Jürgen Schrötteringk (senior age, 1551)

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Jürgen Schrötteringk (* 1551 in Wellingholzhausen ; † January 27, 1631 in Hamburg ) was a German businessman and Hamburg senior citizen .

Life

Schrötteringk was a son of the farmer Johann Schrötteringk. He lost his parents at a young age and came to Hamburg as an orphan. There he did a business apprenticeship with Simon Hartiges, who later became his partner .

As a merchant, Schrötteringk took over the post of imperial salt factor from his father-in-law Diederich von Holten . The impure, brownish Boysalz from Spain was mainly refined in Silesian salt works. Schrötteringk transported the salt by ship across the Elbe to Silesia and exported Hungarian copper to Spain on the way back . When the salt business only brought in small profits from 1620, Schrötteringk resigned his office as a salt factor in 1625 and went on to work as a shipowner . His son, the future mayor Johann Schrötteringk, continued the copper business and from 1625 transported Swedish copper to Spain.

Schrötteringk took on various honorary positions as a citizen. He participated financially in the construction of the Hamburg orphanage and became its provisional on November 14, 1600.

On September 2, 1602, the Hamburg citizenship elected 100 citizens, the so-called Hundred Men , to which Schrötteringk also belonged, to work out a new recess with the council. The 11th Hamburg Recess was completed on October 6, 1603.

In 1609 Schrötteringk was elected finance citizen . As such, Schrötteringk belonged to the sixties in 1620 and 1621 , a deputation of 60 citizens who, after the council's proposal on April 28, 1620, was elected by the citizens to work out a new Accise and Licent order. Furthermore, this deputation was supposed to discuss every year in Easter week the shortcomings and infirmities which were reported to the senior elders and finance citizens during the year and to punish the guilty.

During the Thirty Years' War the army commander came on July 28, 1626 Christian William of Brandenburg in the castle Ritzebüttel one. The bailiff of the Hamburg office Ritzebüttel Hans Schaffshausen (1556–1638) was captured and the residents of the office robbed and the surrounding area plundered. The Hamburg council and the citizenry then set up a deputation to raise the necessary funds, money and soldiers to recapture the Ritzebüttel office. Schrötteringk was a member of this deputation. After a letter from the Danish King Christian IV to the Brandenburg prince to vacate the Hamburg fortress remained unanswered, several warships sailed from Hamburg down the Elbe to Ritzebüttel. Thereupon the occupiers withdrew, plundered the land of Hadeln on their way out and drove away booty with 800 wagons.

On November 15, 1626 Schrötteringk was elected for Johann vom Kampe (1569-1626) to the senior elder in the parish of Sankt Petri . In 1629 he was sworn in on the corpse and died in 1631. His successor was Andreas Tegge (1568–1650).

In 1617 Schrötteringk had the so-called Red House built on Grosse Reichenstrasse . This house served as a brewery and residential building and passed into the possession of his youngest son Albert in 1623 as a family fideikommiss . Schrötteringk was one of the richest merchants in Hamburg and left his heirs with a fortune of one million Mark Banco .

The Schrötteringksweg in Hamburg-Uhlenhorst was named after him in 1907.

family

Schrötteringk was married twice and had a total of 15 children:

  1. ⚭ with Anna Hartiges, daughter of his teacher and later partner Simon Hartiges
    1. Cäcilie (1584–1654), 1. ⚭ 1601 with Bernhard Tegge (1561–1606), lawyer and council secretary , 2. ⚭ 1609 with Johann Moller (vom Hirsch) (1567–1613), lawyer and schleswig-holstein-gottorfscher council, 3. ⚭ 1617 with Johann Sillem († 1627), broker and captain of the Hamburger Bürgerwache
    2. Anna, ⚭ with Johann Kellinghusen († 1635)
    3. Johann (1588–1676), merchant and mayor
    4. Gesa (* 1590)
    5. Simon († 1631), lawyer, ⚭ with Gesche Janes
    6. Eberhard († 1615)
    7. Jürgen († 1623)
  2. ⚭ 1595 with Anna von Holten (1577–1643), daughter of the mayor Diederich von Holten († 1605)
    1. Margaretha (1596–1633), ⚭ 1617 with Ditmar Koel (1597–1653), merchant and councilor
    2. Diederich (1597–1678), merchant and senior elder
    3. Catharina (1603–1638), ⚭ 1620 with Magnus Hornmann (1596–1674), merchant and senior citizen
    4. Heinrich (* 1606), died young
    5. Elisabeth († 1649), ⚭ with Paul Janes, custodian administrator at the main church of Sankt Petri
    6. Anna († 1637), ⚭ 1632 with Nicolaus Jarre (1603–1678), lawyer and mayor
    7. Hinrich (1611–1686), lawyer and protonotary
    8. Albert (1613–1672), lawyer and heir to the family fideikommiss, ⚭ with Wolmar Rumpff († 1661)

literature

  • Friedrich Georg Buek : Genealogical and biographical notes on the mayors of Hamburg who died after the Reformation . Johann August Meißner, Hamburg 1840, OCLC 166067441 , p. 99-101 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 24, 2015]).
  • Friedrich Georg Buek: Jürgen Schrötteringk . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 74 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 24, 2015]).
  • Hermann Kellenbenz : Entrepreneurs in the Hamburg Portugal and Spain trade 1590–1625 . In: Ernst Hicke (Ed.): Publications of the Wirtschaftsgeschichtliche Forschungsstelle e. V. Band 10 . Verlag der Hamburgische Bücherei, Hamburg 1954, OCLC 4950252 , p. 134-135 .
  • Marianne Strutz-Ködel (ed.): German gender book . tape 142 . CA Starke, Limburg an der Lahn 1966, OCLC 634621315 , p. 63 (also Hamburg gender book. Edited by Hildegard von Marchtaler . Volume 11.).
  • Herwarth von Schade : On the harmony and welfare of this good city: 475 years of senior citizens' council in Hamburg . Convent, Hamburg 2003, OCLC 53903206 , p. 379 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Orphanage . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 451–454 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  2. ^ Nicolaus Adolf Westphalen : Haupt-Receß der Stadt Hamburg . In: History of the main basic laws of the Hamburg constitution . tape 1 . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1844, OCLC 162906981 , p. 158–187 ( digitized version on the website of the Hamburg State and University Library [accessed on February 25, 2015]).
  3. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Combing . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 433-435 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  4. Friedrich Georg Buek: The Hamburg upper elders, their civil activity and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 50–51 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  5. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Hans Schaffshausen . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 52–55 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  6. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Genealogical and biographical notes on the mayors of Hamburg who have died since the Reformation . Johann August Meißner, Hamburg 1840, OCLC 166067441 , p. 139–140 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  7. Friedrich Georg Buek: The Hamburg upper elders, their civil activity and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 54–55 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  8. ^ Johann Gustav Gallois : History of the City of Hamburg. With lots of illustrations and maps . W. Oncken, Hamburg 1867, OCLC 162985059 , p. 296–297 ( digitized from the pages of the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek [accessed on February 25, 2015]).
  9. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Johann vom Kampe . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 50–51 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  10. ^ Johann Martin Lappenberg , Hermann Gries : Jürgen Schrötteringk . In: Association for Hamburg history (ed.): The mild private foundations in Hamburg . Second revised and changed edition. W. Mauke's Sons, Hamburg 1870, OCLC 46242545 , p. 208–209 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  11. Hans Schröder : Moller (Johann II.) . In: Lexicon of Hamburg writers up to the present . tape 5 , no. 2661 . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1870, OCLC 165098719 ( facsimile on the pages of the Hamburg State and University Library [accessed on February 25, 2015]). Facsimile ( memento of the original from February 25, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / schroeder.sub.uni-hamburg.de
  12. Mayor Kellinghusen's Foundation (ed.): "Dat Slechtbok." Sex register of the Hamburg family Moller (vom Hirsch), written in 1541 by Joachim Moller , Rathmann. With addenda up to 1612, as well as documented enclosures. Introduced and explained by Dr. Otto Beneke . Hamburg 1876, p. 69 ( digitized on the pages of the University and State Library Düsseldorf [accessed on February 25, 2015]).
  13. Hermann Kellenbenz: Entrepreneurs in the Hamburg Portugal and Spain trade 1590-1625 . In: Ernst Hicke (Ed.): Publications of the Wirtschaftsgeschichtliche Forschungsstelle e. V. Band 10 . Verlag der Hamburgische Bücherei, Hamburg 1954, OCLC 4950252 , p. 140 .
  14. ^ Eduard Lorenz Lorenz-Meyer , Oscar Louis Tesdorpf : Hamburgische Wappen und Genealogien . Hamburg 1890, OCLC 899111492 , p. 192 ( digitized version on the pages of the University and State Library Düsseldorf [accessed on February 25, 2015]).
  15. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Diederich vom Holte . In: Genealogical and biographical notes on the mayors of Hamburg who have died since the Reformation . Johann August Meißner, Hamburg 1840, OCLC 166067441 , p. 60–61 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  16. Hermann Kellenbenz: Entrepreneurs in the Hamburg Portugal and Spain trade 1590-1625 . In: Ernst Hicke (Ed.): Publications of the Wirtschaftsgeschichtliche Forschungsstelle e. V. Band 10 . Verlag der Hamburgische Bücherei, Hamburg 1954, OCLC 4950252 , p. 123 .
  17. ^ Friedrich Georg Buek: Magnus Hornmann . In: The Hamburg Oberalts, their civil effectiveness and their families . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1857, OCLC 844917815 , p. 95–96 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  18. Jürgen Suhr: The gentlemen God's chest administrators of the Church of St. Petri . In: Description of the Sanct Petri Church in Hamburg and its tower. In addition to a chronological index of the laudable church college and the preachers, as well as four explanatory illustrations . Perthes-Besser & Mauke, Hamburg 1842, OCLC 247739381 , p. 179 ( digitized from Google Books [accessed February 25, 2015]).
  19. ^ Albert Schrötteringk in the catalog of the German National Library (accessed on February 18, 2015).