Job von Schrendeisen

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Coat of arms (after Jost Amman , 1589)

Job von Schrendeisen was from 1526 to 1538 landgrave-Hessian rentmaster in Homberg (Efze) in northern Hesse . On July 22, 1530 he was raised to the hereditary imperial nobility at the Augsburg Reichstag by Emperor Charles V and thus became the founder of the short-lived noble family of the von Schrendeisen .

Job came from a family that had been landgrave ministerials since at least the middle of the 15th century . He was the eldest of three sons of Kassel's mayor Hiob Schrendeisen and his wife Elisabeth von Wildungen , daughter of Henrich von Wildungen, who was mayor of Homberg from 1466 to 1480 and landgrave rent master from 1485 to 1524. His grandfather was the Gudensberg mayor Ludwig Schrendeisen.

When he left the Landgrave's service in 1538 , Landgrave Philipp enfeoffed him with the Nassenerfurth Castle , the associated estate and the village of Nassenerfurth , which he had inherited through his mother.

Job von Schrendeisen and his wife Gela von Wenings had three sons - Wolf, Heinrich and Balthasar - and two daughters - Salome and Anna. His sons sold Nassenerfurth Castle in 1590 to Philipp Wilhelm von Cornberg , the illegitimate son of Landgrave Wilhelm IV , who sold them to his half-brother, Landgrave Moritz , in 1594 . The daughter Anna Schrendeisen was married to Ludwig Feige (1535–1584), Reich Chamber Court Assessor in Speyer for the four Hessian Landgraves, Councilor and Court Judge Judge Landgrave Wilhelm IV in Marburg. He was a son of the Hessian Chancellor Johann Feige von Lichtenau , and a brother-in-law of the Hessian Chancellor Reinhard Scheffer the Elder . The daughter Salome Schrendeisen († 1574) married Johann (Hans) Rückersfeld († 1591), mayor of Homburg an der Efze, who in 1575 married Agnes Hombrecht (Humbracht) from the Frankfurt patrician family Humbracht . As a result, Rückersfeld became a member of the Frankfurt noble patrician society Alten Limpurg . Since his children, including Daniel Wilhelm Rückersfeld from his first marriage, who was married to Elisabeth Schrendeisen, did not live in Frankfurt, they did not become members and so the patrician status of those Rückersfeld in Frankfurt had expired again in 1591. The lineage of (von) Rückersfeld is first documented in Homberg in 1332; there it produced lay judges and mayors in the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries. It borrowed its name from Rückersfeld near Homberg.

Notes and individual references

  1. ^ Job (Job) Schrendeißen ( Memento from March 29, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
  2. Wolf (1534–1598) became councilor in Frankfurt am Main and in 1592 a member of the Alten-Limpurg Society or Ganerbschaft Alten-Limpurg in the Frankfurt patriciate . His cousin Henrich Schrendeißen († 1593), son of Job's brother Balthasar, had already become a member of the same patrician society in 1575. ( Wolf Schrendeisen ( Memento from March 30, 2012 in the Internet Archive ); Henrich Schrendeißen ( Memento from March 30, 2012 in the Internet Archive ))
  3. " Feige, Ludwig ", in: Hessian Biography (as of April 30, 2020)
  4. a b Andreas Hansert and Herbert Stoyan : Frankfurter Patrizier , 2012, Chapter 265, Rückersfeld, p. 1087 f.
  5. Klaus H. Wachtmann: Family Chronicle of Pastor Friedrich Seybert (1865–1955) , 2017, p. 220 f.
  6. Georg August von Lersner: The far-famous Freyen Reichs Wahl- and Handels-Stadt Franckfurt am Mayn ... , 1734, 134. Rückersfeld, p. 233.
  7. Siegfried of Ruckirsfelde, Schöffe to Homberg, 1373 in the hereditary homage: Saxon State archive , 10001 older documents No 04,063th ; Albert von Rückersfeld, Schöffe zu Homberg, was enfeoffed in 1471 by Johann von Westerburg with a quarter of the tithe zu Bobenhausen ; In 1484 Johann von Rückersfeld was enfeoffed by Werner von Westerburg with half and a quarter of the tithe there, and in 1492 Johann Rückersfeld, citizen of Homberg, was enfeoffed by Ludwig von Löwenstein with a quarter of the tithe there. " Bobenhausen, Schwalm-Eder-Kreis ", in: Historisches Ortslexikon (Status: November 8, 2017) Albert Rückersfeld, Schöffe zu Homberg, was enfeoffed in 1484 by Werner von Löwenstein-Westerburg with the exemption from Holzhausen near Homberg; Johann Rückersfeld, citizen of Homberg, was enfeoffed in 1492 by Löw von Löwenstein with the freehold property to Holzhausen. " Holzhausen bei Homberg, Schwalm-Eder-Kreis ", in: Historical local dictionary (as of February 10, 2020)
  8. Klaus H. Wachtmann: Family Chronicle of Pastor Friedrich Seybert (1865–1955) , 2017, pp. 262 and 299.
  9. Klaus H. Wachtmann: Family Chronicle of Pastor Friedrich Seybert (1865–1955) , 2017, p. 373.

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