Friedrich VI. from Dalberg

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Friedrich von Dalberg on his epitaph in the Katharinenkirche Oppenheim

Friedrich VI. von Dalberg (born February 10, 1459 ; † November 12, 1506 ) was a German knight from the von Dalberg family and mayor of Oppenheim .

Family involvement

origin

Friedrich VI. von Dalberg was one of 11 children from the marriage of Wolfgang III. Treasurer of Worms , called von Dalberg, and Gertrud von Greiffenclau zu Vollrads († 1502), daughter of the knight Friedrich von Greiffenclau zu Vollrads (1401–1462). Wolfgang III. was mayor of Oppenheim in 1503 and perhaps again in 1506 and court marshal of the Palatinate .

One of the brothers of Friedrich VI. von Dalberg was Johann III. von Dalberg , Bishop of Worms and Chancellor of the Electoral Palatinate . Wolfgang VI. von Dalberg (1473–1522), another brother, officiated as Electoral Palatinate bailiff in Oppenheim .

marriage

Double epitaph of the couple in the Katharinenkirche Oppenheim

Friedrich VI. von Dalberg married Katharina von Gemmingen († 1517), daughter of Dieter von Gemmingen († 1467) and Anna von Venningen . Her grandparents on the paternal side were the Palatine marshal Hans der Reiche von Gemmingen († 1490) and Katharina Landschad von Steinach , on the maternal side the Palatine court master Dietrich von Venningen († 1454) and Margaretha von Handschuhsheim .

From the marriage of Friedrich VI. and Katharina come from

  1. John XXI. (* 1478 or 1479; † 1527) became a clergyman in Öttingen .
  2. Gertrud (* 1482) married Hans von Seebach.
  3. Margarete (* 1483, called 1524; † 1524)
  4. Wolfgang VII., Called zu Herrnsheim (* 1484/1485; † February 18, 1527) married Lorichia, daughter of Johann and Klara von Kronberg , before February 21, 1516 and was buried in the Katharinenkirche in Oppenheim.
  5. Friedrich VII (* around 1485; † December 25, 1520) was a student at Heidelberg University in 1503 and became its rector in 1511 . In 1509 he became canon in Worms , in 1516 canon in Speyer . He is buried in St. Martin in Worms .
  6. (Maria) Apollonia (* around 1487; † April 12, 1524) became abbess of the Marienberg monastery in Boppard .
  7. Anna (* around 1488; † 1503) was a nun in the Marienberg monastery in Boppard.
  8. Philipp IV. (* 1490 or 1491; † January 13, 1533) married Katharina, daughter of Philipp and Katharina von Kronberg. Philip IV was buried in the Katharinenkirche in Oppenheim. His widow married two more times: first Kaspar von Kronberg and, after his death in 1537, Friedrich IX. von Fleckenstein († 1559).
  9. Maria (* around 1491; † 1523) was also a nun in the Marienberg monastery in Boppard.

Friedrich von Dalberg and his wife were buried in the Katharinenkirche Oppenheim, where their artistic double epitaph has been preserved.

Act

Friedrich VI. von Dalberg had been a member of the Oppenheim Council since 1482 and was its mayor from 1503 to 1506.

In 1495 he went to the Worms Reichstag in his old knight's costume .

Friedrich VI. von Dalberg was, like his brother, Johann III. von Dalberg, the Bishop of Worms, devoted to humanistic ideas, valued and encouraged study of ancient scripts. Johann Gottfried, canon and pastor at the Katharinenkirche in Oppenheim, dedicated 12 of his translations of ancient works to him. In a dedication, Johann Gottfried wrote that Dalberg was very interested in ancient written material, thereby promoting its dissemination and contributing to its preservation. Both were connected to the Heidelberg humanist group Sodalitas litteraria Rhenana . Jakob Wimpfeling translated Filippo Beroaldo's De tribus fratribus for Friedrich VI. from Dalberg.

Friedrich VI. Together with his brother, Bishop Johann von Worms, von Dalberg is considered to be the builder of the St. Leonhards Chapel in Dalberg near Bad Kreuznach . He was also the caretaker of the churches of Wallhausen and Spabrücken .

literature

in alphabetical order by authors / editors

  • Johannes Bollinger: 100 families of the chamberlain from Worms and the lords of Dalberg . Bollinger, Worms-Herrnsheim 1989. Without ISBN.
  • Simone Drücke: Humanistic lay education around 1500: the translation work of the Rhenish humanist Johann Gottfried , Verlag Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2001, pp. 25, 26 u. 252, ISBN 3525205856 ; (Digital scan)
  • Detlev Schwennicke: European family tables. Family tables on the history of the European states . New series, vol. 9: Families from the Middle and Upper Rhine and from Burgundy . Marburg 1986. Without ISBN, plate 56.
  • Johann Christian von Stramberg : Memorable and useful Rheinischer Antiquarius, part 2, volume 16, p. 178, Koblenz, 1869; (Digital scan)
  • Carl. JH Villinger: The chamberlain from Worms called von Dalberg and their relationship with Oppenheim . In: 1200 years of Oppenheim am Rhein. City of Oppenheim, Oppenheim 1965
  • Georg Wilhelm Zapf : Johann von Dalberg Bishop of Worms , Augsburg, 1799, p. 26 u. 27; (Digital scan)

Web links

Remarks

  1. ^ The information from Villinger: Die Kämmerer von Worms , p. 61, are not congruent.
  2. Schwennicke, plate 56, against: February 19, 1507.
  3. Bollinger, p. 38, gives the year 1481.

Individual evidence

  1. Villinger: Die Kämmerer von Worms , pp. 55-68 (61).
  2. Unless otherwise noted: information according to Schwennicke.
  3. Bollinger, p. 38.
  4. Bollinger, p. 38.
  5. Bollinger, p. 38.
  6. Bollinger, p. 38.
  7. Gerhard Fouquet : The Speyer Cathedral Chapter in the late Middle Ages , Volume 2, p. 376, Archive for Middle Rhine Church History, Mainz, 1987
  8. Bollinger, p. 38.
  9. Bollinger, p. 38.
  10. Bollinger, p. 38.
  11. ^ Regine Dölling: St. Katharinen Oppenheim . 2nd edition: Schnell + Steiner. Regensburg 2011 ISBN 978-3-7954-2528-9 , p. 42.
  12. Zapf, p. 27.
  13. Zapf, p. 27.
  14. Biographical page on Johann Gottfried
  15. Simone pressures: Humanistic lay formation in 1500: the translation work of the Rhenish humanist Johann Gottfried , Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2001, p 252, ISBN 3525205856 ; (Digital scan)
  16. Hubert Cancik: Europa - Antike - Humanismus: Humanist attempts and preparatory work , Transcript Verlag, 2014, p. 127, ISBN 3839413893 ; (Digital scan)
  17. ^ Biographical website on Friedrich von Dalberg
  18. ^ Website of the Leonhard Chapel in Dalberg