Frobenius (family)

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Frobenius is a Franconian-Thuringian and Swiss family of publishers and officials who also produced well-known scholars. The best known of these are the mathematician Ferdinand Georg Frobenius and the ethnologist Leo Frobenius .

Tribe list

  • 1. Johann Froben (Latinized: Johannes Frobenius) (around 1460–1527), Swiss printer and publisher of Franconian origin
    • 1.1. Hieronymus Froben (Latinized: Hieronymus Frobenius) (1501–1563), Swiss printer and publisher
      • 1.1.1. Ambrosius Froben (1537–1602), Swiss printer and publisher
      • 1.1.2. Aurelius Frobenius (1539–1587), Swiss printer and publisher
        • 1.1.2.1. Aurelius Erasmus Frobenius (1573–1637), Swiss printer, councilor in Basel
          • 1.1.2.1.1. Aurelius Sebastianus Frobenius (1601–1664), electoral stable master in Heidelberg
          • 1.1.2.1.2. Emanuel Frobenius (1604–1684), lord of the castle at Benken, palatinate stable master in Heidelberg
            • 1.1.2.1.2.1. Emanuel (von) Froben (1640–1675), stable master from the Electorate of Brandenburg, saved the life of the Great Elector in the Battle of Fehrbellin and fell, whereupon his family was ennobled (his act was immortalized on electoral medals and entered literature, among others in Kleist's Prince of Homburg )
            • 1.1.2.1.2.2. Jacob Christian Friedrich von Froben (1650–1694), stable master of the Electorate of Brandenburg, master of Quandites in Prussia
    • 1.2. Justina Froben (1512–1564) in Basel, married to the printer Nicolaus Episcopius
  • 2. Günther Frowin (?), Probably immigrated to Großhettstedt from the Feuchtwangen area in Franconia
    • 2.1. Volckmar Frobenius (around 1490–1551 / 52), allegedly a nephew of Johann Froben in Basel, reformer of Stadtilm in Thuringia, married to Christina Mandel (1503–1602), baptized Jew and godchild of Martin Luther
      • 2.1.1. Johann Frobenius (1531 / 32–1582 / 88), pastor in Hettstedt and Neuroda in Thuringia
        • 2.1.1.1. Eustachius Frobenius (approx. 1555–1587), since 1580 Schwarzburg administrative officer (princely official) in Arnstadt
          • 2.1.1.1.1. Hieronymus Frobenius (1580–1666), multiple mayor of Arnstadt during the Thirty Years' War
            • 2.1.1.1.1.1. Christoph Hieronymus Frobenius (1615–1682), councilor, doctor and pharmacist in Ohrdruf
              • 2.1.1.1.1.1.1. Johannes Georgius Frobenius (1654–1693), pharmacist in Ohrdruf
                • 2.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. Johann Christoph Frobenius (1692–1741), surgeon in Erfurt
                  • 2.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. Johann Christian Frobenius (1729–1772), pastor of St. Andreas in Erfurt
                    • 2.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. Nicolaus Christoph Andreas Frobenius (1764–1828), pastor of the Barfüßerkirche in Erfurt
                      • 2.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. Hermann Theodor Wilhelm Frobenius (1808–1868), pastor and superintendent in Langensalza, later in Merseburg, and consistorial councilor
                        • 2.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. Hermann Frobenius (1841–1916), lieutenant colonel, writer, a. a. to Sudan
                          • 2.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. Leo Frobenius (1873–1938), German ethnologist
                          • 2.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.2. Hermann Frobenius (1871–1954), painter (husband of Lenore Frobenius-Kühn)
            • 2.1.1.1.1.2. Ernst Georg Frobenius (1630–1700), doctor in Arnstadt and Königsee
              • 2.1.1.1.1.2.1. Georg Christoph Frobenius (1672–1735), Dr. med., princely Schwarzburg city and country medicine to Königsee
                • 2.1.1.1.1.2.1.1. Katharina Frobenius (1713–1775), married the pastor Johann Martin Heinze in Ellichleben, ancestor of the well-known Holstein preacher Claus Harms (1778–1855)
                • 2.1.1.1.1.2.1.2. Wilhelm Gottfried Frobenius (1716–1770), City Physician of Königsee
        • 2.1.1.2. Bastian Frobenius, 1595 in Lobenstein, 1597 in Augsburg
          • 2.1.1.2.1. Johannes Frobenius (1595–1657), field preacher in the Thirty Years War, schoolmate at the School of the Holy Spirit in Nuremberg
            • 2.1.1.2.1.1. Johannes Salomon Frobenius (1639–1712), teacher at the St. Lorenz School in Nuremberg
              • 2.1.1.2.1.1.1. Georg Arnold Frobenius (1683–1767), merchant in Nuremberg, Vienna, Hungary and Augsburg
                • 2.1.1.2.1.1.1.1. Johann Georg von Froben, City and Marriage Court Assessor in Augsburg, in Karlsruhe since 1768 in the service of Baden, raised to the nobility in 1754 because of his aristocratic relatives, ancestor of General Anton Freiherr v. Froben (1839-1910)
      • 2.1.2. Andreas Frobenius (1532–1604), President of the Consistory in Ansbach, legal scholar of the Brandenburg Council of Margrave Georg Friedrich, in 1577 on delegation to Count von Hohenlohe
      • 2.1.3. Bonifatius Frobenius (1537–1584), legal scholar, councilor and mayor of Iphofen in Franconia
        • 2.1.3.1. Georg Ludwig Frobenius (1566–1645), Hamburg mathematician, bookseller and publisher
          • 2.1.3.1.1. Heinrich Frobenius (1597–1660), Hamburg bookseller and publisher
            • 2.1.3.1.1.1. Joachim Heinrich Frobenius (Frobeen) (1637–1711), court confectioner of Queen Hedwig Eleonore of Sweden in Stockholm
      • 2.1.4. Valentinus Frobenius (approx. 1540–1590), Juris consultus, Onoltzbach imperial notary publicus, town clerk in Ansbach in Franconia
      • 2.1.5. Johannes Frobenius, a later son, legal scholar, imperial notary publicus and city secretary of Crailsheim in the Onoltzbach area in Franconia
        • 2.1.4.1. Johann Frobenius, lawyer, feudal provost and government councilor in Bayreuth ("prince. Grace most secret secretary")
          • 2.1.4.1.1. Johann Lorenz Frobenius (1623–1682), court preacher and confessor of the Brandenburg-Ansbach margrave Georg Albrecht, superintendent and school inspector in Kulmbach
        • 2.1.4.2. Georg Wolfgang Frobenius (1593–1656), master's degree, subdeacon in Bayreuth, pastor in Wonsee and Thurnau
        • 2.1.4.3. Johann Werner Frobenius, secretarius of the court chancellery of Emperor Ferdinand II. In Vienna, was raised to the nobility in 1629, which also applies to his brothers

See also

about the printer Johann Froben :

on the mathematician Ferdinand Georg Frobenius :

about the ethnologist Leo Frobenius :

swell

  • Christoff Jacob Frobenius: My, Christoff Jacob Frobenius, as well as my wife Anna, Magdalena, and children, their due, which was also thoroughly verified by my soldiers and dear forefathers. message (…) [Frobenius first chronicle, entries 1709 to 1755, 293 pages], manuscript (kept in the Hamburg State and University Library, signature Frobenius: Familiengeschichte Vol. I: CH I, 86, 1: 1)
  • Clericatus Ilmensis , kept in the Sondershausen State Library (No. 1624)

literature

  • Heinrich Ludwig Frobenius: Family book [second Frobenius chronicle, written in Ansbach 1742-49], [Frobenius second chronicle, from the brother of the former], manuscript (kept in the Hamburg State and University Library, signature Frobenius: Familiengeschichte Bd. II: Cod .Hans. I, 86, 1: 2)
  • The funeral sermon of Johann Laurentius Frobenius, Superintendent von Kulmbach, with biographical information is preserved in the Braunschweig Funeral Sermons , Volume 2, No. 1.669. - See Fritz Roth : Complete evaluations of funeral sermons and personal documents for genealogical and cultural-historical purposes . Volume 10, R 9242.
  • Fikenscher: Scholarly Principality of Baireuth . 2nd volume, 1801
  • Mrs. L. Hoffmann: The learned bookseller Georg Ludwig Frobenius . 1867
  • Albert LadenburgFrobenius, August Sigmund . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 8, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1878, p. 125 and the following.
  • Walther Frobenius: To the pedigree of the privy councilor Professor Leo Frobenius . In: Thuringian Home Mirror . Volume 10, 1933, No. 7
  • Descendants of the Basel Frobenius (PDF; 24 kB)