Hans von Thienen

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Coat of arms of Thienen

Hans von Thienen (born March 13, 1686 in Warleberg, today part of Neuwittenbek ; † March 6, 1742 in Lübeck ) was a German lawyer and dean of the Lübeck bishopric.

Life

Hans von Thienen came from the Schleswig-Holstein nobility family ( Equites Originarii ) von Thienen and was the only son of the landlord of Warleberg and Rathmannsdorf Henning von Thienen (1652–1703) and his wife Apollonia Augusta, nee. von Thienen from the house of Kühren . His sister Elisabeth married Wulf Blome (1728–1784) at Hagen Castle . In 1695, Henning von Thienen acquired the city palace in Kiel, which has since been called the Warleberger Hof . Warleberg, whose sovereignty was disputed between the ducal (Danish) and the Gottorf portion, went bankrupt in 1710, and was acquired by Jean Henri Desmercières in 1714 .

Even as a six year old, he gained 1,692 Possession of a prebend in Lübeck cathedral chapter , had waived the Christoph Venninghausen in his favor.

Thienen entered the imperial service and became imperial chamberlain and imperial court counselor . During the two-time vacancy of the prince-bishop's chair in 1726/27, he took over as senior of the chapter together with the dean Johann von Wickede (1664-1732) the government of the bishopric in the name of the chapter. On February 12, 1733 the chapter elected him as the successor of Wickedes to the cathedral dean . In 1738 he was also given a thesaurus .

His marriage to Agathe Margarethe, geb. von Qualen (1695–1768), a daughter of Hans von Qualen († 1713) zu Östergaard and the yew tree Margarethe Ratlov and widow of Hans Heinrich von Brömsen (1677–1717), remained childless. From 1729 to 1734 he employed Christian Ludwig Liscow to raise his step-sons Hans (1716–1764) and Otto Hinrich (1717–1776) von Brömbsen , who were later both canons in Lübeck .

After his death, his preamble went to Hinrich von Buchwaldt (1732–1753). His successor as dean was Friedrich Christian von Wedderkop .

On the occasion of his mother's death in 1720, he had acquired the outer half of the south-facing radiant chapel in Lübeck Cathedral as a family grave chapel. The wall that separated it from the ambulatory was destroyed along with the portal and a black marble plaque with an inscription during the air raid on Lübeck in 1942. The four sandstone sarcophagi of Hans von Thienen, his mother, his wife Agathe and their son Otto Hinrich von Brömbsen, who died in 1776 as a result of a duel with his nephew Friedrich August von Brömbsen (1741–1797), have been preserved.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Rudolph Becker : Complicated history of the kaiserl. and salvation. Roman Empire freyen city of Lübeck. Volume 2, Lübeck 1784, p. 208
  2. Johannes Baltzer and Friedrich Bruns: The architectural and art monuments of the Free and Hanseatic City of Lübeck. Issued by the building authorities. Volume III: Church of Old Lübeck. Dom. Jakobikirche. Aegidia Church. Bernhard Nöhring's publishing house: Lübeck 1920. Unchanged reprint 2001: ISBN 3-89557-167-9 , p. 94
  3. ^ Marcus Jochim Carl Klug : The duel between the two Liibeck cathedral capitulars Otto Heinrich and Friedrich August v. Brömbsen in 1776 , HG Rahtgens, Lübeck 1858