Job Schrendeisen

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Job Schrendeisen (also Job Schrendeysen, Schrendeißen, Schrindeisen, Schrindisen ; * around 1460 in Gudensberg ; † after 1519 in?) Was a Landgrave-Hessian ministerial and mayor of Kassel .

family

Schrendeisen came from a wealthy and respected bourgeois family . His father Ludwig was mayor in the north Hessian town of Gudensberg and was financially so well off that he was able to lend considerable sums of money to his sovereigns, Landgraves Ludwig II and Wilhelm II . From 1458 he also held the landgrave lower court of Geismar as a fief . Two members of the family were canons at the St. Petri-Stift in Fritzlar during Job Schrendeisen's lifetime , and his brother Ludwig is attested as canon at the Imperial Cathedral of St. Bartholomew in Frankfurt am Main in 1521 . His second brother, Hugo, is declared chef of the Landgrave Wilhelm II in 1490 and is said to have been one of the first on the city wall when King Maximilian I stormed Stuhlweissenburg in 1490 .

Life

Schrendeisen entered the landgrave's service early on. From 1482 he was rent clerk in Kassel , where he became a citizen in 1485 . 1501 he is there as a chamber expressed writer, then as a chamberlain . In 1505 he became mayor of Kassel; he is attested in this office in 1512.

In February 1510 he was one of the three authorized representatives (the other two were the newly elected Landhofmeister Ludwig von Boyneburg zu Lengsfeld and Wilhelm von Dörnberg ) of the Hessian estates , which became Elector Friedrich III. and his brother Johann to Mulhouse were sent to the approval of the provincial estates regency during the minority of the then six-year-old Landgrave Philipp I seek. The previous summer, after the death of Landgrave Wilhelm II, the state estates had elected a nine-member Regency Council at a state parliament on a spit to prevent the landgrave widow Anna von Mecklenburg from reigning .

Marriage and offspring

Before 1498, Job Schrendeisen married Elisabeth von Wildungen , daughter of the Hessian rent master Henrich von Wildungen in Homberg (Efze) , who was mayor there from 1466 to 1480 and from 1485 to 1524 rent master. The two had three sons: Job , Balthasar and Henrich. Job was 1526-1538 treasurer in Homberg, was built by Emperor Charles V at the Diet of Augsburg on July 22, 1530 made an imperial nobility, and was at his departure from the Landgrave service in 1538, the castle and the estate wet Erfurth to fief , which he inherited from his mother.

Individual evidence

  1. December 2, 1481, request for payment in favor of the Gudensberg mayor Ludwig Schrendeisen. Regest no. 4015. Regests of the Landgraves of Hesse. In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
  2. June 22, 1493, Wilhelm II confirms guilt with Ludwig Schrindeisen. Regest no. 5417. Regests of the Landgraves of Hesse. In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
  3. "Geismar, Schwalm-Eder District". Historical local dictionary for Hessen. In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
  4. Johann Schrendeisen, 1482 canon in Fritzlar and altarist of the St. Michaelsaltar in Niedenstein ( Charter: Documents Niedenstein (1343-1600) 19) , and Konrad Schrendeisen, doctor, 1501/1510 canon and official of Fritzlar and owner of the parish in Datterode ( June 17, 1501, councils of the landgrave mediate between abbot and convent in Haina. Regest No. 4832. Regest of the Landgraves of Hesse. In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS)., And Heimatverein Dattenrode: "The chapel on the Boyneburg" ( Memento of the original from September 17, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this note. ). @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.heimatverein-datterode.de
  5. Frankfurt patriciate: Ludwig Schrendeißen ( Memento from March 29, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
  6. Frankfurt patriciate: Hugo Schrendeißen ( Memento from March 30, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
  7. ^ Job (Job) Schrendeißen ( Memento from March 29, 2012 in the Internet Archive )

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