Hartung from Lampoting

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Hartung von Lampoting (also: Hartnid , Hartneid ) († August 18, 1306 ) was canon of Salzburg from 1277 to 1295 , then provost of Gurk and finally provost of the Berchtesgaden monastery from 1303 to 1305 .

As provost of the Berchtesgaden monastery, Hartung von Lampoting was still subject to the metropolitan authority of the Archdiocese of Salzburg . It was not until 1455 that the monastery was able to get rid of it and was then subordinate to the Pope in spiritual matters . But the secular independence of the Stiftspropstei began to manifest itself as early as 1294 through the acquisition of blood jurisdiction for serious offenses.

Lampoting was the first provost to have his personal coat of arms (a rose with a small escutcheon ) in the provost sigel . Lampoting's tombstone is in the Martinskapelle ( war memorial chapel since 1923 ) in the east wing of the cloister between Berchtesgadener Stiftskirche and the former Augustinian monastery . It is the oldest surviving provost's tombstone and Lampoting's grave, after that of Eberwin, the second oldest of a Berchtesgaden monastery provost , which is located in Berchtesgaden.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Manfred Feulner: Berchtesgaden - history of the country and its inhabitants . Pp. 50-51.
  2. According to A.Helm, the episcopal insignia received after him in 1254 are already a sign of direct papal suzerainty to which the monastery would have been subject to since then. See Helm A .: Berchtesgaden through the ages , keyword: History of the country, p. 109.
  3. ^ Helm A .: Berchtesgaden in the course of time, keyword: History of the country, pp. 108-109.
  4. ^ Walter Brugger , Heinz Dopsch , Peter F. Kramml: History of Berchtesgaden. Pen, market, land. Volume 1: Between Salzburg and Bavaria (until 1594). Plenk, Berchtesgaden 1991, ISBN 3-922590-63-2 , p. 339.
  5. Helm A .: Berchtesgaden through the ages, keyword: Pröpste, p. 261.
  6. Berchtesgaden Collegiate Church . Historical church leader. Christian Art in Bavaria No. 9. Verlag St. Peter, Salzburg 2002. P. 38