Johann Friedrich Hacker

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Johann Friedrich Hacker (born July 26, 1666 in Schlaggenwald , † November 15, 1697 in Platten ) was a Bohemian forest rider , forestry and mountain master .

Life

He came from Schlaggenwald and was the son of the local mining factor Caspar Hacker and his wife Catharina. Johann Friedrich Hacker was appointed as the successor to Paul Wenzel Seeling as the imperial forest rider in St. Joachimsthal , Platten and Gottesgab and, as a forest officer, was responsible for the supervision and maintenance of the imperial forests. At the same time he was the miner for the local mining office, which at that time was one of the most important in the Kingdom of Bohemia .

Since he was placed at his predecessor's side as an adjunct during the lifetime of his predecessor, the imperial chief mint master's office in Prague issued an ordinance on March 11, 1693: In view of Paul Wenzel Seeling's fifty years of service as a forest ranger and due to his old age, he should be designated Successor Johann Friedrich Hacker can only receive half an annual salary of 137 guilders for further service, but Seeling is granted the entire annual salary as a forest ranger and mountain master of 275 florins for life. Only after Seeling's death in the same year did Johann Friedrich Hacker receive full pay as a forest ranger and mountain master.

Hacker died at the age of 31 after a short period of service. His son Franz Carl Hacker was also a long-time miner and mine manager in Platten.

family

Johann Friedrich Hacker married Anna Margaretha Meyer, who also came from Schlaggenwald in 1693 in Platten. The three sons Franz Carl (1694–1753), Joseph Anton (* 1695) and Johann Leopold (* 1697) emerged from their marriage.

Individual evidence

  1. Max Donebauer: Description of the collection of Bohemian coins and medals of Max Donebauer . Рипол Классик, ISBN 978-5-87563-534-2 ( google.de [accessed January 30, 2017]).
  2. Chronological-systematic collection of the mining laws of the Austrian monarchy: From 1670 to 1716 . Sollinger, 1833 ( google.de [accessed June 14, 2017]).
  3. ^ Gregor Lindner: Memories from the history of the kk free mountain town Sankt Joachimsthal Ed .: St. Joachimsthal. Volume 2, 1913, p. 893.
  4. Stadtpfarrei St. Laurentius Platten (ed.): Death register, Volume 14