Heinrich von Hailfingen the untimely

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coat of arms of Heinrich von Hailfingen the Untouched

Heinrich von Hailfingen the Untouched was mayor of Hagenau from 1337-40 and in 1348 Vogt there.

family

Heinrich von Hailfingen the Untouched was a son of Peter von Hailfingen , who called himself "von Speier" when he was last mentioned in a document in 1301.

His brothers were Kraft von Hailfingen and Hug von Hagelloch . Hug apparently settled in Hagelloch, after which he occasionally called himself with the omission of the family name. In 1326 he sold the Count Palatinate of Tübingen several serfs to Entringen and Altingen for 19 pounds Heller . His sisters were called Gute, Junte and Sophie.

Heinrich's wife is not known by name, but probably came from the von Kuppingen noble family . His two children Georg and Guta are mentioned for the first time in 1345 when the latter waived inheritance on the occasion of her marriage to Marquard von Ehingen .

One of the relatives of this line is probably Friedrich, who made his will in 1300 as the former dean of Calw . Peter, Heinz and Jörg were reburied in his grave in Bebenhausen Monastery , as well as Georg, who died in 1408.

Live and act

Together with his father and brother Kraft, he gave birth to Peter von Entringen at a young age in 1298 . He acted as a guarantor when his brother Hug, who in 1310 waived his claims to vineyards on the Härtrichberg or Mönchberg (near Entringen ) opposite Bebenhausen , which his father had previously sold to the monastery, for which he received 9 pounds of Heller. Heinrich then called himself Hüglin, son of the blessed Peter von Entringen, but in his seal the son of Peter von Hailfingen.

On July 9, 1316 the three brothers Heinrich, Kraft and Hug, together with their mother Ite and their sisters Gute, Junte and Sophie, issued another waiver certificate for Bebenhausen, this time regarding the goods to Reusten that had belonged to their cousin Heinrich von Remchingen . In favor of the Bebenhausen Monastery, you waive all claims and rights to compensation of 74 pounds Heller. The brothers called themselves the "Untouched", an epithet that Heinrich usually bore in the following years. In the Sindelfingen tradition, Ita is referred to as an entringer, as is her son Kraft, who became a canon in the local monastery.

On June 11, 1330 Heinrich von Hailfingen (Haulfingen), the Untouched, sold the wife of Heinrich the Schäppeler from Weil im Schönbuch to the monastery of Bebenhausen Irmgard for 14 pounds of Heller.

Heinrich bought all of Hagelloch's rights to the goods belonging to his sister Junte from his brother Hug von Hagelloch in 1331, for which he paid 6 pounds sterling. These consisted of a courtyard at Breitenholz, certain vineyards and a house in Entringen. With that Hug disappeared from tradition.

Heinrich, who continued the tribe, must certainly be counted among the more important representatives of the Hailfinger family. In the 1320s and 1330s he was a constant companion of the Counts of Hohenberg and the Count Palatine of Tübingen the shearers , for whom he often testified or sealed.

The Hohenbergers , who had been the imperial bailiffs in Alsace since 1331 , are likely to have provided him with the office of mayor of Hagenau . Heinrich held this official title in 1337 and 1340, while in 1348 he was called Vogt zu Hagenau. At the beginning of the 1350s he mostly called himself the former mayor of Hagenau.

In 1340 he bought a piece of forest in Schönbuch near Entringen for 40 pounds hellers from the Pfäffingen- based Renhard von Calw and in 1343 he bought some goods in Entringen for 80 pounds hellers from the Stuttgart citizen Walther von Entringen. He was also wealthy in the Horber area, because In 1342 he awarded the lay tithe to Hart to a citizen of Horber in exchange for certain annual validities.

Heinrich's circumstances deteriorated noticeably later, which is documented by several sales. In 1349 he sold five Jauchert fields in Reusten, which had belonged to his late sister Junta, to Bebenhausen for 30 pounds of pounds. In the following year, he sold a farm in Hildrizhausen to Count Palatine Konrad the Scheerer for 40 pounds of pounds Müneck Castle and the village of Breitenholz to the Herter von Dusslingen . His son Georg agreed to all sales.

Tribe list of the untrained

  • Peter von Hailfingen (1270/1301) ∞ Ita
    • Kraft von Hailfingen (1298/1316)
    • Heinrich von Hailfingen the Untouched (1298/1364)
      • Georg von Hailfingen the Elder (1345/1408) ∞ Anna von Hornstein
        • Georg von Hailfingen the Younger (1394/1442)
      • Good ∞ Marquard von Ehingen
    • Hug of Hagelloch (1310/1331)
    • Quality
    • Junte
    • Sophie

Individual evidence

  1. Hans-Peter Müller: Die Nobligen von Hailfingen (picture)  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: dead link / home.pages.at  
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k l m Hans-Peter Müller: Die Unbezunten (text) ( Memento from September 29, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  3. ^ Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg: Holdings A 474, U 1836, Bebenhausen, special part, Reusten.
  4. ^ Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg: Holdings H 14 No. 21, p. 9b, Bebenhausen, special part, Weil im Schönbuch
  5. Hans-Peter Müller: Petersche Line  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: dead link / home.pages.at