Christoph von Hagen

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Christoph von Hagen , also Christoph vom Hagen , (* 1538 ; † November 24, 1572 ) was a district administrator of the Archdiocese of Magdeburg .

Life

Von Hagen was a son of Adolph von Hagen and Maria von Werthern . He was the owner of the Hadmersleben office , where he lived until 1558, and a heir in Quedlinburg . From 1561 he acquired real estate in Quedlinburg and had the Quedlinburg City Palace built.

Von Hagen was married to Margarethe / Magdalena von Bünau from Droyzut and had two daughters.

His daughter, Maria von Hagen (1562–1638), married the governor of the Electorate of Saxony, Christoph Vitzthum von Eckstedt . From this marriage, the son of the same name (1594-1653) emerged, who was war bishop and also governor in Quedlinburg.

His son Otto von Hagen became known as a coal and steel entrepreneur on Kyffhäuser and in the Goldenen Aue, where he had acquired an estate in Berga .

Web links

credentials

  1. Johann Seifert: Johann Seifert, JUC Ahnen-Taffeln Third Part: According to the order of the alphabet, Zuforderist the Drey-Einigen God to infinite honor Then those glorious ancestors to whose fame always emerged from their crypts before the earthly world, and to those now living high lovers to gracious pleasure, therefore also those bit on the litzte time sufficient high posterity to perpetual blankets, through long and precious correspondence, carried together with untiring diligence, and finished . Published by Auctoris, 1719 ( google.de [accessed on January 21, 2018]).
  2. ^ Thomas Wozniak: Quedlinburg in the 14th and 16th centuries: A social topographical comparison . Walter de Gruyter, 2013, ISBN 978-3-05-006051-4 ( google.de [accessed on January 21, 2018]).
  3. Valentin König, Georg Wilhelm Kirchmaier: Genealogical nobility history or gender description of those in the Chur-Saxon and neighboring countries partly formerly, but mostly still in good florals, the oldest and most handsome noble families and from the same sprung various barons and nobles Count's houses, where the same antiquity, lineages, coats of arms, division of their family houses, rulers, feudal and knightly estates, as well as the life and deeds of the most famous high-nobility persons, after their birth, marriage, produce children and death, at the same time Many remarkable incidents of those who either in times of war and peace, with holding charges at high courts, or through other honorable service, demonstrated bravery or erudition, and otherwise, gained a glorious fame, clearly described: Zweyter Part . published by Wolffgang Deer, 1729 ( google.de [accessed on January 21, 2018]).
  4. Johann Seifert: Johann Seifert, JUC Ahnen-Taffeln Third Part: According to the order of the alphabet, Zuforderist the Drey-Einigen God to infinite honor Then those glorious ancestors to whose fame always emerged from their crypts before the earthly world, and to those now living high lovers to gracious pleasure, therefore also those bit on the litzte time sufficient high posterity to perpetual blankets, through long and precious correspondence, carried together with untiring diligence, and finished . Published by Auctoris, 1719 ( google.de [accessed on January 21, 2018]).