Franz Diemann

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Franz Diemann , also Franciscus Diman , Dijman , Dyeman , Dyc (k) mann , Digemann (* in Lübeck ; † June 27, 1527 ibid) was a German Roman Catholic clergyman, canon in Lübeck and papal family.

Life

Franz Diemann was a son of the Lübeck merchant and councilor Anton Dimant / Thonies Dyman († 1498). In 1491 he enrolled at the University of Rostock together with his brother (?) Gherardus . Here were both 1493 Bakkalar ; Franz graduated with a master's degree in 1495/96 .

Diemann was the owner of several benefices in Lübeck. He was canon at Lübeck Cathedral and owner of Vicarie No. 32 at Lübeck's Marienkirche , which he held in trust for the underage Hermannus Mesmann, the son of Councilor Hermann Messmann .

From 1500 he can be traced in Rome. He appeared as a party representative and witness at trials before the Rota Romana , became papal familiarius ( familiarius papae ) and thus part of the papal family . He is mentioned in Rome in 1513 when the Rotanotary, who was born in southern Italy and later Bishop of Bagnoregio in Central Italy, Mercurius de Vipera († 1527) renounced two canon positions at Lübeck Cathedral, one in favor of Franz Diemann due to a legal dispute with him and on the other in favor of Johannes Pumpel . In 1514 Diemann litigated in Rome because of a vicarie at Lübeck Cathedral. In 1515 he was registered as a notary at the Rota.

In the summer of 1523 he got the papal confirmation of the election of Henry III in Rome . Bock catches up with the bishop of Lübeck . In 1524 he received another prebend as canon at the collegiate monastery of St. Michael in the episcopal residence of Eutin . On behalf of the Lübeck bishop he was involved in the settlement negotiations with the Hamburg scholaster Heinrich Banzkow in 1524 .

In the year before his death, he gave his family , Gregor Olderogge, who came from the diocese of Mainz , vicarie no. 1 at the Jakobikirche in Lübeck through his right to present in the cathedral chapter . His canonical went to Bernhard Cloenewinkel, who was also active in Rome .

His grave in Lübeck Cathedral has not been preserved.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Entry 1491 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  2. Entry 1493 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  3. ^ Entry 1495/96 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  4. Wolfgang Prange : Vicariates and Vicars in Lübeck up to the Reformation. (= Publications on the history of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck. Series B, vol. 40). Schmidt-Römhild, Lübeck 2003 ISBN 3-7950-0478-0 , pp. 67, 149 No. 103
  5. Vipera, Mercurius de in: Zedler: Large complete Universal Lexicon of all sciences and arts , Volume 48, 1746, Sp. 1683/1684 ( digitized version )
  6. Christiane Schuchard, Knut Schulz: Thomas Giese from Lübeck and his Roman notebook from 1507 to 1526 , Schmidt-Römhild, 2003, p. 24
  7. ^ Andreas Röpcke: The Eutin Collegiate Foundation in the Middle Ages 1309–1535 ( Sources and research on the history of Schleswig-Holstein ISSN  0173-0940 71), Neumünster 1977 ISBN 978-3-529-02171-8 , p. 142
  8. Eduard Meyer: History of the Hamburg school and teaching system in the Middle Ages. Meißmner, Hamburg 1843, p. 43; 155 ff. ( Digitized version )
  9. Wolfgang Prange : Vicariates and Vicars in Lübeck up to the Reformation. (= Publications on the history of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck. Series B, vol. 40). Schmidt-Römhild, Lübeck 2003 ISBN 3-7950-0478-0 , p. 150 No. 112
  10. No entry in Klaus Krüger: Corpus of medieval grave monuments in Lübeck, Schleswig, Holstein and Lauenburg 1100–1600. Jan Thorbeke Verlag, Stuttgart 1999 ISBN 3-7995-5940-X