Heinzelmann (family)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Heinzelmann is the surname of a family of merchants , bankers and industrialists from Kaufbeuren who appeared as mayors , senators, members of the Bavarian Estates Assembly and as German consuls of the Republic of Venice from 1525 to the 19th century .

In addition, the family founded under Christoph Friedrich Heinzelmann d. Ä. the textile industry in Kaufbeuren with the construction of a factory and also donated a number of foundations and social reforms. The entrepreneurial family Heinzelmann belonged to the most important families of the city of Kaufbeuren and belonged to their patriciate .

The Heinzelmann family was as enterprising in Venice settled and there to build a Protestant church community involved. A Johann Heinzelmann was also consul of the Holy Roman Empire in Venice. In 1832 representatives of the industrialist family settled in Augsburg to set up a bleaching and dyeing factory and later to take a seat on the SWA supervisory board .

In the former free imperial city of Kaufbeuren, Heinzelmannstrasse and the Heinzelmannstift founded in 1915 are named after the family.

Foundations

  • Heinzelmann`sche dowry foundation, founded in 1780, is administered by the city of Kaufbeuren
  • The Heinzelmann-Schachenmayr`sche Pfarrwitwen- and Orphan Foundation was founded in 1879 under the administration of the Evangelical Lutheran Parish Office in Kaufbeuren
  • Mayor Eduard Heinzelmann`s Foundation is merged with the United Kaufbeurer charitable foundations of the city in 1942
  • In 1958 the Christoph Friedrich Heinzelmann Foundation merged with the United Kaufbeurer charitable foundations of the city

Significant members of the family

  • Martin Heinzelmann progenitor of the family
  • Hans Heinzelmann (1526–1580) son of Martin Heinzelmann
  • Hans U. Heinzelmann (1681–1685) is the first Heinzelmann to hold the mayor's office in Kaufbeuren
  • Johann Heinzelmann the Elder Ä.
  • Johann Heinzelmann the Elder J.
  • Hans J. Heinzelmann
  • Johann Heinzelmann
  • Johann G. Heinzelmann
  • Carl E. Heinzelmann (1848-1856)
  • Christian Gottlieb Heinzelmann
  • Christoph Friedrich Heinzelmann d. Ä. (1786-1847)

literature

in order of appearance

  • Fritz Junginger: History of the Imperial City of Kaufbeuren in the 17th and 18th Centuries , Hochschulschrift , Munich 1965, ( DNB 481307621 ), pp. 93, 97, 101.
  • Eberhard Eggel: The Heinzelmann textile merchants in Kaufbeuren and their relatives . In: Archive for family research and all related areas, volume 34, CA Starke Verlag , Limburg 1968, ISSN  0003-9403 , pp. 574-591.
  • Stefan Müller: 19th century stock corporations - family businesses between the need for capital and maintaining influence . Augsburger Schriften zur Rechtsgeschichte - Volume 30. Edited by Christoph Becker , Lit Verlag , Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-643-14049-4 , pp. 31–32. Digitized at Google Books

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Working group for imperial cities historical research, monument preservation and civic education (ed.): Yearbook for the history of the Upper German imperial cities . tape 11 . Esslingen City Archives, 1965, ISSN  0341-9924 , p. 154 .
  2. Gustav Adelbert Seyler , Otto Titan von Hefner : Coats of arms of the bourgeois families of Germany and Switzerland . tape 4 . Bauer and Raspe , Neustadt an der Aisch 1974, ISBN 3-87947-012-X , p. 60 .
  3. ^ Henry Simonsfeld : The Fondaco dei Tedeschi in Venice and the German-Venetian trade relations . Ed .: Bavarian Academy of Sciences . Scientia Verlag, Aalen 1968, OCLC 6856280 , p. 183, 212, 362 .
  4. ^ Alfred Weitnauer : Allgäuer Chronik - data and events . tape 3 . Verlag für Heimatpflege, Kempten 1972, OCLC 12713686 , p. 89 .
  5. ^ Peter Fassl: Denomination, economy and politics - from the imperial city to the industrial city, Augsburg 1750-1850 . tape 32 - Treatises on the history of the city of Augsburg. Thorbecke, Sigmaringen 1988, ISBN 3-7995-6942-1 , p. 229 .