Eberhard von Entringen

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coat of arms of those of Entringen

Eberhard von Entringen was dean and canon in Strasbourg .

Live and act

On April 17, 1247, Pope Innocent IV ordered Eberhard von Entringen, at the request of the cleric Heinrich von Pforzheim , to force the abbess and the convent of Erstein near Strasbourg to grant the named cleric a benefice of their patronage according to an earlier mandate and revoked this papal letters now received from the nuns who had been banned by the previous executors. He was canon in Strasbourg from 1247 to 1278 and provisor et gubernator ecclesiae argentinensis in 1277 , d. H. Administrator and manager of the Strasbourg cathedral.

In February 1258, Eberhard von Entringen was archdeacon of the Niedermünster monastery (Inferioris monasterii) in Hohenburg . In 1266 he was rector fabrice in Strasbourg, at a time when the related Scholasticus Markward von Entringen was iudex fabrice . They were clerical builders of the Strasbourg cathedral who belonged to the cathedral chapter and were commissioned by the bishop .

An Eberhard von Aentringen is also commemorated in 1191 in the foundation letter of the Bebenhausen monastery , but it is uncertain whether it was not an ancestor of the abbot Herrenalber.

family

He was a brother of Konrad and Otto von Entringen and the Ita von Entringen .

Individual evidence

  1. Hans Ammerich : The Diocese of Speyer and its history , Volume 2: From the Staufer period (1125) to the beginning of the 16th century ; Kehl am Rhein 1999; ISBN 3-927095-44-3 . P. 2, 4.
  2. Horst Boxler: The Lords of Entringen and the early history of the Counts of Königsegg
  3. a b Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg: WUB Volume XII., No. 5841.
  4. Max Bach: The Parler and their relations to Gmünd, Reutlingen and Ulm. Repertorium für Kunstwissenschaft 23 (1900), pp. 377–387.
  5. Prehistory and early history of the building works: Münster and cathedral "factories" (1165-1500).
  6. Christian Friedrich Sattler: Topographical history of the Duchy of Württemberg and all the same incorporated lordships, in which the cities, monasteries and the same offices are described in detail according to their location, former owners, fates, natural and other peculiarities. Betulius, 1784. Page 305 of 619 pages.
  7. Heinrich von Strasbourg and the entire cathedral chapter declare their promise never to sell the Strasbourg bailiwick to a princely family (illustri vel superillustri), by whatever legal title. May 1, 1247, Strasbourg. (PDF file; 502 kB)
  8. ^ Julius Kindler von Knobloch; Baden Historical Commission [ed.]: Upper Baden gender book (volume 1): A - Ha. Heidelberg, 1898, page: 490.