Daniel Eberhart Dolp

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Daniel Eberhart Dolp (born September 19, 1702 in Nördlingen ; † August 8, 1771 there ) was a German lawyer and mayor of the free imperial city of Nördlingen.

Life

Epitaph Daniel Eberhart Dolps in St. George's Church in Nördlingen

Daniel Eberhart Dolp was born as the son of the Nördlingen school man Georg Friedrich Dolp . He studied law at the universities of Jena , Halle and Leipzig . In Halle, he particularly joined the legal historian Johann Peter von Ludewig , of which his first publication bears testimony: In an anonymous pamphlet he defended his academic teacher against attacks from Christian Thomasius ' camp . After graduating, Dolp initially worked as a court master . He then took over various offices in his hometown, most recently (from 1761 until his death) the office of mayor and supreme school overseer (protosolarch). Because of his great legal expertise, several imperial estates appointed him their adviser. In 1756 he was awarded the title of Imperial Palatine Count in recognition of his services .

Dolp was married twice. From his first marriage to Sibilla Maria, née Klein, he was survived by his son Daniel Heinrich, who later died with the rank of major ; from his second marriage to Rosina Elisabetha, née Tröltsch, three daughters and son Anton Jacob emerged, who in 1766 took over the position of councilor from him and in 1804 was promoted to electoral Bavarian city commissioner in Nördlingen.

Daniel Eberhart Dolp dealt with questions of legal history in numerous writings, in particular from the history of the city of Nördlingen. A bibliography of his writings can be found in the biographical article in Clemens Alois Baader's “Lexicon of deceased Bavarian writers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries”.

After Dolp's death, the widow and children had two funeral sermons printed; his friend Georg Wilhelm Zapf wrote a necrology . Dolps Epitaph is located on the north side of the choir of St. George's Church in Nördlingen.

Works

  • (anonymous): Urgent thoughts on some news which Nicolaus Veridicus Impartialis Bohemus communicated in an impartial letter to his good friend in B. from the newest state in Halle and the news of some incidents in Halle, especially from Tit. pl. Chr. Thomasio, promoted to print by Lamberto Probino Symzero, Meclenb. o. O. 1724 ( online ). Reprint in: Stefan Borchers (Ed.): Four writings at the end of Wolff's first teaching period at the University of Halle. Georg Olms, Hildesheim, Zurich, New York 2012 (= Christian Wolff: Gesammelte Werke. Dept. III: Materials and Documents, Vol. 130), ISBN 978-3-487-14321-7 , pp. 45–52.
  • (anonymous): Kurtze, but thorough explanation that the imperial city of Nördlingen in Swabia did not become part of the imperial Immedietaet until 1251, as was the case with bißhero and recently by T. Mr. Hof-Rath von Falckenstein in the second review of his antique. Nordgaviensium was held in front of it, with some old documents that have never been brought to light . Mundbach, Nördlingen 1735 ( online ).
  • Thorough report of the old state and the successful Reformation of the churches, monasteries and schools in the H. Reich city of Nördlingen and its associated area. Likewise of the clerical castles and other houses still in the city . Mundbach, Nördlingen 1738 ( online ).
  • (anonymous): The best-founded refutation of such a rubricirten printed writing in the rights and stories: Species facti cum deductione ex actis eorumque circumstantiis, in the matter of the Count of Oettingen-Wallerstein against the Closter Neresheim, punct. Mandate. de non turbando in possessione vel quasi Jurisdictionis Territorialis. In: Johann Jacob Moser (Ed.): Teutsches Staats-Archiv, or collection of their most recent and most important Reich, Crays and other acts, deductions, judgments of their highest Reich courts, contracts and other state documents and documents ... First Part. Knoch and Eßlinger, Frankfurt a. M. and Leipzig, 1756, pp. 27-90 ( online ).
  • (anonymous): Fair refutation and answer to a deduction published in print under the title: Sublimis Statuum SRI Advocatia patrimonialis & ecclesiastica Ordinaria, quae vigore Superioritatis territorialis eis competit… o. O. 1759 ( online ).

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The name variants include "Daniel Eberhard Dolp" and (after the misprint in Adelung) "Daniel Eberhard Dolz ".
  2. ^ Matriculation at the University of Jena on March 28, 1722; see. The register of the University of Jena. Volume II: 1652 to 1723. Edited by Reinhold Jauernig, continued by Marga Steiger. Hermann Böhlaus successor, Weimar 1977 (publications of the Friedrich Schiller University Jena), p. 211. Matriculation at the University of Halle on April 28, 1723; see. Matriculation of the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg. Part 1: (1690-1730). Edited by Fritz Juntke. University and State Library, Halle 1960 (works from the University and State Library of Saxony-Anhalt in Halle a. D. Saale, Volume 2), p. 122. Matriculation at the University of Leipzig on October 8, 1726; see. The younger matriculation of the University of Leipzig, 1559–1809. Edited by Georg Erler. Volume 3: The matriculations from the winter semester 1709 to the summer semester 1809. Giesecke & Devrient, Leipzig 1909, p. 66.
  3. See Baader, Lexikon , Vol. 1/1, p. 120 ( online ).
  4. Beyschlag, Beyangebote , p. 72, lists the following official functions of Dolps in Nördlingen: trainee lawyer and archivist , 1732 council secretary, 1740 councilor , 1753 council consultant and finally in 1762 (apparently wrongly for 1761) mayor and proto-holarch.
  5. See Jürgen Arndt: Hofpfalzgrafen-Register . Vol. 3. Degener, Neustadt an d. Aisch 1988, ISBN 3-7686-3046-3 , p. 231; Friedrich Wecken: Directory of the Imperial Palatine Counts appointed by the Counts and Princes of Fürstenberg. In: Familiengeschichtliche Blätter 22 (1924), p. 155.
  6. See Beyschlag, Beyträger , p. 72.
  7. Tears of love and tenderness, which the grave of your most beloved husband ... Mr. Daniel Eberhard Dolp ... mayor of the magistrate ... in ... Nördlingen ... as the same ... August 8, 1771. His glorious life ended ... by this, wanted to consecrate the beloved Wittib Rosina Elisabetha Dolp, bored Tröltsch . Beck, Noerdlingen 1771; The most painful loss of your resp. Father's best and father-in-law ... Mr. Daniel Eberhard Dolp ... Mayor's ... in ... Nördlingen ... Which Thursday, August 8th, 1771 ... passed away ... lamented ... sons and daughters who remained, son-in-law and daughters-in-law ... Beck, Nördlingen 1771. Both funeral sermons can be found in the inventory the State and City Library of Augsburg .
  8. The title of the anonymously published publication is: Monument near the grave of the mayor [!] Daniel Eberhard Dolps in the imperial city of Nördlingen. Lohse, Oettingen 1771. A copy of the rare script is in the collection of funeral sermons in the Nördlingen City Archives.
  9. Cf. Georg Monninger: The epitaphs in the St. George's Church, in the Spitalkirche and in the city museum in Nördlingen. Beck, Nördlingen 1914, p. 13; Klaus Raschzok: Epitaphs, death shields and funeral sermons as symbols of remembrance. Remarks on a Protestant Piety Tradition. In: Remembrance of the dead and culture of mourning. History and future of dealing with the deceased. Edited by Markwart Herzog . Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 2001 (Irseer Dialoge, Vol. 6), pp. 111–155, here pp. 142–146.