Johann Adlzreiter from Tettenweis

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Johann Adlzreiter from Tettenweis

Johann Adlzreiter von Tettenweis (born February 2, 1596 in Rosenheim , † May 11, 1662 in Munich ) was a Bavarian lawyer and politician .

Life

Adlzreiter was born in Rosenheim as the son of the nestling master Christoph Adlzreiter and his wife Martha, née Berger. After graduating from the Jesuit grammar school in Munich in 1615, he studied law at the University of Ingolstadt . 1617–1618 he worked as a clerk at the Pfaffenhofen Regional Court , as his parents could no longer finance his studies. Thereupon the Ingolstadt professor Kaspar Denich accepted him as a trainee in his house and thus gave him the opportunity to finish his studies. In 1622 he graduated with a thesis on the rights of the tax authorities, which he dedicated to Duke Wolfgang Wilhelm von Pfalz-Neuburg , who rewarded him with a letter of coat of arms . He then worked as a lawyer in Straubing until he was appointed to the court chamber council by Elector Maximilian I in 1625 . As a confidante of the elector, he became auditor in Munich that same year and in 1638 head of the secret archive; In 1639 he received a seat and vote in the secret council, in 1643 the title of a privy councilor. In 1649 he was appointed Vice Chancellor; In 1650 he was awarded the title Real Secret Chancellor, combined with the transfer of some feudal estates in Lower Bavaria . After one of them he called himself "von Tettenweis". According to the elector's will, he was appointed a member of the council in 1651, which held the guardianship and government until Crown Prince Ferdinand Maria came of age .

As an archivist, Adlzreiter created a new archive order that remained in effect until the end of the 18th century.

From 1625 Adlzreiter was married to Euphrosine Gebhardt, a daughter of the Straubing government councilor , Georg Gebhardt (also Gebhard), and had 14 children. A daughter Euphrosine married the court chancellor Johann Rudolf von Wämpl . Adlzreiter was buried in the Carmelite Church in Munich. In Rosenheim, Munich and Ingolstadt streets were named after him.

Fonts

  • Antimanifesto electoralis Bavarici (1641)
  • Assertio electoratus Bavarici versus Joan. Joach. a Rusdorf Vindicias Palatinas (1643)
  • The Annales bociae gentis "Yearbooks of the Baierischen People" (1662) were published under his name. As archivist, however, he only provided the source material. The actual author was the Jesuit Johannes Vervaux .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Max Leitschuh: The matriculations of the upper classes of the Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich , 4 vol., Munich 1970–1976; Vol. 1, p. 29.