Georg Gogreve

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Georg or Jörg Gogreve (* around 1534 , † 1575 or 1576 in Minden ) was a Catholic cleric in the diocese Minden and diplomat who in 1564 in Rome for the Duchy of Cleves the papal privilege of establishing the Old University in Duisburg caught. In 1574/75 he worked for the Protestant Principality of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel .

Life

Georg Gogreve was the "illegitimate" son of a cleric. He came from the Westphalian - Waldeck noble family of Gaugreben and was a close relative of the Schaumburg Chancellor Johannes Gogreve († 1573/74). Georg Gogreve's mother was Anna Goldener († after 1569), Hille and Johann are named as his siblings in 1569. His father was probably Severin Gogreve († around 1550) from Oldendorf unter Schaumburg , a canon at the St. Bonifatius monastery in Hameln and at the St. Martini collegiate monastery in Minden. Georg Gogreve bequeathed one of the twelve noble farms ( Burgmannenhöfe ) in Oldendorf to his son Bernhard .

Georg Gogreve also received a canonical to St. Martini in Minden. In 1553 he fought with Kunne (Konrad) Kostede over a courtyard in the church of St. Johannis in Minden. In 1555 he inscribed himself in the brotherhood book of the Collegio Teutonico di Santa Maria dell'Anima as Minden canon ( canonicus Mindensis ) in Rome . In the Roman process for the monastery status of the Münster hereditary families, "Georgius Gogreue, clericus Mindensis " said in 1558 as a 24-year-old in favor of Johannes Schencking († 1581). From 1559 he was the successor of Andreas Masius (1514–1573) there agent ( solicitor ) of Duke Wilhelm V of Jülich-Kleve-Berg (1516–1592). As a notary for the Rota , Gogreve obtained permission from Pope Pius IV (1499–1565) to found a university in Duisburg for the Klevian duchy in 1561 , but was shortly afterwards imprisoned and had to have the bull brought back from Antwerp at his own expense . He blamed Johannes Monheim (1509–1564), the Protestant rector of the Düsseldorf Lyceum , for the complications . The curia was concerned that the Catholic character of the university was not guaranteed. The Cologne Jesuits had already warned internally in March 1560 against Monheim and a Schola Duisburgensis . Finally, in 1564, a bull of approval was finally issued. The University of Duisburg did not start teaching until 1655, when Kleve belonged to the Protestant Electorate of Brandenburg .

As his Roman procurator, Gogreve supported together with Johann Visbroc (* around 1525 - † 1590) also the humanist Jean Matal (* around 1517 - † 1597) in his benefice trials in the 1560s for canonicals to St. Lambert in Liège and St. Apostles in Cologne.

In 1566, Georg Gogreve was succeeded by Pope Pius V (1504–1572) as the successor of Johann Minsche alias Hominis (1501–1558), who died in Rome, the provost office of St. Johannis in Minden and additional canons at Paderborn Cathedral and St. Germanus and St. Mauritius awarded to Speyer . He was unable to take possession of the provost's office in St. Johannis, but Georg Gogreve was later dean of the St. Martini monastery in Minden and the last possessor (owner) of the Graflich Schaumburg sovereignty in Minden. In 1567 he received 600 guilders for a trip to Vienna and Rome to obtain regalia and papal confirmation for Bishop Hermann von Schaumburg (1545–1592; ruled 1567–1582) in Minden.

The monastery of St. Mauritz and Simeon in Minden prescribed goods and rents in Steinbergen , Aminghausen , Wietersheim ( Witersen ), in the offices of Hausberge and Petershagen as well as near Bückeburg to the dean Georg Gogreve of St. Martini . In 1572 he signed in Lübbecke the "Union" of the entire Catholic clergy in Minden with Herrmann von Schaumburg against the Protestant city of Minden, after which Hermann was finally replaced in 1573 by Pope Gregor XIII. was confirmed as bishop. In 1574 dean Georg Gogreve extended a loan of 190 Reichstaler, which he had granted to the married couple Thomas and Marie Timpe, against 6% overdraft interest and a guarantee from Lübeck canon Johann Lendeken, their brother-in-law.

When the Bonn canon Alexander Trivius (1526–1607) visited the diocese of Minden in 1575 on a papal mandate, the Church of St. Martini was owned by the Protestants. Dean Gogreve was "a bad Christian and of little faith ( sometimes Christiano et di poca religione )," wrote Trivius. In the run-up to Heinrich Julius von Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel's inauguration as Prince-Bishop of Halberstadt , the Roman courtier ( curtisanus ) Georg Gogreff acted in 1574/75 as agent (authorized representative) of the Lutheran Duke Julius von Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel for his son Heinrich Julius , who was Catholic as bishop should be educated.

Georg Gogreve's grave slab is in the cloister of Minden Cathedral . Anton Minsche is mentioned from 1576 to 1601 as his successor in the office of dean of the Martinistift, which continued to exist after the collegiate church was lost.

family

Georg Gogreve's “illegitimate” son, whom he presumably had with his “servant” Anna, was:

  1. Bernhard Gogreve (* around 1569; † after 1611) from Minden or Oldendorf under Schaumburg, inherited his father's house near St. Johann in Minden and one of the twelve noble farms in Oldendorf, since 1593 brewer in Minden, notary ( Notarius publicus Caesareus ); he is probably not identical with the Bremen bailiff, secretary and notary Bernhard Gogreve, who is mentioned between 1591 and 1595 in Neuenwalde , Bremen and Burg Hagen ;
    ⚭ Künna (Kunigunda) griffin straw (Griepenstro) († after 1600);
    their sons:
    1. Simon Gogräve (1593-1648) from Minden, General Counsel of the City of Minden, archiepiscopal Bremen's advice and earning shear Vice Chancellor,
      ⚭ I. 1624 Anna Hinrich King († 1638),
      . ⚭ II 1644 Catherina Elisabeth Grave (1620-1684);
      for his descendants see → Simon Gogräve .
      Simon Gogräve died after his " ancestors for over a hundred and more years " in the city of Minden "had the right to burgers " in 1648 as " now the last to take ".
    2. Bernhard Gogräve (Hooggreve) (1600–1640), Countess Limburg-Styrumscher and Bronckhorstischer Hofmeister and bailiff , chamber secretary and councilor,
      ⚭ 1631 Adelheid Terville (1607–1671) from Zutphen , daughter of Ludolf Tervile (1580–1651), judge in Bredevoort and Rentmeister of Borculo , and Sara de Croy (Crois) (1586–1631).
      Children of the two, born in Zutphen and Styrum :
      1. Cunegunda Gogreve (1633–1650), unmarried,
      2. Anna Catherina Gogreve (1635–1691),
        ⚭ Simon Rembert Deichmann (1630–1702), bailiff and chief inspector of the coal mine in Obernkirchen , Hessen-Kassel chamber councilor in Rinteln , son of Christoph Deichmann (1576–1648) from Burgsteinfurt and Christina Vultejus (1588 –1667), a daughter of Hermann Vultejus ,
        1. Christina Adelheit Deichmann (1654–1677),
          ⚭ 1675 in Rinteln Philipp Pestel, Dr. jur., (* around 1650), son of David Pestel (1603–1684) and Marie Varendorf,
      3. Elisabeth Gogräve (Gograff) (1638–1691) from Styrum,
        ⚭ I. 1660 Johann Antrecht (1626–1667) from Rinteln, Hessian councilor in Rinteln, son of Johann Antrecht the Elder. J. (1577–1646) from Kassel, envoy to the peace negotiations in Münster and Osnabrück, and Anna Christina Hund (Canisius) (1596–1676),
        ⚭ II. 1675 Johann Joachim d'Orville (1633–1688) from 's- Gravenhage , enrolled in Heidelberg in 1652 with his brothers Friedrich and Jakob, Hessen-Kassel Privy Council, envoy to the Reichstag in Regensburg and in 1678 to the peace negotiations in Nijmegen , grave slab preserved in the envoy cemetery in Regensburg, son of the Elector Palatinate prince educator Friedrich d'Orville ( 1590–1641) and Maria Modesta Camerarius (1601–1665), a daughter of Ludwig Camerarius .
  2. (perhaps) Simon Gogreve, 1576 owner of a canonical benefice at the collegiate monastery of St. Martini Minden, 1580 enrolled as Simon a Gogreve Mindensis in Bologna, 1588 briefly - non-resident owner of the parish in Lerbeck - obliged to the Confessio Augustana .

Root list of the Gaugreben (Gogreve) for Oldendorf, Stadthagen and Hameln

Dietrich Gaugreben "the old man" († 1401/07), bailiff of Medebach ,

  1. Hildebrand Gogreve, 1435 admission to the court servants of Count Otto II of Holstein-Schaumburg ,
    1. (probably) Hildebrand Gogreve, 1514 appointed servant of Count Johann IV of Holstein-Schaumburg ,
    2. Johann Gogreve the Elder Ä. (* before 1450/55; † 1529), 1486 canon at St. Bonifatius monastery in Hameln , 1513, 1514 scholaster, 1516–1527 as dean, 1525–1528 as senior attested,
      oo probably his "maget ... Alheide" († after 1528), "Carstens butter van dem olden Hagen (= Altenhagen )",
      1. Severin Gogreve (* before 1470/75; † around 1550) from Oldendorf under Schaumburg, son of the dean Johann, Gogreve the Elder. Ä., 1502 extension of the already granted dispensation from the birth defect to the permission to receive two further benefits, 1525, 1528 canon and vicar at St. Bonifatius monastery in Hameln, 1530, 1544 canon at St. Martini in Minden, from 1538 during the Exile in Rinteln Thesaurar of the Martinistift, 1542 "im pabstumhe" possessor of the chaplaincy in Bodenwerder , 1549 senior,
        oo Anna Goldener,
        1. Georg Gogreve (* around 1534; † 1575/76) Oldendorf unter Schaumburg,
          oo Anna NN.,
          For his descendants see above in this article the section → Family ,
        2. Hille Gogreve († after 1569),
          ⚭ 1532 Jobst Hoffmann,
        3. Johann Gogreve († after 1592), Tribunus plebis ,
          ⚭ NN.
          1. (probably) Johann Gogrävius (* around 1593; † 1618), attended school in Osnabrück and Hamburg, 1611 enrolled in Helmstedt (" Johannes Gograve Mindensis "), 1615 as a law student in Jena , died in Jena from an injury from a fight,
      2. Margaretha Gogreve († after 1560),
        ⚭ Wolter Rust († 1550/60) from Hameln,
        1. Anna Rust (* before 1528, † after 1528),
        2. Margarete Rust (* 1540; † after 1591),
          ⚭ 1560 in Minden Heinrich Hencken the Elder. J. (1534–1591) from Einbeck,
      3. Johann Gogreve the Elder J. ( iunior ) (* around 1475; † 1546) from Oldendorf under Schaumburg, son of the dean Johann Gogreve the Elder. Ä., 1492 matriculated in Rostock (" Iohannes Ghogreue de Hamel "), 1494 Baccalaureat (" Iohannes Hogreue "), Magister, benefice as a pleban at St. Aegidia in Hanover (1498 resigned), from 1499 he and Mauritius Gogreve ( s. U. ) as Minden cleric in trials before the Roman Rota , 1512 canon, 1525–1545 dean at St. Bonifatius monastery in Hameln, 1520, 1530 also canon at St. Martini in Minden, from 1534/35 also chancellor Count Otto IV of Schaumburg . He died without a "legitimate heir", but left Magister Johann Gogreve an "eternal vicarie" at the Erasmus and Maria Magdalenen altar at the church in Hameln ,
        oo NN.,
        1. Johannes Gogreve (* around 1520; † 1573/74) from Hameln, enrolled as Johannes Gogreiff (Gotgreff) in Cologne in 1536, Magister Artium at the Montana-Burse in 1539, Chancellor of Schaumburg from around 1544, in 1548 the descent of "Johan Goggrev" legitimized by Emperor Karl V, he owned a Halbmeierhof and a Kötterhof in Zersen near Oldendorf in 1561 , built the Prinzenhof in Rinteln around 1565/70 , in 1570 "Johann Goygreue" received an imperial letter of Maximilian II's coat of arms and freedom from foreign courts, protection and Umbrella, tomb in the St. Martini Church in Stadthagen , ⚭ Metta Deseniß,
          1. Anthonius Gogreue (* around 1550, † around 1592), 1566 canonical to St. Johannis in Minden, enrolled in 1569 in Wittenberg (" Antonius Gogreue Schaumburgensis "), 1577 in Heidelberg (" Schauenbergensis "), 1578 in Padua and Siena, lived in Stadthagen and Rinteln,
            ⚭ around 1596 Anna Langermann (* around 1554, † around 1610) from Hamburg; his widow ⚭ II. around 1596 David Hotzen (* around 1560; † 1623), Count of Schaumburg's chief forester at Hemeringen near Hameln,
          2. Anna Gogreve,
            ⚭ 1570 Johann Campe (Kampf), mayor,
          3. Otto Gogreff (* around 1550/55; † 1573), 1566 in Strasbourg, 1571 in Tübingen (" Otho Gogreue Schaumbergensis "), Besançon and Orléans, 1573 together with Justus (Jobst; Jodocus) von Donop (1551–1579) from the Grafschaft Lippe, who had just survived Bartholomew's Night in Orléans , matriculated in Heidelberg (" Otto Gogreff Schomburgensis "), died there,
          4. Liborius Gogreve (* around 1555/60; † after 1613), 1571 school in Duisburg, 1574/75 enrolled as "Liborius Gogreue Hagensis " in Rostock, Lic. Jur., Stadthagen,
            ⚭ Dorothea Reiche,
            1. Anton Gogreve († after 1624), in 1604 Antonius Gogrebe Schaumburgensis Rintelensis was matriculated in Marburg,
            2. Johann Gogreve († after 1625), Stadthagen,
              ⚭ Maria Rust († after 1625),
          5. Dorothea Gogreve,
            ⚭ Cordt Meyer (Meiger) († after 1602), Mayor of the city of Stadthagen,
          6. Georg Gogreve (around 1565/70; † 1609/13), enrolled in Rostock in 1584 (" Georgius Gogreuius Hagensis "),
            ⚭ 1589 Ilsa Lorleberg († after 1613), coat of arms stones at the house
            Emmernstr. 12 in Hameln
          7. Erich Gogreve († after 1613),
          8. Elisabeth Gogreve,
            ⚭ Gerd Leist († after 1622), coat of arms stones at the
            Leisthaus in Hameln,
            1. Gerhard Georg Leist († 1598) from Hameln, epitaph in Afferde with the Leist and Gogreve coats of arms,
          9. Anna Maria Gogreve (around 1565; † before 1614),
            ⚭ 1587 Erich Limborch (* around 1560; † 1614/15) from Lower Saxony, 1586 Dr. jur. in Basel, 1593–1597 East Frisian Councilor, Hohnstein Chancellor of the Principality of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel,
      4. Mauritius (Moritz) Gogreve (* around 1480; † 1518) de Hameln , probably also a son of the dean Johann Gogreve the Elder. Ä., Matriculated in Erfurt in 1498, vicar of the Bonifatiusstift in Hameln in 1506, joined the Rota College in 1517,
      5. Conrad Gogreve († after 1528).

swell

  • Max Lossen : Letters from Andreas Masius and his friends 1538–1573. (Publications of the Society for Rhenish History 2). Dürr, Leipzig 1886, esp. Pp. 323-325, 327, 332-336, 345-347, 355 and the like. ö. ( digitized version in the Internet Archive)
  • Letter from Alexander Trivius (Alessandro Trivio) to Cardinal Giovanni Antonio Volpe , Bishop of Como, dated March 21, 1575 from Minden. In: Augustin Theiner : Annales Ecclesiastici , Vol. II. Typographia Tiberina, Rome 1856, pp. 470–472, especially p. 472 ( Google Books )

literature

  • Karl Hogrebe: The Sauerland Gogreven , Vol. I and II. Josefs, Bigge 1939
  • Hubert Jedin : The cost of the papal privileges for the planned University of Duisburg 1560/61 . In: Roman quarterly for Christian antiquity and church history 64 (1969), pp. 218–228
  • Sabine Wehking : The inscriptions of the city of Minden . (The German inscriptions 46). Reichert, Wiesbaden 1997, p. 93 ISBN 3-89500-049-3
  • Fritz Droste: City of Olsberg . Your Villages in History , Vol. II. From 1370 to around 1600 . Vocational training center Josefsheim Bigge, Olsberg 1998, p. 102ff
  • Wolfgang Bonorden: Dr. jur. Simon Gogräve, d. 1648 . (The graves in the St. Petri Cathedral in Bremen 10 = leaves of the mouse. Society for Family Research, Bremen 22). Bremen 2000, p. 18f ISBN 3-89757-047-5
  • Lupold von Lehsten: The Hessian Reichstag delegates in the 17th and 18th centuries , appendix lists and biographical-genealogical sheets of the Hessian delegates to the Reichstag in the 17th and 18th centuries . (Sources and research on Hessian history 137.2). Hessian Historical Commission, Darmstadt 2003

Remarks

  1. 1557 Prebende to St. Mauritz in Münster, cathedral capitular and vicar general (1569–1572) in Augsburg, agent of the Augsburg monastery in Rome.
  2. Kaspar Groppers collaborator , long-time companion of the Nuncio Giovanni Francesco Commendone (1524–1584), Bishop of Zante ( Zakynthos ), in Germany and Poland.
  3. Er ⚭ I. 1651 Maria Juliane Gleim (1629–1656), daughter of Heinrich Gleim, Hessian mayor in Felsberg, Pfänner in Soden, and Anna Elisabeth Kraushaar.
  4. Er ⚭ I. 1666 Marie Christine Vultejus (1649–1668) from Kassel, daughter of Komizialgesmitt Johann Vultejus and Elisabeth Tossanus.
  5. Not identical with Simon Ogreuius (Hoggreve) († July 10, 1624) from Schleswig ( Sleswicensis Holsatus ), enrolled in Rostock 1587, 1594–1604 deacon in Kotzenbüll , 1604–1606 pastor (Sognepræst) in Buphever on Edomsharde (cf. today Bupheverkoog before Pellworm ), then in Königsbüll on Alt-Nordstrand , later pastor in Tating .
  6. son of Heinemann von Gaugreben († after 1384) and Lucia (Luckel) von Hohenfels zu Viermünden.
  7. In silver, a fallen, red anchor without a stick (or a wolf iron), placed upright with the ring facing down, accompanied by 3 (2: 1) red roses. Crest ornament with two ostrich feathers, helmet covers red-silver.

Individual evidence

  1. From the charity award of Pius V in 1566: "... non obstante defectu natalium, quem pateris de presbytero genitus et soluta ..." (= "regardless of the birth defect that you are known to have as someone who was born of a priest and an unmarried woman" ).
  2. ^ A b c d Wilhelm Eberhard Schwarz: The Nunciature correspondence Kaspar Groppers. Along with related documents 1573–1576. (Sources and research in the field of history 5). Schöningh, Paderborn 1898, p. 182f ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  3. a b c Chancellor Johannes Gogreve and Georg Gogreve were "cousins"; see. Wolfgang Bonorden: Dr. jur. Simon Gogräve, d. 1648 . (The graves in the St. Petri Cathedral in Bremen 10 = leaves of the mouse. Society for Family Research, Bremen 22). Bremen 2000, p. 18f; Georg Gogreve zu Minden to Chancellor Johann Gogreve regarding personal messages , 1566; Lower Saxony State Archive Bückeburg, (L 1 Schaumburger Samtarchiv, v. Gogreve, No. 4202).
  4. ↑ Mentioned as a family name near Minden in Stadthagen; Document dated April 8, 1539; Richard Doebner: Document regests from Stadthagen . In: Zeitschrift des Historisches Verein für Niedersachsen 63 (1898), pp. 148-254, esp. P. 224 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  5. a b c document dated March 12, 1569; Landesarchiv NRW, Westphalia Münster department (St. Mauritz and Simeon Monastery, Minden, certificate no. 332) ( digitized version ).
  6. a b See debt claim of the collegiate church in Hameln against the heirs of Severin Gogreve for 100 florins , 1552–1554; Lower Saxony State Archives Bückeburg (L 1 Schaumburger Samtarchiv, v. Gogreve, No. 4188).
  7. ^ Heinz Finger : Reformation and Catholic Reform in the Rhineland . (Writings of the University and State Library Düsseldorf. 26). Die Bibliothek, Düsseldorf 1996, p. 97, considers the Chancellor Johann Ghogreff (* around 1499; † 1554) from Jülich-Kleve-Berg to be the father. Johann Ghogreff had received a prebend ( benefice ) at St. Martini in Minden in 1519 , he studied abroad from 1518, was provost of the St. Gereon Abbey in Cologne from 1524 until his laicisation in 1530 and did not come to the three siblings as the father of the three Question.
  8. files, 1553; Lower Saxony State Archive Bückeburg (L 1 Schaumburger Samtarchiv, v. Gogreve, No. 4190).
  9. Cf. Rudolfine von Oer: The Münster "Erbmännerstreit". On the problem of revisions of Reich Chamber Court judgments . (Sources and research on the highest jurisdiction in the Old Kingdom 32). Böhlau, Cologne 1998.
  10. Johannes Schencking: Ad omnes Sacri Romani Imperii, et singvlarvm provinciarvm ordines, ipsosque Canonicos Monasterienses Aduersarios . o. O. [Regensburg?] 1576, pp. 166f and 188 ( Google Books ) = Pro militari progenitorum suorum nobilitate, quodque nobiles Civitatis Monasteriensis . o. O. 1582, pp. 56f and 64 ( Google Books ).
  11. a b Stephan Ehses: Andreas Masius to Cardinal Morone. Zevenaar. September 18, 1561. Concerning the University of Duisburg . In: Roman quarterly for Christian antiquity 22 (1908), pp. 62–66, esp. P. 63 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  12. See Wilhelm Crecelius:  Monheim, Johannes . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 22, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1885, p. 167 f.
  13. letter of "Georgius Gogreuus" Andreas Masius (from 1 January 1564) from Rome; see. Enclosure 19. In: Theodor Joseph Lacomblet: Düsseldorf , Part IV. In: Archive for the history of the Lower Rhine 5 (1866), pp. 203–205 ( Google Books ); see. Pp. 71-73.
  14. ^ Hubert Jedin: The plan to found a university in Duisburg 1555/64 . In: Günter von Roden: The University of Duisburg (Duisburger Forschungen 12). Braun, Duisburg 1968, pp. 1–32, especially p. 20.
  15. Also Jean Vischbroek; Vursbrouck; Wisbroch et al. Ä .; from Ghent, secretary of Cardinal Giovanni Morone , died as a canon on St. Martin in Liège .
  16. ^ Cf. letters from Joannes Metellus (Jean Matal) of September 12, 1562 from Liège and from Johann Visbroc of December 11, 1562 from Rome, both to Andreas Masius; Max Lossen: Letters from Andreas Masius and his friends 1538–1573 . (Publications of the Society for Rhenish History 2). Dürr, Leipzig 1886, No. 253 and 254, p. 347.
  17. See Peter Arnold Heuser: Jean Matal. Humanistic jurist and European thinker of peace (around 1517-1597) . Böhlau, Cologne 2003, p. 169.
  18. a b Treaty of June 6, 1472; Landesarchiv NRW, Westphalia Münster department (St. Mauritz and Simeon Monastery, Minden, certificate no. 340).
  19. a b Text printed in: Ernst Albrecht Friedrich Culemann (edit.): Collection of their noblest state contracts of the principality of Minden . Enax, Minden 1748, pp. 78-85, especially p. 79 ( digitized version of the Münster University Library).
  20. Cf. relocation of the fiefs after his death to Stadthagen , file of July 23, 1578; Lower Saxony State Archives in Bückeburg (holdings L 0 Capaunsche Collection, Holstein-Schaumburg Collection of Documents and Messages, Vol. 4, No. 461).
  21. Cf. Main State Archives Münster (036 I Grafschaft Schaumburg - Urkunden, 168); Staatsarchiv Bückeburg (Capaunsche Collection, Volume 4, No. 461; Schaumburg Samtarchiv, No. 1653 and 4190; holdings v. Gogreve, No. 4190 and 4202).
  22. ^ Document of April 7, 1572; Landesarchiv NRW, Westphalia Münster department (St. Mauritz and Simeon Monastery, Minden, certificate no. 338).
  23. ^ Regest of a document dated May 20, 1574; Richard Doebner: Document regests from Stadthagen . In: Journal of the Historisches Verein für Niedersachsen 63 (1898), pp. 148-254, esp. No. 459, p. 240 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  24. Cf. Otto Bernstorf: Bishop Hermann von Minden from the Graflich Schaumburg house; a spiritual prince of the Reformation period . In: Hans Gelderblom (Ed.): The excavations and finds in the Minden Cathedral as a guide to one's own past and as a guide to contemporary works in Westphalia . (Mindener contributions 10). Bruns, Minden 1964, pp. 75-145, especially p. 99.
  25. ^ Letter to Como dated March 21, 1575.
  26. Cf. Gropper to Como , November 11, 1574 and May 7, 1575, and The Bavarian ambassadors Christoph von Pienzenau, Dr. Ludolf Halver and Jakob Dandorf to Duke Albrecht V of Bavaria , June 15, 1575; Wilhelm Eberhard Schwarz: The Nunciature Correspondence Kaspar Groppers. Along with related documents 1573–1576. (Sources and research in the field of history 5). Schöningh, Paderborn 1898, No. 172, 238 and 247, pp. LXXXII f, XCV, 217, 285 and 290.
  27. ^ Sabine Wehking: DI 46, No. 96 . In: www.inschriften.net (accessed on January 1, 2019).
  28. See Wolfgang Bonorden: Dr. jur. Simon Gogräve, d. 1648 . (The graves in the St. Petri Cathedral in Bremen 10 = leaves of the mouse. Society for Family Research, Bremen 22). Bremen 2000, p. 18f.
  29. a b c Cf. Lupold von Lehsten: The Hessian Reichstag delegates in the 17th and 18th centuries , appendix lists and biographical-genealogical sheets of the Hessian delegates to the Reichstag in the 17th and 18th centuries . (Sources and research on Hessian history 137.2). Hessian Historical Commission, Darmstadt 2003, p. 314.
  30. a b Cf. mortgage note from Count Otto's heirs , re. Inclusion of 1000 Thlr. from Anna, servant because. Georg Gogreves , April 4, 1580; Lower Saxony State Archives Bückeburg (Schaumburger Samtarchiv, orig. 1 Sc Schaumburgische Schuldbriefe, No. 422; see No. 396); Chapter S. Martini to the cathedral chapter in Minden regarding complaint against the former servant Georg Gogreves, dean , for the evacuation of the dean's apartment, June 1, 1582; Landesarchiv NRW, Westphalia Münster department (Grafschaft Schaumburg - files, Diocese of Minden, No. 8).
  31. Cf. Emil Sehling: The Protestant Church Regulations of the XVI. Century , Vol. VII / 1. Lower Saxony , half 2, half vol. 1 Archbishopric Bremen… . Mohr, Tübingen 1963, p. 30 + note. 3; Erich Weise: History of the Lower Saxony State Archives in Stade . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1964, pp. 22-24.
  32. Johannes Fürsen : Gloriosa & laudabilis sapientum Christianorum Sapientia & Scientia. The wise Christians glorious and praiseworthy wisdom and science ... Bey ... Leichbegangnus, Des ... Simonis Gogräven, Beyder Rechten Doctoris, and well-deserved Procancellarii of the Vehrden Foundation . Villiers, Bremen 1648 ( Google Books ).
  33. Johannes Fürsen: Gloriosa & laudabilis sapientum Christianorum Sapientia & Scientia. The wise Christians glorious and praiseworthy wisdom and science ... Bey ... Leichbegangnus, Des ... Simonis Gogräven, Beyder Rechten Doctoris, and well-deserved Procancellarii of the Vehrden Foundation . Villiers, Bremen 1648, p. 49f ( Google Books )
  34. Sie ⚭ II. 1642 Bernhard Capella (1603–1660) from Detmold; see. Files Werpup , Gebrüder , 1617–1638; City archive Lemgo (administrative documents of the city of Lemgo, from number: 6516): "Capella, stepfather of the children Gograve, bailiff zu Gemen, 1659".
  35. Jan Carel van der Muelen: De Geslacht Tervile en Theben Tervile . In: De Nederlandsche Leeuw 6 (1888), pp. 42–44 and 52–55, esp. P. 42f ( digitized version of the Koninklijk Nederlandsch Genootschap voor Geslacht- en Wapenkunde). The Tervile family originally came from Vreden .
  36. Johannes Niesius (1629–1679): The true believer and pious noble Kleynod, framed in their precious faith and well-kept in heaven for eternal, holy looking. Except… XVI. Psalm v. 5. 6. drafted and promoted. Bey ... corpse-Begängnüß of ... women Christinen nobility Pestels bored Deichmannin, of ... Mr. Philippi Pestels, I. U. D. Hertz beloved husband . When she took August 11th ... 1677th ... into heaven, had her dead body ... put to its rest and brought to it. on the 16th day of the same month / Valentin Wolter: Oratio funebris… Christinae Adelheidis Deichmans . Gottfried Kaspar Wächter, Rinteln 1677 ( digitized version of the Lower Saxony State and University Library Göttingen).
  37. See Art. Antrecht . In: Friedrich Wilhelm Strieder : Basis for a Hessian scholar and writer story . Vol. I. Barmel, Göttingen 1781, pp. 88-92, especially p. 91f ( Google Books ).
  38. ^ Maria Luisa Accorsi, Claudia Zonta ( arrangement ): Natio germanica Bononiae , Vol. I La matricola, 1573-1602, 1707-1727 . Cooperativa Libraria Universitaria Editrice, Bologna 1999, No. 756, p. 121.
  39. ^ Anton Gottfried Schlichthaber: On the older church history in the Principality of Minden. XXI. Lerbeck In: Mindener Heimatblätter 4,20 (1926), p. 3 ( digitized version of the University and State Library of Münster); Hans Nordsiek: The Church Visitation Protocols of the Principality of Minden from 1650 . (Publications of the Historical Commission for Westphalia 7). Aschendorf, Münster 2013, p. 128 ( PDF of the Westphalia-Lippe Regional Association).
  40. Johann Melchior Krafft: A two-fold two-hundred-year jubilation memory ... started in this city of Husum . Fickweiler, Hamburg 1723, p. 404 ( Google Books ); Hans Nicolai Andreas Jensen: Attempt at church statistics for the Duchy of Schleswig , Vol. I and II. Kastrup, Flensburg 1840, pp. 654, 795 and 829.
  41. ^ Certificate of appointment dated August 31, 1435; Lower Saxony State Archives Bückeburg (Schaumburg Samtarchiv, Count's Servants, No. 1).
  42. ^ Certificate of appointment from 1514; Lower Saxony State Archive Bückeburg (Princely House Archive, Old Schaumburg Archive, No. 727).
  43. a b c d e f g h Cf. Incomplete copy of the will of Senior Johannes Gogreve , 1528. In: Erich Fink (edit.): Document book of the monastery and the city of Hameln , Vol. II. (Sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony 10). Hahn, Hannover / Leipzig 1903, No. 711, pp. 528-532; see. No. 716, p. 534 ( Google Books ; limited preview); ( Digitized in the Internet Archive).
  44. a b Cf. dean and chapter renew an old statute of the monastery , 1525. In: Erich Fink (edit.): Document book of the monastery and the city of Hameln , vol. II. (Sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony 10). Hahn, Hannover / Leipzig 1903, No. 708, pp. 524-527, u. ö.
  45. The Provost of Hameln was the patron saint of the church in Altenhagen; Christoph Barthold Scharf: Topographical directory of all cities, towns, villages ... in the Electorate of Braunschweig-Lüneburg ... , attached to The Political State of the Electorate of Braunschweig-Lüneburg . Johann Georg Berenberg, Lauenburg 1777, p. 4.
  46. Ludwig Schmugge (Ed.): Directory of the supplica registers of the penitentiary of Alexander VI. occurring persons, churches and places of the German Empire (1492–1503) . (Repertorium Poenitentiariae Germanicum 8). Walter de Gruyter, Berlin 2012, No. 5234, p. 693; Repertorium Poenitentiariae Germanicum online VIII, 05234.
  47. ^ Hermann Hamelmann : Reformation history of Westphalia ... Minden (1568). In: Klemens Löffler (Ed.): Hermann Hamelmanns Geschichtliche Werke , Vol. II. Aschendorff, Münster 1913, pp. 75–101, especially p. 82f ( digitized in the Internat Archive).
  48. a b cf. Hans Nordsiek: The beginnings of the Reformation in Minden 1529–1535. Citizens' movement, council and clergy in a Westphalian bishopric . In: Mitteilungen des Mindener Geschichtsverein 78 (2006), pp. 43–99, esp. P. 64f ( digitized version of the Mindener Geschichtsverein).
  49. Karl Kayser (arr.): The Reformatory Church Visitation in the Guelph Lands 1542–1544 . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 1897, p. 349 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  50. Rector Et Senatus Academiae Ienensis LSD: De confusione, & quasi diluvio quodam gravissimorum scelerum ... ; PP the XIII. Martii. AOR 1618. Steinmann, Jena 1618 ( digitized version of the Jena University Library).
  51. Horst Hülse (arrangement): The inscriptions of the city of Einbeck . (The German inscriptions 42), Ludwig Reichert, Wiesbaden 1996, no. 49; see. No. 157 and No. 161 ( German inscriptions online ).
  52. ^ Documents dated February 2 and 12, 1498; City Archives Hanover (documents, No. 1222 and 1224).
  53. Nikolaus Hilling : The Roman Rota and the Diocese of Hildesheim at the end of the Middle Ages 1464–1513 . (Studies on the history of the Reformation and texts 6). Aschendorf, Münster 1908, pp. 46, 104–107, 114f and 120f ( Google Books ; limited preview); ders .: Roman Rota Trials 1464–1513. The diocese of Minden and Roman Rotaprozesse from the Saxon dioceses from 1464–1513 . In: Archives for Catholic Church Law 96 (1916), pp. 3-27 and 193–202, esp. Pp. 13, 18, 25 and 201.
  54. ^ Document of April 7, 1534; Lower Saxony State Archives Hanover (Principality of Calenberg, documents from the Bonifatius Stift in Hameln, No. 590).
  55. Max Bär : History of the von Walthausen family in Lower Saxony , Bd. II. Lax, Hildesheim / Leipzig 1929, p. 593.
  56. Cf. sections from the will of the dean master Johann Gogreve , 1546. In: Erich Fink (arrangement): Document book of the monastery and the city of Hameln , Vol. II. (Sources and representations on the history of Lower Saxony 10). Hahn, Hannover / Leipzig 1903, No. 762, pp. 586-589; see. No. 761, pp. 585f ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  57. Enfeoffment of the Gogreve family (Gogrefe) with Welliehausen ; Hameln City Archives (II.2. Estates and family papers, holdings 323 - Völker, No. 80 and 81).
  58. a b cf. Anzeiger des Germanisches Nationalmuseums 2, no. 14 (1889), p. 199 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  59. Gogrene (sic) John legitimatio, , June 5, 1548; Austrian State Archives (House, Court and State Archives, Reichshofrat, Restitutiones natalium ac legitimationes, 3-1-25).
  60. ^ Georg Schwedt: The city with 24 villages. Hessisch Oldendorf on the Weser . Norderstedt 2018, pp. 235f.
  61. Imperial crest letter for Johann Gohgreve of 1570; see. Alfred F. Wolfert: The wolf iron as a coat of arms image . In: Archivum heraldicum 98 (1984), pp. 11–18, esp. P. 14f ( PDF from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich).
  62. Gogreur (sic!), Johann , 1570; Austrian State Archives (House, Court and State Archives, Reichshofrat, Gratialia et Feudalia, Confirmationes privilegiorum (German expedition), 64-3-1).
  63. ^ On the following, see Wilhelm Weidler, Karl-Egbert Schultze ( arr . ): Kinship table Gogreve-Meyer-Scheile . In: German Gender Book, Vol. CXX. (Lower Saxony gender book 6). Starke, Glücksburg 1957, p. 277 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  64. Lothar White: Bernhard Copius (1525-1581) . In: Friedrich Bratvogel (Ed.): Bernhard Copius and the Lemgoer Gymnasium . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2011, pp. 43–70, especially pp. 82f ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  65. acts of death of Otto Gogreve, son of the Chancellor Johann Gogreve, Heidelberg , 1573; Lower Saxony State Archives Bückeburg (Schaumburger Samtarchiv, v. Gogreve, No. 4209; see No. 4201).
  66. Lower Saxony State Archive Bückeburg (L 1 Schaumburger Samtarchiv, No. 4207).
  67. Christine Wulf: Hameln, No. 91 † . In: German inscriptions online 28 ( digitized at www.inschriften.net).
  68. Christiane Schuchard: The Rota-Notare from the dioceses of the German-speaking area 1471-1527. A biographical directory . In: Sources and research from Italian archives and libraries 93 (2013), pp. 104–210, esp. P. 180 ( PDF from the Max Weber Foundation).