Joachim von Dale

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Joachim von Dale , also von Dalen (born September 7, 1651 in Lübeck , † February 2, 1726 there ) was a lawyer and councilor of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck.

Life

Dale came from the aristocratic family della Vallée according to their own statements . His grandfather Johannes von Dale , heir to Lillo, Chestele and Putte, was Royal Spanish Councilor in the Netherlands and left Antwerp in 1580 during the Eighty Years' War and moved to Northern Germany. His father, born in Hamburg, the merchant Joachim von Dale (1610–1669) became a member and senior man of the corporation of the Schonenfahrer in Lübeck . His nobility was recognized by Emperor Leopold I in 1667 .

Dale studied law at the Universities of Rostock and Leipzig from 1671 to 1675 . It was in 1676 at the University of Giessen to Dr. PhD in both rights . His Grand Tour took him to Italy, Vienna and Prague. This was followed by a six-month stay in Paris. Then he lived temporarily in England and Denmark. In 1695 he was elected to the city council in Lübeck. In 1701 he belonged together with the Lübeck Syndicus Johann Georg Gutzmer and the councilor Johann Westken to a commission which was supposed to forbid the Reformed parish , which was only tolerated in Lübeck, to preach in German; However, this initiative does not prevail. Disgruntled because of being overlooked twice in the last mayoral elections , he resigned from the Lübeck council in 1708 , was appointed Lübeck resident and envoy in the Electorate of Hanover and was given the title of Privy Councilor of Commerce .

Joachim von Dale's first marriage was Katharina Margaretha, daughter of the Lübeck mayor Bernhard Diedrich Brauer . For the wedding on March 14, 1681, Dietrich Buxtehude wrote the wedding cantata Schlagt, Künstler, die Pauken und Saiten ( BuxWZ 122), which is preserved in the Düben collection . The marriage produced a son and a daughter; the son later died in Leipzig. In his second marriage he married Agneta, geb. Bartels, daughter of Lübeck councilor Diedrich (von) Bartels (1633–1689). This marriage was childless. Dale had owned the Brandenbaum Estate since 1696 . His taking possession of the Brandenbaum estate was the subject of proceedings before the Reich Chamber of Commerce .

In 1725 he acquired a side chapel in the Katharinenkirche and had it remodeled in the late Baroque style into his burial chapel.

Fonts

  • with Friedrich Geiler: Disputatio juridica de legitimatione , Leipzig 1675 ( digitized version )
  • Dissertatio inauguralis juridica de subscriptionibus principum, ... 1676

literature

  • Glorious Life Runf, Which The ... Mr. Joachim von Dale, Hereditary Lord on Brandenbaum ... led in the world, And with a blissful ending. MDCCXXVI. decided on February 2nd , Thun, Lübeck 1726 ( digitized from SUB Göttingen )
  • Georg Wilhelm Dittmer : Genealogical and biographical news about Lückeck families from earlier times , Dittmer, 1859 ( digitized version )
  • Emil Ferdinand Fehling : Lübeckische Ratslinie , Lübeck 1925, No. 819 and note after No. 833

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Certified copy of the letter of nobility in the manuscript archive of the University and State Library of Bonn
  2. matriculated in April 1671, see entry in Rostock matriculation portal
  3. Johann Rudolph Becker : Circumstances history of the Kaiserl. and salvation. Roman Empire Freyen City of Lübeck, Volume II, Lübeck 1784, p. 137 (digitized version)
  4. ZVLGA 32-34 (1951), p. 62
  5. ^ Friedrich Bruns †: The Lübeck Council. Composition, addition and management, from the beginning to the 19th century. In: ZVLGA , Volume 32 (1951), pp. 1–69, p. 62 (Chapter 9: Conclusion of Council Membership )
  6. So Fehling. According to Dittmer (lit.) he was elector of Brandenburg Privy Councilor of Commerce.
  7. Kerala Snyder : Dieterich Buxtehude. Life, work, performance practice. Bärenreiter, Kassel 2007 ISBN 978-3-7618-1836-7 , pp. 21 and 459; also as counterfactors with spiritual texts Rejoice, earth! You heaven sound! (BuxWZ 26), O happy hours, o wonderful day (BuxWZ 85)
  8. Fehling, Council Line, No. 814
  9. ^ Matthias Kordes, Historical Archive of the City of Cologne: Reich Chamber of Commerce Cologne: No. 601-1232 (GM) , Böhlau, 2000
  10. Johannes Baltzer , Friedrich Bruns , Hugo Rahtgens : The architectural and art monuments of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck. Volume IV: The Monasteries. The town's smaller churches. The churches and chapels in the outskirts. Thought and way crosses and the Passion of Christ. Nöhring, Lübeck 1928. (Facsimile reprint 2001, ISBN 3-89557-168-7 ), p. 70f