Diedrich von Brömbsen

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Diedrich von Brömbsen (* 1613 in Lübeck ; † 1671 in Burggrub in Franconia ) was a Lübeck patrician and councilor.

Life

Diedrich von Brömbsen was born in Lübeck in 1613 as the son of Lübeck councilor and heir to Klein-Steinrade Dietrich Brömse (1579–1638) and his wife Margaretha Lüneburg, daughter of Joachim Lüneburg (1512–1588). He was the son-in-law of Lübeck's mayor Anton Köhler . In 1637 he became a member of the patrician circle society in Lübeck. With a patent dated October 9, 1641, Emperor Ferdinand III confirmed . the privileges of the circle society and at the same time recognized the nobility of the families belonging to it at that time; from 1642 Broemse and his family therefore called themselves von Brömbsen . In 1645 he enrolled at the University of Rostock . As a lawyer he represented the interests of the patricians before the Reichshofrat in Vienna in 1654 in the proceedings of the Lübeck brewers against the Lübeck patricians who owned the estates . 1654–1666 he was the emperor's envoy in Lübeck. In 1659 he was elected to the Lübeck Council. As a delegated councilor, he represented the city of Lübeck together with councilor Johann Ritter in Graz to pay homage to Emperor Leopold I. The English navigation file (1656) prompted two trips to London. In 1661 the first, together with the Syndicus Martin Böckel , seemed to have had a favorable outcome. Brömbsen received favorable commitments for Lübeck and the Hanseatic cities and the accolade of King Charles II of England. In 1662, however, the navigation act was reinstated by a royal decree. This time Brömbsen traveled to England together with Bremen and Hamburg councilors; However, they only obtained the right to continue using the Stalhof . In the civil unrest in Lübeck, which led to the cash process , he was on the side of the patricians. He also obtained an imperial mandate in 1664, according to which the city's artisans owed obedience to the council. Brömbsen entered, as was his brother, who hated also among citizens Mayor Gotthard Höveln , 1669 as part of the Bürgerrezesses from Lübeck advice and retired to Burggrub in Franconia, where he died the 1671st

Dietrich's first marriage was Margaretha Köhler, daughter of Lübeck's mayor Anton Köhler (1585–1657). After Margaretha's death in 1645 he married Sophia von Töbing (1617–1663), daughter of the mayor of Lüneburg Hartwig von Töbing (1576–1630), as a second marriage. The daughter Sophia Magdalena von Brömbsen (1660–1702), who was married to Nikolaus Bartholomäus Michael von Danckelman (1650–1739) since 1690, comes from the second marriage .

He was the hereditary lord on Klein-Steinrade, which was heavily devastated in the course of the craftsmen's unrest in 1665, and from 1669 on Burggrub in Franconia.

literature

  • Heinrich Bangert : Paramythētikos ad generosum et strictuum Dn. Diedericum a Brömbsen ... , [1663]
  • Georg Wilhelm Dittmer : Genealogical and biographical news about Lückeck families from earlier times , Lübeck 1859, p. 19. (digitized version)
  • Emil Ferdinand Fehling : Lübeck Council Line. Lübeck 1925, No. 784.
  • Nils Jörn : Dietrich von Brömbsen - the failed career of a Lübeck at the Reichshofrat. In: Nils Jörn and Michael North (ed.): The integration of the southern Baltic region into the old empire. Cologne, Weimar, Vienna: Böhlau 2000 (sources and research on the highest jurisdiction in the Old Reich 35) ISBN 3-412-09900-7 , pp. 185–233

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Fehling: Lübeckische Ratslinie, No. 755
  2. Entry in the Rostock matriculation portal .
  3. ^ Friedrich Bruns †: The Lübeck Council. Composition, addition and management, from the beginning to the 19th century. In: ZVLGA , Volume 32 (1951), pp. 1–69, p. 62 (Chapter 9: Conclusion of Council Membership )