Ernst von Fürst

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Coat of arms of the von Fürst family in the older part of Scheibler's book of arms

Ernst von Fürst or Ernst von First (around 1514 ) was a Tübingen bailiff.

Live and act

Ernst von Fürst, whose ancestral castle was Fürst bei Öschingen , lived in his own Freyhaus in Tübingen, where his ancestors had lived most of the time. He had had a property in Mühlen near Horb am Neckar since 1510 and probably stayed in Egelstal for a while.

On June 18, 1514, the Hohentübinger Burgvogt Ernst von Fürst and the Tübingen Vogt Konrad Breuning ended an uprising in Tübingen. Breuning then advised the Duke to move the state parliament to Tübingen and thereby separate the landscape from the representatives of the farmers.

Ernst von Fürst was a quick and experienced warrior. Around July 31, 1514 he took part in the suppression of the peasant uprising in the Rems Valley with an army of 500 well-dressed Tübingen and 100 Balingers in the ducal army of 1,800 men .

family

Ernst von Duke was a son of the married to Ursula Swelher squire and knight Konrad von Prince († around 1491/1494), the owner of the Württemberg fief Prince in the denunciation of Öschingen and from 1464 to 1472 and was Burgvogt in Tübingen. His brother Veit von Fürst was imperial governor in Modena and his brother Wilhelm von Fürst was imperial councilor and attorney at law in 1508.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Daniel Georg von Memminger: Description of the Oberamt Rottenburg / Chapter B 17. JG Cotta'sche Buchhandlung, Stuttgart and Tübingen, 1828.
  2. a b When Horb was still abroad for the Egelstal: From the weir system to the agricultural estate: the 700-year eventful history of the Egelstal estate.
  3. a b Remstalbräu - The Experiment: History  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.remstalbraeu.de  
  4. Ludwig F. Heyd, Karl Pfaff: Ulrich, Herzog zu Württemberg. A contribution to the history of Württemberg and d. German Empire in the age of d. Reformation. Volume 1. Fues 1841.
  5. Street sign on Tübingen Fürststraße .
  6. ^ Christian Pfister: Eberhard im Bart, first Duke of Wirtemberg: from real, largely handwritten, historical sources. H. Laupp, 1822, p. 83.