Franz Adolf Dietrich von Ingelheim

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Ingelheim and Dalberg alliance coat of arms for Franz Adolf Dietrich von Ingelheim and his wife Ursula Kämmerin von Worms Freiin von Dalberg (1668–1730) above the entrance door of the Catholic Church in Burgholzhausen, Hesse, in front of the height

Franz Adolf Dietrich von Ingelheim (born December 15, 1659 in Aschaffenburg , † September 15, 1742 in Wetzlar ), Count Palatine , Imperial Baron and Imperial Count called Echter von und zu Mespelbrunn , was Imperial Chamberlain from 1730 to 1742.

Life

Ingelheim was born on December 15, 1669 in Aschaffenburg as the son of a bailiff of Miltenberg, who belonged to Kurmainz , and studied law at the universities of Mainz and Erfurt . After his studies he worked in the administration of Erfurt, then became Hofrat von Kurmainz and in 1682 a member of the Privy Council. In the same year he was appointed Vice Cathedral of the Rheingau in the rank of court counselor based in Geisenheim . Before that, in 1680 he was promoted to imperial baron.

In 1683 he married Maria Ursula von Dalberg, a daughter of the Electorate of Mainz, Friedrich Dietrich Kämmerer von Worms called von Dalberg . The still young Ingelheim was made a real Reichshofrat by Emperor Leopold I in 1690 and in 1696 the Emperor made him a candidate for the Catholic presidency at the Reich Chamber of Commerce in Wetzlar. The presentation of Ingelheim for this post horrified the class-conscious assessors of the court, since Ingelheim did not come from the count or gentry class. They flatly rejected Ingelheim as the new president, which snubbed the Kaiser and Ingelheim. Since the assessors did not want to have an open dispute with the emperor, they came to terms with the appointment.

On April 4, 1698, Ingelheim therefore passed the usual examination as the new President of the Reich Chamber of Commerce. After the death of the Protestant President Manderscheid, Leopold decided to appoint Count Friedrich Ernst von Solms-Laubach as his successor. With the new president, however, it came to frictions quite quickly, which openly broke out during the presentation as assessor of Ow's Catholic candidate.

In 1698 he became President of the Reich Chamber of Commerce in Wetzlar, from which he was suspended in 1703 after a dispute with his official colleague Solms-Laubach. In 1711 he was reinstated and from 1730 to 1742 he was a judge of the Reich Chamber of Commerce.

Between 1715 and 1718 he had the Von Ingelheim'sche Palais built in Wetzlar .

family

Franz Adolf Dietrich was the son of Philipp Ludwig von Ingelheim (1627–1661) and Maria Ottilia Echter von Mespelbrunn (1629–1701), he married Ursula Kämmerin von Worms Freiin von Dalberg (1668–1730) on February 21, 1683, she was the daughter of the incumbent Vice Cathedral in Mainz and director of the knighthood on the Rhine river, Friedrich Dietrich von Dalberg and the Maria Clara Countess von Schönborn. This marriage resulted in 22 children.

  • Anselm Franz von Ingelheim (1683–1749), Prince-Bishop of Würzburg
  • Maria Anna von Ingelheim (1684–1697)
  • Rudolf Johann Friedrich von Ingelheim (1685–1706)
  • Amalia Maria Theresia von Ingelheim (1687–1734) oo Arnold Christof Frh.v.Bylandt
  • Maria Christine (Christiane) Sophia von Ingelheim (* 1687) oo 1710 Wilhelm Adolph Schenk von Schmidtberg
  • Johann Gottfried von Ingelheim (1689–1721) Electoral Mainz Chamberlain, Oberamtmann and Lord of Tauberbischofsheim
  • Anton Dietrich Carl von Ingelheim (1690–1750) choir bishop in the diocese of Trier , governor of Koblenz
  • Ernst Friedrich von Ingelheim (* 1690 †)
  • Ludwig Anton von Ingelheim (* 1691 †)
  • Franz Philipp von Ingelheim (* 1692 †)
  • Maria Theresia Luise von Ingelheim (* 1693) canon at St. Mergen Abbey in Cologne , abbess
  • Anna Elisabeth Charlotte von Ingelheim (1694–1695)
  • Catharina Eva Augusta von Ingelheim (* 1695 †)
  • Anna Eleonora von Ingelheim (1696–1730) canon of Dietkirchen / Bonn
  • Johann Philipp von Ingelheim (1697–1784) oo 1722 Maria Clara Philippina von Dalberg, Vice Cathedral in the Rheingau
  • Anna Ernestine (Wilhelmina) von Ingelheim (1699–1718)
  • Anna Magdalena Friederike von Ingelheim (* 1702) canon at Neville in Brabant
  • Maria Anna Amalie (Juliane Eva Johanna) von Ingelheim (* 1704) oo 1731 with Adam Christoph Joseph von Berg, called Freiherr von Trips
  • Anna Charlotte Catharina von Ingelheim (* 1706) canon of Dietkirchen / Bonn
  • Anna Constantia Philippine Franziska von Ingelheim (* 1708) canoness to Mons
  • Anna Carolina Lucretia von Ingelheim (* 1710) canoness to Neville
  • Isabella Maria Antonia von Ingelheim (1712–1714)

Appointments

  • Appointment as imperial baron with "high and well-born" as well as large palatinate; Pardubice May 27, 1680;
  • Name and coat of arms association with the extinct Genuine from and to Mespelbrunn; Vienna March 8, 1698;
  • Imperial Count with increased coat of arms ; Laxenburg June 1, 1737;

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Friedrich Merzbacher: Heinz Duchhardt, Reich Chamberlain Franz Adolf Dietrich von Ingelheim (1659 / 1730–1742). A biographical sketch . In: Journal of the Savigny Foundation for Legal History. German Department . tape 93 , no. 1 , 1976, ISSN  2304-4861 , pp. 513 , doi : 10.7767 / zrgga.1976.93.1.513 ( degruyter.com [accessed December 10, 2018]).
  2. a b c Anette Baumann: Lawyers and Procurators: Lawyers at the Reich Chamber of Commerce (1690-1806) . Böhlau, Cologne 2006, ISBN 3-412-07806-9 , pp. 100 .
  3. Echter-Ingelheim family tree (Graeflich Ingelheim family archive, Mespelbrunn Castle)