1576.
  2. ^ Adam Friedrich Glafey: Adam Friedrich Glafeys JCti Königl.-Pohln. Hof- und Justitzien-Raths also secret archivarii; The core of the history of the High Chur and Princely House of Saxony: Evidenced by documents and testimonials from proven scribes. Riegel, Frankfurt and Leipzig 1737.
  3. Friedrich Edelmayer , Maximilian Lanzinner, Peter Rauscher : Finances and rule: material foundations of princely politics in the Habsburg countries and in the Holy Roman Empire in the 16th century. Oldenbourg Verlag, 2003, ISBN 9783486648515 , p. 145.
  4. ^ Johann Christian Hasche: Diplomatic history of Dresden from its origin to our days, Volume 2. 1817.
  5. ^ André Thieme: The Electoral Saxon office inheritance books from the middle of the 16th century and their digital recording.
  6. Martina Schattkowsky : The von Bünau family: noble lords in Saxony and Bohemia from the Middle Ages to modern times. Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2008, ISSN  1439-782X , p. 442.
  7. Martina Schattkowsky: The von Bünau family: noble lords in Saxony and Bohemia from the Middle Ages to modern times. Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2008, ISSN  1439-782X , p. 444 (photo of the epitaph).