Hermann Nagel (Canon)

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Hermann Nagel (* 1584 - † November 18, 1637 ) was canon in Münster .

Life

Hermann Nagel came from the Westphalian noble family of Nagel , which had its origins in the Grafschaft Ravensberg and spread to the Rhineland and the Netherlands in the 16th century . He was the son of Adolf von Nagel zu Ittlingen ( Drost zu Stromberg) and his wife Anna von Galen zu Ermelinghof. With the receipt of the tonsure on June 11, 1605, he was prepared for a spiritual life. After the presentation by the Turnar Georg Nagel Hermann came into possession of on 14 June of the year Münster Dompräbende of the late Canon Christoph von Elverfeldt. On July 27, 1607, he presented a certificate from the University of Paris and asked at the same time to move to another university because of the plague that was raging there. It is not known whether he enrolled elsewhere. On March 29, 1619 Hermann received the minor ordinations and became a subdeacon the next day . On March 17, 1625 he received the archdeaconate city wages, waived it in the year and switched to the archdeaconate Beckum, which had become free through the death of Canon Temmo von Bocholtz . As early as February 1619 Hermann was accused by the vicar general of living in a concubinage and was instructed to give up this. A few years later the accusation followed that Hermann had a relationship with a nun from Überwasser . Thereupon the elector ordered Ferdinand on December 14, 1632 to open a trial against him. The lawsuit ran on February 11, 1633 and while the proceedings were still ongoing, a new charge came with the same allegations. Hermann received the order to release the maid, with whom he had lived for years, within three days.

swell

  • The diocese of Münster 4.2. ( Germania Sacra NF 17.2) The Cathedral Monastery of St. Paulus in Münster , edited by Wilhelm Kohl, published by the Max Planck Institute for History, Göttingen, Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin / New York, ISBN 978- 3-11-008508-2 , Germania Sacra NF 17.2 Biographies of the Canons, page 19ff. Digitized

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