Dieter VI. from Dalberg

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Dieter VI. on a woodcut from 1514

Dieter VI. von Dalberg (* 1468 ; † February 9, 1530 ) was a knight and a high- ranking official from the Electorate of the Palatinate from the noble von Dalberg family .

origin

Dieter VI. was the son of Wolfgang III. Chamberlain of Worms called von Dalberg (1426–1476) and his wife, Gertrud, daughter of Friedrich von Greiffenclau († 1502). Dieter VI. had a brother of the same name (Dieter V.), who shortly before the birth of Dieter VI. had died, so that the parents gave this name again. Wolfgang and Gertrud von Dalberg had a number of other children - and Dieter VI. thus siblings - including Johann XX. von Dalberg (1455–1503), the Bishop of Worms and an important figure in early humanism , Friedrich VI. von Dalberg (1459–1506), Mayor of Oppenheim , Guda von Dalberg († 1518), first prioress of the Maria Himmelskron monastery and later of the Marienberg monastery near Boppard , and Wolfgang VI. (1473 or 1474 to 1522), Electoral Palatinate bailiff in Oppenheim.

family

Dieter VI. married Anna in 1495 († August 28, 1528, buried in Wallhausen), daughter of Hans von Helmstadt and Gertrud von Palandt. The couple had the children:

  1. Friedrich VIII. (* 1499 or 1500; † February 21, 1574, buried in Wallhausen), who was electoral Mainz bailiff in Oppenheim and in 1536 married Anna († December 12, 1564, buried in Ruppertsberg), daughter of Ludwig von Fleckenstein.
  2. Anna († February 6, 1549; buried in Hattenheim ) married Dietrich von Schönenberg in 1522 († November 10, 1542, buried in the Franciscan Church in Heidelberg ), burgrave in Alzey , marshal of the Palatinate .
  3. Margareta († June 27, 1546, buried in St. Laurentius in Weinheim ) married Ulrich Ulner von Dieburg († November 16, 1550, buried in St. Laurentius in Weinheim).
  4. Eberhard I., named from 1520 to Bechtoldsheim († September 25, 1559, buried in Herrnsheim) was married twice. His first marriage was with Ursula, daughter of Frowin and Kunigunde von Hutten († April 19, 1555, buried in Herrnsheim). In 1559 he married a second time, Anna, daughter of Veit and Gertrud von Wernau .
  5. Katharina (* around 1498; † March 10, 1560) married Augustin von Braunsberg († 1544 in Hungary) around 1518.

Life

Dedicated image from Jakob Köbel : Ain newe sorted Rechenbüchlein ... , Oppenheim 1514: Handover of the arithmetic booklet from Jakob Köbel to Dieter VI. from Dalberg

Dieter VI. and his family lived at Dalberg Castle . Between 1490 and 1500 he had the castle expanded extensively. He was both a councilor and an important advisor to Elector Ludwig V of the Palatinate . With him he took part in the Diet of Worms in 1521. Dieter VI. became, like his employer, Lutheran , but this did not prevail in the Dalberg family in the long run. Dieter VI. was very open to humanism and maintained contact with its representatives in Heidelberg and elsewhere.

Dieter VI. died on February 9, 1530. He was buried in the church of Wallhausen . A double epitaph for him and his wife is on the churchyard wall there. Before the destruction of the Katharinenkirche in Oppenheim in the Palatine War of Succession in 1689 there was a death shield for Wolfgang VI. from Dalberg.

literature

in alphabetical order by authors / editors

  • Friedrich Battenberg : Dalberg documents. Regesta on the documents of the treasurers of Worms called von Dalberg and the barons of Dalberg 1165–1843 Volume 14/3: Corrigenda, indices and family tables (by Dalberg and Ulner von Dieburg) = Repertories of the Hessian State Archives Darmstadt 14/3. Darmstadt 1987. ISBN 3-88443-238-9
  • Johannes Bollinger: 100 families of the chamberlain from Worms and the lords of Dalberg . Bollinger, Worms-Herrnsheim 1989. Without ISBN.
  • Detlev Schwennicke: European family tables. Family tables on the history of the European states . New series, vol. 9: Families from the Middle and Upper Rhine and from Burgundy . Marburg 1986. Without ISBN, plate 56.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ The ordinal numbers according to Bollinger, pp. 10–13.
  2. Genealogical data, unless otherwise stated, according to Schwennicke.
  3. Bollinger, p. 38; Battenberg: Repertories 14/3, Plate VI.
  4. a b Bollinger, p. 39.
  5. a b Bollinger, p. 38.
  6. ^ Dieter Mertens: Bishop Johann von Dalberg (1455–1503) and German humanism . In: Kurt Andermann (Hrsg.): Ritteradel in the Old Kingdom. The chamberlain of Worms called von Dalberg. Hessian Historical Commission, Darmstadt 2009. (Work of the Hessian Historical Commission, New Series, Volume 31), ISBN 978-3-88443-054-5 , pp. 35–50 (40). Online edition of the article
  7. Carl. JH Villinger: The chamberlain from Worms called von Dalberg and their relationship with Oppenheim . In: 1200 years of Oppenheim am Rhein. City of Oppenheim, Oppenheim 1965, pp. 55-68 (55).