Franz Grambek

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Franz Grambek , also Franciscus Grambeke (* in Lübeck ; † April 1, 1536 in Bremen ) was church lawyer at the Roman Curia and provost in Bremen.

Life

Franz Grambek came from a Lübeck council family. A Werner Grambek died in 1460 as a councilor in Luebeck. He enrolled as Franciscus Grambeke around Easter 1472 to study at the University of Rostock and graduated from Rostock in 1475 with a bachelor's degree . In 1490 at the latest he was a doctor of law. He was first dean of the Bremen Cathedral . From 1489 to 1496 he worked in Rome at the Roman Curia and was papal family. From 1500 to 1534 Grambeck was provost of the cathedral in Bremen.

Since 1494 he was also the owner of a prebende at Lübeck Cathedral . In 1514 he received his great prebende as the successor to the resigned Bernhard Sculteti . However, he never resided in Lübeck. He was also the owner of Vicarie No. 3 at Lübeck Cathedral and in 1514 disregarded the chapter's request to cede it to someone else.

In 1531 he founded the cathedral library in Bremen through his library foundation together with Segebadus Clüwer († November 15, 1547). Due to the uprising of 104 men , the cathedral chapter was temporarily expelled from Bremen in 1532 and was involved in the agreement between the council and the citizenship in 1534. According to Lappenberg, Franz Grambek died around Easter 1536 of the " lice disease " and was described by contemporaries as an unpleasant person:

"According to Renner ad a. In 1536 he is said to have been a greedy person; and in a handwritten message he reads: habuit 22 Wambosia, Fluwelia et Serica et 60 Camisias. "

- also to Lappenberg

He was buried in the Bremen Cathedral .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. According to DNB deviating April 16, Prange (Lit) † 1536 April 1 or 16 .
  2. Entry 1472 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  3. Entry 1475 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  4. Christiane Schuchard, Knut Schulz: Thomas Giese from Lübeck and his Roman notebook from 1507 to 1526 , p. 26 assume that he could have brought Bernhard Cloenewinkel from Lübeck to Rome. After Prange, Cloenewinkel was his sister son
  5. 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. 142 No. 48, 158 No. 3
  6. Bernhard Bruch: The old Bremen cathedral library, its history and the high Romanesque book illumination in Bremen. In: Philobiblion IV, 1960, pp. 292-353
  7. "He had 22 jackets, velvet and silk, and 60 shirts."