Friedrich Richard Mockhel

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Portrait of Fridericus Richardus Mockelius as a Strasbourg student, unknown artist, oil on panel , 1613

Friedrich Richard Mockhel or Mockel ( Latin: Fridericus Richardus Mockelius ; * October 19, 1594 in Tübingen ; † December 7, July / December 17,  1643 greg. In Benfeld ) was a lawyer and diplomat who served as the office director of the County of Hohenlohe-Waldenburg- Pfedelbach and served as a Swedish resident in Alsace .

Life

Childhood in the inn "Zum Goldenen Schaf" in Tübingen

Restored facade of the former restaurant Am Markt 7 in Tübingen

Friedrich Richard Mockhel was one of three children of Johannes Mockel (1567–1631) from Kirchheim unter Teck, who was related to the Tübingen council . “Joannes Mugelius Kirchensis ” had enrolled in Tübingen in 1582, acquired the Baccalaureation in 1588 as “Mockelius” and in 1591 received a scholarship from the Bebenhausen monastery as “Meckel” . After his marriage in 1593 with scientists "Sheep landlady" of the inn "Golden Sheep" Margaretha born Screwery (1561-1627), widow (⚭ 1582) the innkeeper John Lustenauerstraße († 1592), he was "in 1593 by the University dimittiert ". He remained connected to academic life and was in close contact and a. with Martin Crusius . Johann Mockel died during a trade fair in Reutlingen .

Education

Friedrich Richard and his brothers received their first lessons from their father Johannes Mockel, who rented the Domus Collegii (building of the Philosophical Faculty) from Martin Crusius in April 1601 in order to school his own children and those of others. "Friedricus Richardus Mokhel" from Tübingen enrolled on July 7, 1607 together with his half-brother Joseph Lustnawer (* 1592; † after 1631) and for the second time on December 20, 1614 in Tübingen. Between 1612 and 1620 he defended some theses of the disputation under the chairmanship of Christoph Besold . In 1616 Besold presented six series of theses on Book I, Titulus 1–6 of the Pandects , which were written by the students Friedrich Richard Mockhel, Johann Joachim Kegel (1587–1635), Martin Neuffer , Georg Christoph von Schallenberg and Biberstein , Johann Leonhard Breitschwert ( 1595-1635) and Burkhard Ehinger (* around 1589; † 1633) had been defended in disputations, together for a comment .

As a student, Mockhel had an oil portrait made of himself in 1613. In 1617 he was the preceptor of Count Georg Friedrich von Tübingen-Lichteneck (1601–1622). Friedrich Richard Mockhel earned the academic degree of Licentiate in Law. Mockhel dedicated his last Strasbourg disputation De praemiis dissertatio to his new employer, Count Ludwig Eberhard von Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Pfedelbach (1590–1650).

Office director of the Counts of Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Pfedelbach

Hohenlohe official seat Schloss Pfedelbach , Renaissance building from the 16th century with alterations from the Baroque period

From 1620 to 1631/32 Friedrich Richard Mockhel was councilor, secretary and from around 1528 the office director of Count Ludwig Eberhard von Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Pfedelbach. On March 1st, Jul. / March 11,  1624 greg. Mockhel took part as Count Hohenlohe's envoy in Nuremberg at a day of the Franconian Empire convened by Emperor Ferdinand II , during which he wanted to raise contributions. When the Bavarian Regiment Schönberg was on horseback in Franconia and Swabia from 1627, troops were quartered in the Hohenlohe offices of Hollenbach and Weikersheim for a long time. In order to reduce the burden of billeting or to end it prematurely, the Hohenlohe councilors Ludwig Lurzing and Lic. Friedrich Richard Mockel were seconded to the electoral court of Duke Maximilian I of Bavaria in Munich.

In the dispute between the six Hohenlohe counts and the Duchy of Würzburg over canon monastery and hospital in Öhringen and Schäftersheim monastery , "Reinhard Möckel" wrote in Pfedelbach together with other Hohenlohe councilors - Jakob Ludwig in Öhringen, Wolfgang Textor (1588–1650) in Neuenstein, Nikolaus von Helffant († around 1637) and Basilius Schmierer the Elder. J. († 1631/35) in Waldenburg and Johann Christoph Assum (1581–1651) in Langenburg - a report on the Hohenlohe rights to the goods.

On the collegiate day of the Franconian Counts of Künzelsau , the two Hohenlohe councilors Lic. Mockel and Lic. Georg Müller were held on May 21st . / May 31,  1630 greg. delegated as envoy to the Regensburg Electoral Congress, which took place from July to November 1630. As the envoy of the Franconian counts, "Licentiate Mockhel, Chancellery Director in Pfedelbach" took part in the Leipzig Convention of the Protestant imperial estates initiated by Elector Johann Georg I of Saxony (February 26 to April 4, 1631) and signed on March 18 July. / March 28, 1631 greg. on behalf of the counts and lords of the Franconian district a petition from the convent to Emperor Ferdinand II. Mockel prepared a report on the meeting. He then traveled to a conference to implement the decisions of the Convention, which was held on April 22nd . / May 2, 1631 greg. started to Nuremberg. On May 7, 1631, “Director Liz. Mockhell ”at a convent in Weikersheim as the syndic of the Franconian counts' college . On December 1, 1631, Friedrich Richard Mockel gave a speech (a panegyric ) in honor of King Gustav II Adolf of Sweden , who on that day began his campaign to conquer Mainz from Frankfurt am Main . At the end of 1631 Mockhel resigned from the service of the Counts of Hohenlohe and moved to Strasbourg.   

In Swedish service

Secretary to Axel Oxenstierna

In 1632 Friedrich Richard Mockhel became secretary to the Swedish Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna . In the summer of 1632 he was in Mainz, then Swedish, for a few months. Axel Oxenstierna had awarded him the house of the electoral council Dionysius Campius († 1641), who had fled from the Swedes, as a donation .

At the University of Strasbourg , one month after the death of King Gustav II Adolf in the Battle of Lützen, at the invitation of Rector Nicolas Ager on December 10, 1632 , Matthias Bernegger gave an academic commemorative speech in which he was the first to present the Swedish ambassador Josias Glaser (* 1588 ; † after 1650), the Swedish councilor and secretary Friedrich Reichard Mockel and the Count Palatine Georg Otto von Veldenz-Lützelstein-Guttenberg (1614-1635) welcomed.

The conqueror of Colmar Field Marshal General Gustaf Horn left when he withdrew on December 15th . / December 25, 1632 greg. a small garrison under Count Wilhelm Otto von Nassau-Siegen (1607–1641), the Swedish representative Mockhel and two of his chaplains returned to the city. "Friedrich Reinhard Mekhel" informed Horn in August 1633 from Strasbourg about the death of the imprisoned Imperial Colonel Field witness Ernesto Montecuccoli in Colmar. In October 1633 Mockhel stayed in Schlettstadt and in the winter of 1633/34 in Colmar for a few months.

Swedish resident in Alsace

Friedrich Richard Mockhel was appointed resident (general agent) in Alsace in 1634 as the successor to Josias Glaser. In April 1634 Mockhel visited the convention of the Protestant Heilbronn Federation in Frankfurt am Main . He made the return trip via Heidelberg in a tour group together with the syndic of the imperial city of Colmar Hans Heinrich Moog (1600–1688), they reached Strasbourg again on May 31st. In the summer of 1634 Mockhel took care of the studies of Oxenstierna's nephew Axel Åkesson Natt och Dag (1617–1642), Gustav Åkesson Natt och Dag (* around 1618; † 1637) and her cousin Axel Turesson Natt och Dag (1621–1647), who stopped in Strasbourg on their grand tour .

After the battle of Nördlingen

After the devastating defeat in the Battle of Nördlingen (September 6, 1634) Oxenstierna sent the secret secretary Johann von Faltzburg with the royal Swedish archive to Strasbourg, where he worked on the secret correspondence with Mockhel. On September 29th Jul. / October 9,  1634 greg. signed the French resident in Strasbourg Melchior De L'Isle (Lisle) (1580–1644) with the Maréchal de France Jacques Nompar de Caumont , Duke of La Force, and the Swedish resident Friedrich Richard Mockhel on behalf of Rhine Count Otto Ludwig von Salm- Kyrburg-Mörchingen - one week before his death from the plague - signed a treaty in Strasbourg that provided for the cession of all Swedish garrison towns in Alsace except Benfeld and Dachstein to France. Cardinal Richelieu , however, refused to ratify it and on November 1st he himself signed the Paris Agreement with the Heilbronner Bund, which the Swedish Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna refused to sign . In 1535 the Compiègne treaty of alliance was concluded, which left the Swede Benfeld as an exclave in Alsace, France.

Renaissance office building in Benfeld, 12 rue Clemenceau, mid-16th century

Mockhel was a Swedish consiliarius dexterrimus (= council on the right) and resident member of the Strasbourg church convention ( consistory ). In the summer of 1635 he tried to prevent the city of Strasbourg from accepting the Peace of Prague . On October 26, 1635 he moved to Benfeld, Sweden, where he stayed until his death, interrupted by diplomatic trips. Governor of the Bensfeld Fortress was Colonel Arndt von Quernheim (1600–1639), after his death Colonel Friedrich Moser von Filseck († 1671).

At the beginning of 1635 there was a conflict with the allied Duke Henri II. De Rohan and a "Duke of Württemberg" when Quernheim and Mockhel refused to accept French recruits and the billeting of a Württemberg regiment in Obernai (Oberehnheim), which was "under protection of the Swedish Crown ”stood to agree. In March 1635, Chancellor Oxenstierna wanted to restore the county of Saar Werden. In the Swedish name, Friedrich Richard Mockhel in Bouquenom (Bockenheim) solemnly handed over this city and Saar Werden - both originally Lorraine fiefs - to Count Wilhelm Ludwig von Nassau-Saarbrücken on April 23, 1635 . However, the Nassau Counts did not manage to claim this part of the county. Mockhel wintered in Strasbourg in 1635/36. His sister Corona Mockel (* around 1601; † 1636) died there on May 9th.

Fight for Saverne and Breisach

During the siege of Saverne (Zabern) by Bernhard von Sachsen-Weimar in 1636, on behalf of Lieutenant General Cardinal Louis de Nogaret de La Valette (1593–1639), who was in Benfeld on June 8th, his envoy François-Auguste de Thou ( 1604–1642) and the French governor of Colmar , Maréchal de camp Achille de Longueval, sieur de Manicamp (1597–1677), an agreement with Governor Arndt von Quernheim and the Swedish resident Friedrich Richard Mockhel. The French undertook to provide five hundred soldiers. Obernai, which had surrendered to imperial troops in November 1635, and Molsheim were to fall to the Swedes after their capture to secure and supply the Benfeld fortress.

In September 1637 Mockhel was in Strasbourg. When Emperor Ferdinand III. In the spring of 1638 tried to bring about separate peace negotiations with France and Sweden respectively in Cologne and Lübeck, Mockel, as councilor and resident of the Crown of Sweden in Alsace, tried to secure escort through the Duchy of Württemberg . After the conquest of Breisach in December 1638 by Bernhard von Sachsen-Weimar , the pastor Jodocus Haas (1594–1676) dedicated a sermon of thanks to the Swedish resident Mockhel. In January and May 1639 Friedrich Richard Mockhel stayed in Breisach.

The Codex Brisacensis

After the conquest of Breisach, Bernhard von Sachsen-Weimar gave the Swedish legate Friedrich Reichard Mockhel a handwritten codex of the Historia Austrialis Silvii - the so-called Codex Brisacensis . It is a representation of the history of Emperor Friedrich III. by Enea Silvio Piccolomini, later Pope Pius II. Johannes Hinderbach had the manuscript made for Maximilian I. It came to Johann Heinrich Boeckler (1611–1672) via Mockhel's heirs and was published in 1685 by Johann Georg Kulpis because Boeckler could no longer complete the edition himself . The Codex Brisacensis was thought to be lost, but has since been identified in the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris (ms latin 6028).

The private scholar Johannes Freinsheim dedicated Joachim van Wicquefort (1596–1670), an agent of Bernhard von Sachsen-Weimar, and the "amplissimi viro Frid [erico] Reichardo Mockelio Sacrae Reg [inae] Maiest [atis] et Coronae Sveticae Consiliario & Legato per Alsatium “1639 an edition of the Historiae Alexandri Magni Macedonis (= history of the Macedonian Alexander the great ) by Quintus Curtius Rufus . Mockhel had given Freinsheim and his father-in-law Bernegger in 1638 support for Duke Bernhard with 100 doubloons to continue their Tacitus studies.

Death of Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar

In July 1639, Bernhard von Sachsen-Weimar sailed with the resident Mockhel from Hüningen to Neuenburg am Rhein , where the duke died a week later. Mockel appealed to the officers' loyalty to the Swedish crown and advised them to open the (political) will of Bernhard, but when it was first read out, Chancellor Johann Ulrich Rehlinger von Leder, Major General Johann Ludwig von Erlach , Colonel Johann Bernhardemann ( 1587–1657), Count Wilhelm Otto von Nassau-Siegen and Colonel Reinhold von Rosen excluded. The four officers took over the command of the troops in accordance with the order of Bernhard von Sachsen-Weimar. The court chaplain Daniel Rücker (1605–1665) dedicated the print of his funeral sermon in the Breisach Stephansmünster “Mr. Fridrich Reichard Mockeln, your royal. Your Majesty in Sweden Rath and residents in Alsace. Mr. Georg Müllern, your royal. Your Majesty in Sweden Rath and Secret secretario. Mr. Hans Ulrich von Rehlingen auff Löder & c. Princely Saxon Weinmarischen Rath and Cantzley Directori. "

After the death of Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar

The Benfelden Vestung in the year of death of Friedrich Richard Mockhel, Merian-Stich, 1663 (corresponds to a model from 1643)

In the academic funeral speech for Matthias Bernegger, who died in February 1640, Johann Heinrich Boeckler mentioned the envoy Friedrich Reichard Mockel among many learned contemporaries with whom the deceased had dealt. In November 1640 Mockhel traveled to Strasbourg. In 1641 Margrave Friedrich V von Baden-Durlach is said to have told Mockhel that his son-in-law, the Swedish Field Marshal Johan Banér , had made promises about the surrender of Benfeld. Oxenstierna, who heard about it, pointed out to Mockhel the great importance that Benfeld had for Sweden. He should “not be misled” and keep the fortress in good condition. A handover or evacuation could be ordered “by no one else but only by local Chron”. However, as early as 1639, Mockhel had estimated that 20,000 Reichstalers would be needed to maintain the fortress. Mockhel had a lengthy correspondence with the commandant Konrad Widerholt on the Hohentwiel , who as a Württemberg fortress successfully withstood several sieges by imperial troops.

Exchange of Gustaf Horn for Johann von Werth

In 1641/42 Friedrich Richard Mockhel and the Swedish ambassador to France Hugo Grotius , who was therefore in contact with the French Foreign Minister Léon Bouthillier, comte de Chavigny , in Paris and with the Governor of Lorraine François de L'Hospital, seigneur du Hallier , the exchange of the captured Swedish field marshal Gustaf Horn for the imperial cavalry general Johann von Werth , which finally came about on March 24, 1642 on the Dinglinger Zollbrücke. On the same day Horn arrived in Benfeld and was invited by Mockhel to a celebratory meal that the city of Obernai had to deliver. Johann Valentin Andreä dedicated the chapter Sol Veritas Sive Religionis Christianae certitudo (= The sun of truth, or: The certainty of the Christian religion) to Friedrich Reichard Mockel in 1642 in his compendium Rei Christianae et literariae subsidia (= Aids for Christianity and science) .

Hofrat Mockhel issued a fire order for Benfeld in 1642 and a strict Jewish order for the city of Dambach in the Benfeld office on April 26, 1643 . Johann Michael Moscherosch became his secretary in Benfeld in 1643. When the allied French Marshal Jean Baptiste Budes de Guébriant was pushed with his troops to the left bank of the Rhine in August 1643, he was vehemently urged by Mockhel to leave the area around Benfeld.

On the instructions of the commanding officer, Colonel Friedrich Moser von Filseck, Moscherosch continued the official business for the time being after the death of Friedrich Richard Mockhel, who had died after being “very weak”. Resident Georg Hansson von Snoilsky (1607–1672) was appointed Mockhel's successor in Benfeld in 1646.

In 1649 Friedrich Richard Mockhel's brother August Mockhel (1599-1659), who was living in Strasbourg at the time, was referred to in a contract with the city of Wimpfen as "currently the royal Swedish ministro (= envoy) in Alsace".

family

Friedrich Richard Mockhel was married to Agnes Kielmann, a daughter of the Württemberg privy councilor Johann Kielmann von Kielmansegg (1568–1633) from Stuttgart and (⚭ 1592) Margarete Vogler (1574–1633) since 1621 . He was related by marriage to the landscape taker Johannes Kielmann von Kielmansegg (1600–1646), Professor David Magirus , the doctor Andreas Planer (1602–1673) in Schwäbisch Hall, the Württemberg councilor and church box lawyer Matthäus Hiller the Elder. Ä. (1585–1639), the Württemberg Chamberlain Johann Georg Sattler (1597–1640) in Stuttgart and the captain (captain) Johann Philipp Kielmann von Kielmansegg († around 1644). After Württemberg was occupied by imperial troops in 1634, Matthäus Hiller was suspected of being in secret correspondence with his relative, the Swedish resident Mockel. Hiller was arrested in Göppingen . His son Johann Philipp Hiller (1619–1666) from Stuttgart dedicated a Strasbourg disputation in 1637 to the Swedish and Württemberg councilors Friedrich Reichard Mockel, Matthäus Hiller (his father) and Johann Georg Sattler. Johann Philipp Kielmann, who as a bridegroom had impregnated two maids, saved Mockel from church penance after the family intervened in 1643.

Johann Albert Mockel (1596–1622) and the lawyer ( Jurisconsultus ) and Württemberg Chamberlain August Mockel (1599–1659) were - on the part of the father - brothers of Friedrich Richard Mockhel. His brother's family and sister Corona Mockel (1602–1636) fled in 1634 after the battle of Nördlingen like Duke Eberhard III. from Württemberg to Strasbourg . Corona Mockel died there shortly after her arrival. On the mother's side, Friedrich Richard Mockel also had five older half-siblings, including monastery administrator Martin Lustnauer (1586–1635) in Bebenhausen, court pharmacist Joseph Lustnauer (* 1592; † after 1631) in Bamberg and Anna Maria Lustnauer (1588–1619), married (⚭ 1605) to court preacher Bernhard Ludwig Löher (1580–1631) in Stuttgart.

The Mayor of Heilbronn August Friedrich Mockel (1628–1694) and the Strasbourg city kit warden and thirteen-year-old Christoph Jakob Mockel (1630–1704), both sons of August Mockel, born in Schwäbisch Hall and raised in Strasbourg, were Friedrich Richard Mockhel's nephews. Christoph Jakob Mockel dedicated a Strasbourg disputation to his uncle's successor, the Swedish resident Georg Hansson von Snoilsky, in 1649.

swell

  • Letter from Christoph Forstner to Richard Friederich Mockel from February 18, 1630 from Neuenstein ; Johann Christian Volz: Continuation of Christoph Forstner's state letters on Dambenoy with comments . In: Johann Friedrich LeBret : Magazine on the use of state and church history as well as the spiritual constitutional law of Catholic rulers with regard to their clergy 4 (1774), p. 216–338, esp. No. CVII, p. 287–300 ( digitized version ) ; 5 (1776), pp. 186–303, especially p. 271 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library, Munich)
  • Correspondence from Friedrich Richard Mockhel with and mention in letters from Hugo Grotius, Axel Oxenstierna, Johan Adler Salvius , Wild and Rhine Count Otto von Salm (1578–1637), Jean Baptiste Budes de Guébriant a. a., 1636-1643; s. v. "Mock * el *" ( online search of the project ePistolarium - Circulation of Knowledge and Learned Practices in the 17th-century Dutch Republic of the Descartes Center for the History and Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities of the University of Utrecht , the Huygens Institute for History of the Netherlands , the Koninklijke Bibliotheek (National Library of the Netherlands) and others; 27 entries)
  • Correspondence between Friedrich Richard Mockhel and Axel Oxenstierna and Johan Axelsson Oxenstierna, 1637–1643; Svenska Riksarkivet s. v. "Mockhel", "Mockel" and "Mockhell" ( online search ; 24 entries) and mentions of Mockhel in letters from Oxenstierna ( online search ; 9 entries, incomplete)
  • Correspondence with and mentions of Friedrich Richard Mockhel in the correspondence between Johann Valentin Andreae and Johann Schmidt , Johann Conrad Brotbeck , Johannes Freinsheim and Samuel Gloner (1598–1642), 1639–1644; Project development of the correspondence of Johann Valentin Andreae (1586-1654) of the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel s. v. "Mockel" and "Mockhel" ( online search of the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel; over 50 entries)
    • (partly reprinted in excerpts in :) Unprinted letters and excerpts from letters from D. Johann Valentin Andreä… to D. Johann Schmidt, professor of theology and provost of the Collegii Thomani in Strasbourg from the years 1633 to 1654. In: Patriotisches Archiv für Germany 6 (1787), pp. 287–360, esp. Pp. 321, 327–332 and 334–336 ( digitized version from Bielefeld University)
  • Letters from Friedrich Richard Mockel to Axel Oxenstierna and Johan Banér from Benfeld, 1639–1640; Gotha Research Library (estate of Ernst Salomon Cyprian ; Signature: Chart. A 394, pp. 221–224, 229–232 and 265f)
  • Letter from Johann Michael Moscherosch to Johann Heinrich Boeckler dated December 29, 1643 from Benfeld. In: Klaus Conermann, Andreas Herz (ed.): Letters from the Fruitful Society and supplements. The time of Prince Ludwig von Anhalt-Köthen 1617–1650 , Bd. VII / 1 1644–1646 . (The German academy of the 17th century: Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft. Series I, Dept. A Köthen, 7). Niemeyer, Tübingen 2016, No. 440616 II, p. 273f ( PDF from the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel)
  • Jean Charles Brucker (edit.): Summary inventory of the communal archive of the city of Strasbourg before 1700 - Inventaire sommaire des Archives communales de la ville de Strasbourg antérieures à 1790 , Bd. IR Schultz, Strasbourg 1878 ( Google Books )
  • Günther Schweizer: People and families in Tübingen - a genealogical database . Tübingen 2019, especially p. 2251 ( PDF of the Tübingen City Archives)

Works

  • (together with Christoph Besold) De cura imperantium externa generatim, et in specie de foederibus, bello defensivo ac legatis (= About the foreign policy task of the rulers in general and about treaties, the war of defense and diplomats in particular ). Tübingen, around 1612
  • (together with Christoph Besold, with a dedication to patrono suo (= his protector) Melchior Bonacker (1572–1628) and a contribution by Johannes Saubert ) Disputationum, Ad Praecipuas Pandectarum Leges , Prima: Explicationem continens L. 1. & 2. tit. de Iustit. & Iure . Pro Quâ, Spiritus S. Sancti suavi adspirante aurâ… ᾿Επίμετρον. Mulierem, Romani Pontificis sedem occupasse, falsò credi; nobis videtur esse falsißimum (= addition. To think that it is wrong that a woman has taken the chair of the Roman pontiff is, in our opinion , completely wrong ) . Johann Alexander Cellius, Tübingen 1612 ( digitized version of the Berlin State Library), addition : ( Google Books )
    • (slightly abbreviated and slightly revised, reprinted as :) Praecognita miscellanea generalia. I, 1-20 , Lex 1. tit. 1. Lib 1 ff., 1-25 and Lex 2. tit. 1. Lib 1 ff., 1–6 . In: Christoph Besold: Ad tit. I. III. IV. V. et VI. lib. I. Pandectarum commentarii succincti . Johann Alexander Cellius, Tübingen 1616, pp. 1–47 ( Google Books ), contribution by Johannes Saubert, pp. 181f ( Google Books ) and Corol [larium] (= additional) I. Mulierem, Romani Pontificis sedem occupasse… , P. 182f ( Google Books )
  • (together with Christoph Besold) Quaestionum politicarum cinnus (= a mixture of political issues ). Tübingen 1613
  • (together with Christoph Besold) Doctrinae politicae synopsis (= overview of political theory) , quam ex Christophori Besoldi Disputationum politicarum Classibus excerpsit, & Tabellis aliquot repraesentavit (= as he pulled them out of the groups of Christoph Besold's political disputations and presented them in some tables) . In: Christoph Besold (ed.): Politicorum Libri duo , Quorum Primus, Reipublicae Naturam & constitutionem , XII. capitibus graduit, Alter Vero, De Republica In Omnibus Partibus gubernanda , IX. sectionibus tractat. Tübingen 1616 ( Google Books )
    • 2nd edition Johann Alexander Cellius, Frankfurt am Main and Tübingen 1620
  • (together with Christoph Besold) De praemiis dissertatio (= discussion of rewards ) . Eberhard Wild, Tübingen 1620 ( Google Books )
    • (reprinted in :) Christoph Besold (ed.): Disputationum juridoco-politicarum, in illustri Academia Tubingensi habitarum, fasciculus , Vol. I. Eberhard Wild, Tübingen 1623, No. I ( Google Books )
  • Gustavus Adolphus Rex Svecorum , a Friderico-Ricardo Mockel, nuper calendis Decembris Anni 1631. Strasbourg 1643

literature

  • Bogislav Philipp von Chemnitz : Royal Swedish War Fought In Germany… Stories… Johannes Janssonius, Stockholm 1653, p. 26, 186, 253, 545, 547, 557, 592, 651f, 828 and 917f ( Google Books )
  • Henning Witte : Diarium biographicum, In quo scriptores seculi post natum Christum XVII. praecipui… Juxta annum diemque cujusvis emortualem… descripti . Martin Hallervorden, David-Friderich Rhetius, Danzig and Königsberg 1688, p. 179 ( Google Books )
  • August von Gonzenbach : The General Hans Ludwig von Erlach von Castelen , Bd.IK L. Wyß, Bern 1880 ( Google Books ; limited preview)
  • Frieda Gallati : "The Royal Swedish War in Germany" by Bogislav Philipp von Chemnitz and his sources . Huber, Frauenfeld 1902, esp. Pp. 30f, 36f, 44–46, 140 and 144f ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Ernest Meininger: Un cas de haute trahison à Mulhouse (Episode de la guerre de Trente ans) . In: Bulletin du Musée historique de Mulhouse 29 (1905), pp. 9–71, esp. Pp. 20f, 38, 47, 54 and 64 ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Arthur Bechtold: Contributions to a biography of Moscherosch . In: Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins 32 (1917), pp. 562–572, esp. P. 565f ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Roswitha Philippe: Württemberg and the Peace of Westphalia . (Series of publications by the Association for the Study of Modern History 8). Aschendorff, Münster 1976
  • Heiko Droste: In the service of the crown. Swedish diplomats in the 17th century . (Nordic story). LIT, Münster 2006, No. B 76, p. 403, also p. 170 and 264 on Georg Müller ( Google Books ; limited preview)

Web links

  • Portrait "Fridericvs Richardvs Mockelius Tvbingensis Anno Ætatis svæ XIX: Christi vero MDCXIII", oil on wood, 33 × 25 cm, unknown artist of the 17th century, 1613; Alexis Velliet, Henri-Pierre Teissèdre, Delphine de Courtry: Cabinet d'un Amateur auction catalog (March 26, 2010). Piasa, Paris 2010, No. 61, p. 24 = online auction catalog 2020 of Artnet Worldwide Corporation

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Henning Witte: Diarium biographicum, In quo scriptores seculi post natum Christum XVII. praecipui… Juxta annum diemque cujusvis emortualem… descripti . Martin Hallervorden, David-Friderich Rhetius, Danzig and Königsberg 1688, p. 179.
  2. ^ A b Arthur Bechtold: Contributions to a biography of Moscherosch . In: Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins 32 (1917), pp. 562–572, esp. P. 566.
  3. Son of pastor Sebastian Mockel (1537–1606) from Beilngries and (∞ 1566 in Tübingen) Christina Wurzelmann.
  4. Later "Zum golden Lamm" ( Am Markt 7 ), rebuilt after a fire with a restored facade, today Evangelical parish hall in Lamm .
  5. a b c Friedrich Seck, Monika Balzert: Johannes Kepler - Complete Poems . Olms, Hildesheim 2018, pp. 333–337 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  6. Reinhold Stahlecker, Eugen Staiger (Ed.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. III. H. Laupp, Tübingen 1958, p. 257.
  7. 1631 court pharmacist in Bamberg.
  8. Christoph Besold: Ad tit. I. III. IV. V. et VI. lib. I. Pandectarum commentarii succincti . Johann Alexander Cellius, Tübingen 1616.
  9. a b p. 181 lists the names of the six respondents.
  10. Portrait "Fridericvs Richardvs Mockelius Tvbingensis Anno Ætatis svæ XIX: Christi vero MDCXIII (= in the 19th year of his age, but Christ 1613.)", oil on panel, 33 x 25 cm, unknown artist of the 17th century, 1613; 2020 Auction Catalog from Artnet Worldwide Corporation.
  11. ^ Alfred A. Strnad: In search of the lost "Codex Brisacensis" . In: Paul-Joachim Heinig (Ed.): Kaiser Friedrich III. (1440-1493) in his time . Böhlau, Köln / Wien 1993, pp. 467-516, especially p. 488.
  12. appointment of Friedrich Reichardt Mockhel to the council office manager and secretary with instruction , 1620; Hohenlohe Central Archive Neuenstein (Wa 50 Pfedelbach Government, Bü 38).
  13. ^ Mockel, Friedrich Reinhard, Office Director zu Pfedelbach , certificate dated June 16, 1628; Hohenlohe-Zentralarchiv Neuenstein (Ba 5 documents 1. House and Lordship Hohenlohe, U 78).
  14. Franz Ludwig von Soden: War and Moral History of the Imperial City of Nuremberg , Bd. II. Theodor Bläsing, Erlangen 1861, p. 254 ( Google Books ).
  15. Named after Otto Friedrich Freiherr von Schönberg (1589–1631) on Wesel.
  16. Harald Drös: DI 73, Hohenlohekreis , No. 806 ( online at Deutsche Insschriften Online).
  17. son of Ludwig Lurzing of Rothenburg ob der Tauber , Graflicher councilor and bailiff to Öhringen .
  18. ^ Report of the Hohenlohe councilors Ludwig Lurtzing and Lic. Friedrich Richard Mackel (or Mockel) , 1627–1628 (1629), who were delegated to the electoral court in Munich ; Hohenlohe-Zentralarchiv Neuenstein (We 50 Schlossarchiv Weikersheim 6. Militaria, Bü 2044).
  19. ^ Son of the procurator Valentin von Helffant from Durlach.
  20. ^ Report, n.d. (around 1628/30); Hohenlohe-Zentralarchiv Neuenstein (GA 10 Community House Archive, Department III: Ecclesiastical and Spiritual Foundations in the County of Hohenlohe, Drawer 17 No. 3/9 and others).
  21. ^ From Neuenstein , Council in Schillingsfürst.
  22. Letter to A Hochpreißliches Corpus Evangelicorum by Sr. Princely Graces zu Hohenlohe Ingelfingen ... regarding the error that arose because of the Imperial Count's-Franconian Evangelical vote . Heinrich Georg Neubauer, Regensburg 1775, Beylage N °. 1, p. 14 ( Google Books ).
  23. ^ Johann Philipp Abelin : Theatrum Europaeum , Vol. II. Matthias Merian Erben, Frankfurt am Main 1679, p. 293 ( Google Books ).
  24. Copia Deß letter, so to the Roman Keys. May. The Chur princes, counts, lords and places present at Leipzig, vnd dero Räht and envoys on the 18th of March, anno 1631. have eygenen Curier run off . o. O. 1631, p. 30 ( Google Books ).
  25. Burkhard Gotthelf Struve : Detailed history of the religious complaints between those Roman-Catholics and Evangelicals in the German Empire , Vol. I. Jakob Schuster, Leipzig 1722, p. 716f ( Google Books ).
  26. ^ Report of the envoy of the Franconian counts, Licentiate Mockhel, office director in Pfedelbach, from the meeting of the Protestant Union in Leipzig (Leipziger Union) , 1631; Hohenlohe Central Archive Neuenstein (Oe 1 Particular Archive Öhringen, Bü 14291).
  27. Franz Ludwig von Soden: War and Moral History of the Imperial City of Nuremberg , Bd. III. Theodor Bläsing, Erlangen 1862, p. 233 ( Google Books ).
  28. ^ Anton Faber : New European State Chancellery , Vol. XLV. August Lebrecht Stettin, Ulm, Frankfurt am Main and Leipzig 1778, p. 416 ( Google Books ).
  29. After Simone Giese: Students from midnight. The educational ideal and peregrinatio academica of the Swedish nobility under the sign of humanism and denominationalization . (diss. phil. Tübingen; Contubernium. Tübingen Contributions to the History of Universities and Science 68). Steiner, Stuttgart 2009, pp. 506 and 548, the speech was given in Strasbourg.
  30. ^ Pierre Krieger: La ville libre d'Empire de Strasbourg et la Suède de Gustave II Adolphe durant la guerre de Trente Ans: négociations, alliance et propagande (1631-1633) . Université de Strasbourg, Strasbourg 2014, pp. 199 and 204 ( PDF ), describes the Strasbourg events in November and December 1631 without Mockhel's role.
  31. ^ Request to Friedrich Reichard Mockel in Strasbourg , 1631–1639; Hohenlohe Central Archives Neuenstein (Ba 10 Pfedelbach Government, 4th House Hohenlohe-Pfedelbach, Bü 433).
  32. a b c d e f g Cf. the letter register of Svenska Riksarkivet to the sender: Mockhel, Friedrich Richard d. 1643 ( digitized version ) a. a.
  33. From Eilendorf near Aachen, studies in Bologna and Mainz, Lic. Iur., 1606 Dr. iur. utr., 1612–1616 professor for canon law, then assessor at the law faculty of the University of Mainz.
  34. ^ Letter from Axel Oxenstierna to Friedrich Richard Mockhel dated June 11, 1632; Annelen Ottermann: The Mainz Carmelite Library . Logos, Berlin 2018, p. 328.
  35. 1631 in Basel, 1632 in Strasbourg, Paris, 1634 in Saumur, Alençon, Caen, Lützelstein, 1635 in Nürtingen (on the occasion of the death of his aunt Ursula von Pfalz-Veldenz-Lützelstein , married Duchess of Württemberg) and in Tübingen, grave in the Collegiate Church of Tübingen.
  36. ^ Johann Martin Rauscher: Laudation Funebris Qua Georgio Ottoni, Comiti Palatino Rheni, Duci Bavaria, Comitae Veldentio & Sponhaemio, & c. o. O. [Tübingen] 1636, pp. 255–308, especially p. 287f ( digitized version of the Württembergische Landesbibliothek Stuttgart); Files concerning the funeral of the Duchess Ursula von Württemberg and… a brother's son… of the Count Palatine Georg Otto , 1635; Main State Archives Stuttgart (G 57 Württembergisches Hausarchiv, Bü 19).
  37. Matthias Bernegger: Gvstavi Magni, Svecorvm, Gothorvm, Vandalorvmqve Regis Invictissimi Atqve Gloriosissimi, eulogy funebris , in Universitate Agentoratensi recitata ... The X. Decemb. 1632. Wilhelm Christian Glaser, Strasbourg 1633 ( digitized version of the Rhineland-Palatinate State Library Center in Koblenz).
  38. ^ Henri Strohl : La Suède et l'Alsace . In: Revue d'Histoire et de Philosophie religieuses Année 12 (1932), pp. 444–464, especially p. 457 ( online in the Persée portal of the University of Lyon II).
  39. Letter from Friedrich Richard Mockhel to Gustav Horn from August 12, 1633 in Strasbourg, copy the war Wien ; Hermann Hallwich: Wallenstein's end. Unprinted letters and files , Vol. I. Duncker & Humblot, 1879 p. 503 Note 1 ( Google Books ).
  40. Town clerk, syndic, mayor, 1650 town master in Colmar.
  41. ^ Xavier Mossmann: Scènes de mœurs colmariennes du temps de la guerre de Trente ans . In: Bulletin du Musée historique de Mulhouse 11 (1886), pp. 37-78, esp. Pp. 50 and 52f.
  42. ^ Letters to Axel Oxenstierna from June, August and September 1634 from Strasbourg.
  43. ^ Letters to Axel Oxenstierna from June and August 1634 from Strasbourg.
  44. Sons of Åke Axelsson Natt och Dag (1594–1655) and Elsa Gustavsdotter Oxenstierna (1589–1651).
  45. ^ Letter to Axel Oxenstierna from June 1634 from Strasbourg.
  46. ^ Son of Ture Axelsson (1604–1626) and Ebba Axelsdotter Posse.
  47. Ola Winberg: The statskloka resan. Adelns peregrinationer 1610-1680 . (diss. phil .; Studia Historica Upsaliensia 260). Uppsala 2018, p. 124 ( PDF ).
  48. ↑ Listed under this date by Carl Engel (arr.): Repertory of the City Archives Colmar i. E. (Publications from the Colmar City Archives 2). Printing and Publishing House, Strasbourg 1907, p. 44.
  49. He had participated in 1631 as Mockhel at the Leipzig Convention; Copia Deß writing, so ... the Chur princes, graffen, lords and places present in Leipzig ... let it run off . o. O. 1631, p. 2.
  50. ^ According to others in Worms or in Frankfurt am Main ; the date is also September 26th July. / October 6,  1634 greg. called.
  51. ^ Friedrich Wilhelm Barthold: History of the Great German War , Bd. IS G. Liesching, Stuttgart 1842, p. 204 ( Google Books ); Rodolphe Reuss: Petite Histoire d'Alsace . Editions des Régionalismes, Cressé 2015, p. 64, u. a.
  52. ^ Differentiated Wilhelm Mommsen: Richelieu. His policy in Alsace and Lorraine . Verlag Wirtschaft und Politik, Berlin 1922, pp. 167, 176 and 429, note 3 ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  53. Dedicated in: Johann Georg Dorsche , Salomon Villinger: Syllogismus theologicus de antichristo . Johannes Reppius, Strasbourg 1635 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  54. ^ Edmund Kelter : The correspondence between Mathias Bernegger and Johann Freinsheim (1629. 1633-1636) . In: ders. U. a. (Ed.): Contributions to the history of scholars of the seventeenth century . Lütcke & Wulff, Hamburg 1905, pp. 1-72, esp. No. 22, pp. 31f and 64 ([digitized version] in the Internet Archive).
  55. What is meant is probably Colonel Duke Roderich von Württemberg-Weiltingen (1611–1651), son of Duke Julius Friedrich von Württemberg-Weiltingen , who was in French service in Alsace in 1635 .
  56. a b c D. h. of Queen Christina of Sweden .
  57. Joseph Gyss: Histoire de la Ville d'Obernai ., II Salomon Bd, Strasbourg 1866, p 130 (. Google Books ).
  58. Dagobert Fischer: Histoire de l'ancien comté de Saar Werden et de la prévôté d ' Herbitzheim , Part IV. In: Revue d'Alsace 7 (1878), pp. 101–126, esp.
  59. Threni Ad Tumulum Nobilissimae Et Pientissimae Virginis, Dominae Coronae Mockelianae , Quam Deus Ter Opt. Max. ... ad coeleste beatorum Consortium ... avocavit Argentorati, 9. Maii 1636. ... aetatis 35. Wilhelm Christian Glaser, Strasbourg 1636 ( Digitalisat the Herzog August Wolfenbüttel Library).
  60. ^ Adam Walther Strobel: Patriotic history of Alsace , vol. IV. Schmidt and Grucker, Strasbourg 1844, p. 398.
  61. Letter from Hugo Grotius to Charles Marin († 1651) of June 29, 1636. In: Briefwisseling van Hugo Grotius , Vol. VII. Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague 1969, No. 2648, p. 228f; Joseph Gyss: Histoire de la Ville D'Obernai , Vol. II. Salomon, Strasbourg 1866, p. 139.
  62. Commissioning of the land registry administrator Johann Georg Sattler (1597–1640) in Stuttgart to set up a commission for safe conduct, 1638; Main State Archives Stuttgart (A 248 Rentkammer: General files 1. Princes of Württemberg, Governing House, Bü 72).
  63. Colmar dated January 7, 1639; Jodocus Haas: Ivbilvm Colmariense or Christian joyful Danck sermon, which, after which the famous Vestung Preisach… was conquered by… Mr. Bernhardt, Hertzog zu Sachsen… after 18 weeks of heavy siege on December 7th 1638 and taken by handover ... Order of a laudable ... Magistrate of Colmar on the 14th day of the month has been held and given in truck. Colmar 1639.
  64. a b Letter from Friedrich Richard Mockhel to Marx Conrad Rehlinger (1575–1642) in Basel on January 23, 1639 from Breisach; Reinhard Hildebrandt (edit.): Sources and regesta of the Augsburg trading houses Paler and Rehlinger 1539-1642 , Vol. II. Franz Steiner Verlag, 2004, No. 552, p. 235 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  65. ^ Johann Georg Kulpis: Praefatio ad lectorem. De instituto huius editionis . In: Johann Heinrich Boeckler, Johann Georg Kulpis (eds.): Aeneae Silvii, Episcopi Senensis Postea Pii Papae II. Historia Rerum Friderici Tertii Imperatoris Ex Mscto Optimae Notae , Nunc Primum Edita, Cum Specimine Annotationum Jo. Henrici Boecleri. Josia Staedel and Johann Friedrich Spoor, Strasbourg 1685, unpaginated ( digitized from the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  66. ^ Wilhelm Ernst Tentzel : Monthly conversations with some good friends from all kinds of books and other similar stories . Johann Friedrich Gleditsch, J. Thomas Fritsch, Leipzig 1694. pp. 101-107 ( Google Books ).
  67. ^ Alfred A. Strnad: In search of the lost "Codex Brisacensis". Johann Hinderbach's copy of Enea Silvio's “Historia Austrialis” for the young Maximilian . In: Paul-Joachim Heinig (Ed.): Kaiser Friedrich III. (1440-1493) in his time . Böhlau, Cologne / Vienna 1993, pp. 467-516.
  68. ^ Dedicated March 29 and October 26, 1639, issued in Strasbourg; Johannes Freinsheim: Q. Curtius Rufus De Rebus Alexandri Regis Macedonum . G. A. Dolhopff, J. E. Zetzner, Strasbourg 1670, pp. 23–26 ( digitized version of the Austrian State Library Vienna); see. Commentarii in libros superstites Q. Cvrtii Rvfi . L. Zezner, Strasbourg 1639, p. 16 ( Google Books ).
  69. ^ Letter from Matthias Bernegger to Friedrich Reichard Mockhel dated June 18, 1638; Alexander Reifferscheid: Sources on the history of intellectual life in Germany during the seventeenth century based on manuscripts , vol. I. letters by G. M. Lingelsheim , M. Berneggers and their friends . Henninger, Heilbronn 1889, p. 919 ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  70. Printed in: Bernhard Röse: Duke Bernhard der Große von Sachsen-Weimar , Bd. II. Landes-Industrie-Comptoir, Weimar 1829, Nro. 57, pp. 554-556 ( Google Books ).
  71. ^ Samuel von Pufendorf : Commentariorum de rebus Suecicis libri XXVI . Johannes Ribbius, Utrecht 1686, p. 375 ( digitized in the Internet archive) = six and twenty books of the Swedish and German war history . Johann Friedrich Gleditsch, Frankfurt am Main and Leipzig 1688, p. 509 ( Google Books ).
  72. Georg Müller (1593–1639), Lic. Jur., Perhaps identical to the Hohenlohe council from Neuenstein (1630), secretary of Axel Oxenstierna since around 1633, 1635 in Stralsund, Swedish councilor, 1637 in The Hague and Basel and in December 1637 together with Hugo Grotius negotiations in Paris, correspondence with Matthias Bernegger , 1638 Swedish resident in Hamburg, 1639 in Jönköpping and Hamburg, married to Sophia Sauber († after 1643).
  73. Christian trawr preaches, about the deadly case of Deß ... Messrs. Bernharden, Hertzogs zu Sachsen, Gülich, Cleve and Berg , who died on July 8th of this 1639th year, in ... Newenburg am Rhein, ... died on the 19th day Month in Breisach in the Munster ... was attached. Held there in the cathedral, and made in print on request. Decker, Basel 1639, p. 2 ( digitized version from the Württemberg State Library in Stuttgart).
  74. ^ Johann Heinrich Boeckler: In Obitum Summi Viri Matthiae Berneggeri, Oratio Funebris . Friedrich Spor, Strasbourg 1640 ( digitized version ).
  75. ^ Letter from Axel Oxenstierna to Friedrich Richard Mockhel of January 9, 1641 from Stockholm; Svenska Riksarchivet (Det odelade kansliet Riksregistraturet, No. 210, Bl. 3f); Helmut Backhaus ( arrangement ): Rikskanslern Axel Oxenstiernas skrifter och brefväxling , Vol. I. Almqvist & Wiksell, Stockholm 2009, p. 329f.
  76. Correspondence, 1640–1643; Main State Archives Stuttgart (A 360 Hohentwiel, fortress and cellar, Bü 136, 3).
  77. Letters from Friedrich Richard Mockhel to Gustaf Karlsson Horn in Burghausen Castle from 20./30. April 1641; from Mockhel to Hugo Grotius from 13./23. September 16 and 24 December 1641 and January 7, 1642 from Benfeld; from Grotius to Axel Oxenstierna in Stockholm on August 17 and September 21, 1641 from Paris; from Grotius to Mockhel in Benfeld on January 14th and 18th, 1642 from Paris, a. a; in the project ePistolarium of the University of Utrecht (see below under sources ).
  78. Joseph Gyss: Histoire de la Ville d'Obernai ., II Salomon Bd, Strasbourg 1866, p 151f..
  79. ^ Johann Valentin Andreä: Rei Christianae et literariae subsidia , Serenissimo & Potentissimo Principi, Augusto, Brunsvicensium & Luneburgensium Duci Incluto. Philibert Brunn, Tübingen 1642, cover sheets ( digitized version of the University and State Library of Saxony-Anhalt Halle).
  80. ^ Médard Barth: Large fires and extinguishing systems in Alsace from the 13th to the 20th century . Konkordia, Bühl 1974, p. 173.
  81. Rodolphe Reuss: L'Alsace au XVIIe siècle , Vol. II. (Bibliothèque de l'Ecole des hautes études. Sciences philologiques et historiques 120). Émile Boullion, Paris 1898, p. 580.
  82. Jump up to the post between May 11 and September 20, 1643; Arthur Bechtold: Contributions to a biography of Moscherosch . In: Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins 32 (1917), pp. 562-572, esp. Pp. 565f.
  83. ^ Letter from Frédéric-Richard Mockhel to Mareschal Jean Baptiste Budes de Guébriant of 18/28. August 1643; Jean Le-Laboreur: Histoire du Mareschal de Guébriant . Pierre L'Amy, Paris 1657, pp. 676-678 ( Google Books ).
  84. ^ Paul Wentzcke: Paths of Destiny on the Upper Rhine . C. Winter, Heidelberg 1952, pp. 157f.
  85. Son of Janž Znojilšek (1568–1659) from Ljubljana, 1626–1637 professor of Hebrew in Heilbronn, died as a pastor in Esens.
  86. Dedication to Rosen, Moser, Snoilsky and their wives in: Johann Georg Dorsche (Hrsg.): Martin Buceri … Drey final sermons, in the Church of God in Benfelden, which was cleansed by the papacy at that time, in 1538. done . Johann Andreä Erben, Strasbourg 1649, p. 3 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  87. Heiko Droste: In the service of the crown. Swedish diplomats in the 17th century . (Nordic story). LIT, Münster 2006, No. B 76, p. 403, and B 93, p. 408.
  88. ^ Purchase contract of February 2, 1649; State Archives Ludwigsburg (B 342 Deutscher Orden: Kommende Horneck / Neckaroberamt, U 245; see U 173 and U 246); August von Lorent: Wimpfen am Neckar . A. Werther, Stuttgart 1870, p. 115 ( Google Books ); see. Johannes Scheffer: Ioannis Schefferi Argentoratensis vita . (Äldre Svenska biography 1. Uppsala universitets årsskrift 1915, volume 2). Almqvist & Wiksell, Uppsala 1915, pp. 1–36, esp. P. 20: “Sueticus apud Argentoratenses minister” ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  89. Dr. jur. utr., 1634 church council advocate and escape to Strasbourg.
  90. beneficiaries of the Bayer Family Foundation ; see. Ferdinand Friedrich Faber: The Württemberg family foundations , Vol. IV. Franz Köhler, Stuttgart 1853, p. 68f ( Google Books ).
  91. ^ Eduard Georg Ludwig William Howe Graf von Kielmansegg, Erich Friedrich Christian Ludwig Graf von Kielmansegg: Chronicle of the lords, barons and counts of Kielmansegg . Brockhaus, Leipzig and Vienna 1872, p. 17f ( Google Books ); Walter Bernhardt: The central authorities of the Duchy of Württemberg and their officials 1520–1629 . (Publications of the Commission for Historical Regional Studies in Baden-Württemberg B 70–71). Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1972, p. 429.
  92. Eberhard Emil von Georgii-Georgenau: Biographical-genealogical sheets from and about Swabia . Emil Müller, Stuttgart 1879, p. 348 ( Google Books ).
  93. ^ Grandfather of Philipp Friedrich Hiller .
  94. ^ Johann Heinrich Boeckler, Johann Philipp Hiller: De Civilitate Principis . Johannes Reppil, Strasbourg 1637 ( digital copy from the Bavarian State Library in Munich).
  95. Since 1642 he was married to Anne Rosine Langjahr von Puchberg (1619–1663), who in 1645 married the Württemberg councilor Paul Jakob Rümelin as a widow.
  96. Friedrich Fritz: Valentin Andreae's work in the service of the Württemberg Church . In: Blätter für Württembergische Kirchengeschichte 32 (1928), pp. 37–126, esp. P. 116; Frank Böhling, Beate Hinzen (ed.): Johann Valentin Andreae autobiography. Books 6–8. Small autobiographical writings . Frommann-Holzboog, Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt 2012, pp. 14/15 ( PDF ).
  97. ^ Enrolled in Tübingen on October 29, 1616; Johann Heinrich Boeckler, Johann Joachim Frantz: Vivat Memoria Viri Nobilissimi… Dn. Avgvsti Mockelii Consiliarii Würtembergici… Vitam Mortalem Orsvs Est Anno Svperioris… MDCLIX . Johannes Pickel, Strasbourg 1659.
  98. a b Threni Ad Tumulum Nobilissimae Et Pientissimae Virginis, Dominae Coronae Mockelianae , Quam Deus Ter Opt. Max.… Ad coeleste Beatorum Consortium… avocavit Argentorati, 9th May… 1636. aetatis 35. Wilhelm Christian Glaser, Strasbourg 1636 ( digital copy of the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel).
  99. I. N. D. N. J. C. (= In nomine Domini nostri Jesu Christi) Lavdabilivm politicorvm, ex Iustino , Pars posterior quam divino nvmine annvente , sub praesidio Dn. Iacobi Schalleri , Solenni eruditorum examini ad d. August 31st. proponit Christophorvs Jacobvs Mockelivs, Halae natus. Friedrich Spoor, Strasbourg 1649 ( Google Books ).
  100. Jakob Schaller , Christoph Jakob Mockel: I. N. D. N. J. C. (= In nomine Domini nostri Jesu Christi) Lavdabilivm politicorvm, ex Iustino , Pars posterior quam divino nvmine annvente , sub praesidio Dn. Iacobi Schalleri, Solenni eruditorum examini ad d. August 31st. proponit Christophorvs Jacobvs Mockelivs, Halae natus. Friedrich Spoor, Strasbourg 1649 ( Google Books ), ( Google Books ).
  101. Forstner was the Hohenlohe councilor until 1630.
  102. ^ Johann Christian Volz (1721–1785), high school rector in Stuttgart.
  103. ^ From Urach, enrolled in Tübingen in 1586, Princely Wuerttemberg Superior Councilor and diplomat.
  104. The disputation may take place. a. deal with problems of legal sources. In Book I, Titulus 1 de justita et jure (= about justice and justice) of the Pandects , lex 1 contains a section from Ulpianus ' libro primo institutionum , lex 2 a fragment from Pomponius ' libro singulari enchiridii .
  105. ^ Albert Kriegel, Moritz Kriegel, Emil Herrmann : Corpus juris civilis recognoverunt adnotationibusque criticis instructum , Vol. I. 4th edition. Baumgärtner, Leipzig 1848, p. 61 ( Google Books ).
  106. Simone Giese: Students from midnight. The educational ideal and peregrinatio academica of the Swedish nobility under the sign of humanism and denominationalization . (diss. phil. Tübingen; Contubernium. Tübingen Contributions to the History of Universities and Science 68). Steiner, Stuttgart 2009, pp. 506 and 548.