Joachim Hübner (Councilor)

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Joachim Huebner , also Joachim Huebner or erroneously Ern Joachim Huebner (* 1565 in Berlin (Kölln) ; † June 29, 1614 ibid.), Was a Kurbrandenburg and Danish court counselor .

Life

Origin and family

Joachim Huebner was a son of Master Thomas Huebner, educator of Joachim Friedrich von Brandenburg (1546-1608), as well as his subsequent councilor and administrator of Magdeburg . His mother was the Berlin councilor's daughter Margarethe Götzke.

On his mother's side, he was more extensively related to the Frankfurt mayors Erasmus Roch († after 1549) and Christoph Pruckmann . The professor of theology in Frankfurt Bartholomäus Rademann († 1602) was his brother-in-law and the Brandenburg Chancellor Friedrich Pruckmann (1562-1630) was his uncle.

In 1596 he married Magdalene Matthias, daughter of the Chamber Council and Mayor of Berlin Thomas Matthias († 1576/1581). The marriage resulted in 13 children, six of whom died young.

Career

In 1598, Hübner was electoral councilor to Joachim Friedrich von Brandenburg. In 1599 he was the Brandenburg envoy to a Protestant congress in Frankfurt (Main). After the usual five years of service, he was re-engaged in 1603 and sent to Poland for Prussian affairs . In 1604 he was accepted into the newly established Secret Council College, which initially consisted of nine councils . He was dismissed in May 1605 after a rebellion with Chancellor Johann von Löben (1561-1636) for alleged misconduct in the diplomatic mission in Krakow . Hübner then entered the Danish service and became a privy councilor to King Christian IV. Immediately after he took office in 1608, Elector Johann Sigismund Brandenburg (1572–1619) recalled Hübner from Denmark and entrusted him with negotiations with Poland. The special merit of the transfer of the Prussian guardianship and enfeoffment, which was only achieved in 1611, is attributed to Hübner.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Adolf Stölzel : Brandenburg-Prussia's legal administration and constitution presented in the work of its sovereign princes and highest judicial officials. Volume 1, Berlin 1888, p. 7.
  2. Christian August Ludwig Klaproth, Immanuel Karl Wilhelm Cosmar: The royal Prussian and electoral Brandenburg real secret Council of State on its 200-year foundation day January 5, 1805 , Berlin 1805, p. 316, no. 8.