Conrad Julius Hagemann

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Conrad Julius Hagemann (* 1637 in Wennigsen (Deister) , † 1684 in Wiesbaden ) was a German lawyer and mayor of Hanover .

Life

Conrad Julius Hagemann's ancestors served the Guelphs as important state officials in the Duchy of Braunschweig-Lüneburg , while Hagemann's grandfather and father had worked as officials of the Wennigsen monastery .

Born during the Thirty Years' War , the young Hagemann attended schools in Hanover and Braunschweig and then studied in Wittenberg at the Leucorea and in Jena at the university there .

In 1660 Hagemann initially accepted a position as court master at the Lüneburg district administrator Levin von Bothmer , but then continued his studies in Jena, after which he worked as a lawyer in Hanover for three years . There he met his future wife Catharina Elisabeth , daughter of the chamber councilor Heinrich Klawe , who served under Duke Ernst August . But before the wedding, Hagemann went to Speyer to work at the Reich Chamber of Commerce there, and then did his doctorate at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität in Heidelberg , before finally getting married in 1673.

In 1675 Conrad Julius Hagemann was appointed syndic of the old town of Hanover, before he was appointed mayor there around three years later in 1678, succeeding Georg Türke .

In the royal seat of Hanover he was related or professionally related to three other legally trained mayors with a doctorate. Henning Lüdeke (1594–1663), Georg Türke and David Amsing (1617–1684); all four were lawyers and no longer - like their predecessors in the Middle Ages - long-distance traders; the curriculum vitae of all four could be made accessible in particular through traditional funeral sermons. Some of them sat on the city ​​council at the same time , although close relatives shouldn't actually sit on the council together. When a new mayor was to be elected in 1684, the year Hagemann died, Hagemann stood up - successfully - for his friend, the merchant Anton Levin von Wintheim , who came from the old Hanoverian noble family .

Hagemann was buried in Wiesbaden, where the preacher Johann Georg Rüger gave his funeral sermon.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d e f g Carl-Hans Hauptmeyer : rule of the city council. In: History of the City of Hanover , Vol. 1: From the beginnings to the beginning of the 19th century , ed. by Klaus Mlynek and Waldemar R. Röhrbein , Schlütersche Verlagsanstalt and Druckerei, Hanover 1994, ISBN 3-87706-351-9 , pp. 170–174; here: p. 173f.
  2. ^ A b Johann Georg Rüger: Funeral pamphlet for Hagemann, Conrad Julius, 1684; compare the information ( memento of the original from January 20, 2017 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. from the complete catalog of German-language funeral sermons @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / cgi-host.uni-marburg.de
  3. Kersten Krüger (Ed.): European Cities in the Age of Baroque: Shape - Culture - Social Structure (= urban research / series A / representations , vol. 28), Cologne; Vienna: Böhlau-Verlag, 1988, ISBN 978-3-412-05987-3 and ISBN 3-412-05987-0 , p. 262; Preview over google books