Johann Konrad Herold

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Johann Konrad Herold von Höflingen on Schönau; Engraving by Carl Gustav von Amling , Munich 1674

Johann Konrad Herold von Höflingen , from 1665 on Schönau ( Italian Giovanni Conrado Heroldt ; * 1612 in Ellingen im Nordgau ; † July 26, 1682 in Munich ) was a prorector of the law school of the University of Padua , curb-Bavarian clergyman and prince educator in Munich as well as titular provost of St. Peter am Madron Monastery near Flintsbach am Inn .

Life

Parental home at Weißenburger Straße 17 in Ellingen

Johann Konrad Herold came from a low-nobility family that had been raised to imperial nobility by Emperor Rudolph II (r. 1576–1612) . He was a son of the syndic of the Deutschordensballei Franconian lawyer Johann Jakob Herold (* around 1570/75; † 1632) and his wife Anna Maria Vöst. Johann Jakob Herold came from the Austrian town of Horb am Neckar ( Horb ad Nicrum ), had studied in Strasbourg, Dillingen , Cologne and Ingolstadt and was awarded a doctorate in both rights by Albert Hunger in 1593 and a doctorate in both rights by Obertus Giphanius in 1594 . He took part in the Regensburg Diets in 1598, 1603, 1607 and 1613 as a councilor for the Bishop of Eichstätt and for the Teutonic Order . Johann Jakob Herold owned a city palace in Ellingen, the later Palais Landauer (today: Hotel Römischer Kaiser ), in which Johann Konrad Herold was probably born.

Study and Grand Tour

Johann Konrad Herold attended the Jesuit high school in Ingolstadt since 1620 . In May 1622 he worked as an academy student ( LL. & Phys. Stud. ) In a drama performance of the sodality of the “most blessed virgin” on the occasion of the canonization of Ignatius von Loyola and Franz Xavier . In 1625 Herold created an album Amicorum . As stations herald academic training and his Grand Tour therein Padua , Pavia , Bourges , Paris , Amsterdam , Dresden , London , Bologna and Rome mentioned. The album contained about 400 entries, especially from aristocrats, it was owned by Prince Franz Joseph von Auersperg (František Josef z Auerspergu) (1856–1938) in Žleby Castle around 1890 .

Johann Konrad Herold studied in 1627 at the University of Bourges , where he is in the pedigree of Johann Scheib, the preceptor (1659 †), earned the Count Leopold Friedrich von Hohenzollern-Hechingen. In 1629, Jean Conrad Heroldt entered the register of Yves Dugué (* around 1601; † 1661) in Bourges. He turned to the study of law.

Vice-Rector and Legal Counsel in Padua

Official costume of the Rector (purple) and Vice-Rector-Syndic (black) of the University of Padua, 1654

In the second half of the 1630s Iohannes Conradus Heroldt ad Norgoviam nob [ilis] Germanus Francus belonged to the University of Padua ( Universitas Juristarum Gymnasii Patavini ) and was there twice consiliarius (syndic) of the German nation. From 1636 to 1639 he was elected prorector of the university three times. At that time Padua was under the rule of the Republic of Venice . Under Herold's prorectorate, the university's statutes were expanded to include a fifth book in 1636, written by the Doge Francesco Erizzo and the Paduan Podestàs (mayors appointed by Venice as rectors) Paolo Caotorta (1586–1649) and Zuanne Pisani (1580–1662) and Captains (Supreme Councilors) Giacomo (Jacopo) Soranzo and Girolamo Mocenigo (1581–1658) respectively . The teaching staff, students and staff of the study were granted the privilege of exemption from duties and taxes. The Senate of Venice initiated a reorganization of the two universities of Padua, in which the office of the previous rectors and vice-rectors was given up in favor of the Syndiki, who were to carry the title “Vice-Rector” in the future. On the occasion of the restoration of the university - the Archi-Lyceum - Joannes (Giovanni) Gritti gave a solemn speech in 1638 in the Basilica of Saint Anthony in the presence of Syndicus and Vice-Rector Io. Conrado Heroldt nobile Germano Franco and Podestà Giovanni Battista (Giambattista) Grimani († 1648). On the instigation of Ioannes Gritti, Michael Hoffmann ( Michael Offeman Silesius ) and Alexandro Rinaldi, who were assessors of the university, inscription panels in honor of Johann Konrad Herold were attached to the university building in 1636, 1637 and 1638 .

In 1637 Giovanni Conrado Heroldt entered his coat of arms in Adam Carl von Lípa 's register . In 1639 he wrote a manuscript about the German-Franconian nobility, which also dealt with the history of his family.

In Padua he married Lucretia Camilla Dulcia (1620–1645), who, according to him, belonged to the noble family Dulce ( ex illustri Dulciorum Venetorum Prosapia ) originally from Venice . She is related to a cardinal ( Duraviorum Cardinalis ... neptis ) and a Doge of Genoa . Lucretia Camilla Dulcia raised her sons bilingually. Herold's family stayed in Venice in 1643. There the youngest son Joannes Jacopo Valentino died in infancy; he was buried in the nave of the Church of San Giovanni .

Ship accident near Regensburg

Donaustauf with Danube bridge, engraving by Matthäus Merian , 1644

On July 21, 1645, Herold was on a boat trip on the Danube to the imperial court in Vienna with his family and his wife's father . Her vehicle crashed on the wooden bridge of Donaustauf , and Herold's 24-year-old wife Lucretia Camilla and his 5-year-old son Joannes Francisco Antonio drowned, who were unable to free themselves from the ship's hut. Johann Konrad Herold, who was saved, had his wife and son buried in the Niedermünster Church in Regensburg and, in 1646, donated a slate with gold inscription as a souvenir, which was placed in the cloister of Regensburg Cathedral .

Spiritual councilor and prince educator in Munich

Herold entered the clergy as a widower. He celebrated his wife's annual memory as a priest. He was given the papal title of Apostolic Protonotary . In December 1646, during a stay in Wasserburg, Johann Conrad Herold was employed as a clergyman to Elector Maximilian I of Bavaria and was an instructor (private tutor) to Prince Elector Ferdinand Maria of Bavaria , to whom he gave language lessons and lessons in legal history . The other two prince educators were the court master Count Bonaventura Fugger (1619–1693) to Mickhausen and Kirchheim and Father Johannes Vervaux SJ , the prince's confessor.

From 1649 until his resignation in 1653, Herold was canon of the Collegiate Foundation of Our Lady in Munich, from 1651 to 1678 owner of the Pütrich benefit at the St. Elisabeth Church at the Herzogspital . In 1655, Herold dedicated an interpretation in Italian to the Elector Ferdinand Maria of the responsory (poem of praise) from the Officium rhythmicum S. Antonii , which the Franciscan Caesarius of Speyer had written in 1233 two years after the death of Antonius of Padua . During his imperial vicariate after the death of Emperor Ferdinand III. Elector Ferdinand Maria confirmed the imperial nobility for Johann Conrad and his nephew Augustin Oswald Herold von Höflingen on June 19, 1658 with a nobility recognition diploma. In 1660 the electoral valet Leonhard Holzhauser and his wife Katharina Maria prescribed Johann Konrad Heroldt von Höfling , Bavarian councilor, papal protonotary and instructor of Prince Maximilian Philipp Hieronymus von Bayern , for a loan of 500 guilders an annual interest of 25 guilders from their house in the Vorderen Schwabinger Gasse (today Residenzstrasse ). 1667 officiated Herold except as kurbayerischer Council as Council of the Duke Maximilian Philipp Hieronymus of Bavaria, in 1650 by his father, Elector Maximilian I with the Landgraviate Leuchtenberg had been invested.

Enfeoffment with Schönau

After the death of Hans Ludwig von Pertolzhofen († 1665), the clergyman and papal protonotary Johann Konrad Herold was enfeoffed with the Schönau estate . 1667 the Council was Johann Conrad Herald of Höfflingen to Schönaw entitled Begierer, or The Soul treasure in Ingolstadt a copy of the original as Espill de la vida religiosa written in Catalan allegorical novel by Miquel Comalada OSH dedicated. The work was translated from the French version by the Mainz diocesan priest Justus Blanckwalt († 1600) in 1559 and has already been reprinted several times in German. In 1671, Herold corresponded with the court master in the Palatinate-Neuburg Palace Benrath Maria Susanna von Thurn († 1683) zu Alten- und Neubeuert , widow of the Land Marshal of the Duchy of Neuburg Baron Wolfgang Adrian von Spiering (1620–1661) zu Fronberg, because of the funeral ceremonies (burial ceremonies ) for Matthias Rudolf Manderus von Neuhausen, canon of the St. Moritz collegiate foundation in Augsburg . The clergyman Manderus was the court master of the district judge Wolfgang Adrian von Spiering in Fronberg Castle and Burglengenfeld .

Provost of Sankt Peter am Madron

High altar in Sankt Peter am Madron, 1676

On December 5, 1674, Johann Konrad Herold was presented by Elector Ferdinand Maria of Bavaria to the provost office of the St. Peter am Madron monastery. In 1676 he donated the baroque high altar designed by the sculptor Thomas Eder († 1689) and the painter Johann Gabriel Perger from Kufstein . Its holy figures represent the patrons of the seven pilgrimage churches in Rome . Johann Konrad Herold was probably also the client of the Antonius bust from 1682 (originally half-length for the Franciscan church St. Jakob ), which is now in the monastery church St. Anna im Lehel in Munich.

Johann Konrad Herold made his will on January 12, 1682, died at the age of 70 on July 26 and was buried on July 27, 1682.

family

Johann Konrad Herold married Lucretia Camilla Dulcia (born August 30, 1620, † July 21, 1645) from Padua around 1639. Her two sons were:

  1. Joannes (Giovanni) Francisco Antonio (born November 9, 1639 - † July 21, 1645 in Donaustauf),
  2. Joannes (Giovanni) Jacopo Valentino (born February 14, 1643 - † September 12, 1643 in Venice).

Johann Konrad Herold's brothers were Johann Leonhard Herold (* around 1595, † around 1669) - in the Veltlin War in 1624, lieutenant captain under General Gottfried Heinrich zu Pappenheim , until the handover to the Swedish general Gustaf Horn in December 1631 and again from autumn 1634 captain and bailiff of the Grand Master at the Neuhaus fortress , 1632 witness master of the Teutonic Order on the Mainau, since 1657 councilor, chamber secretary and rentmaster of the Teutonic Order - and Johann Gottfried Heroldt (* around 1613). A brother, the father of nephew Augustin Oswald Herold († after 1707) von Höflingen, died in 1658. He is probably Johann Jakob Herold the Elder. J. († 1647). He or another of the brothers married Apollonia Murer, daughter of Fugger 's Kastner from the county of Kirchberg Ludwig Murrer († 1622/26), she was the widow of Christoph III. Rosenberger († around 1616 (?)) Zu Unterweiler, citizen of Augsburg, and after his death had acquired the estate Irmelbronn called Unterweiler (today part of Ulm ) in the county of Kirchberg for sole ownership. Apollonia Murer was the mother of Junker Johann Jakob III. Herold († after 1694) from Höflingen to Schönau zu Unterweiler ( Weiller ), who sold Unterweiler in 1693 to the collegiate monastery St. Michael zu den Wengen in Ulm. Another nephew or great-nephew, Albert Ignatius Herold (* around 1659) von Höflingen, matriculated in Dillingen in 1669.

Johann Konrad Herold's sister Maria Elisabeth Herold (1599–1657) was abbess of the Cistercian nuns - Oberschönenfeld monastery from 1633 until her death .

Johann Konrad Herold left the property of Schönau in 1672 to his nephew Augustin Oswald Herold von Höflingen zu Schönau, who from August 5, 1658 to November 29, 1666 (resignation) was a Munich canon and “Gubernator” (educator) of Prince Elector Max Emanuel II of Bavaria was.

Entry in the register of Johann Konrad Herold with coat of arms in Padua, 1637

coat of arms

Blazon : shield split in red and blue, above a silver bar, covered by 3 crossed golden heraldic staffs.

Motto

“Nihil homine dignius quam de omnibus bene mereri - Nothing honors people more than doing well deserved for everyone”.

Web links

swell

  • Johann Konrad Herold (ed.): Additamentum seu statutorum universitatis juristarum liber quintus nuper adjunctus , sub prorectoratu Joan. Conrad. Heroldt. Padua 1637
  • Johann Konrad Herold, Joannes Gritti (Ed.): Instituta et privilegia ab excellentissimo Senatu Veneto almae Universitati D. D. iuristarum Patavini Archigymnasii concessa in libris quinque enucleata , quorum ultimus postremo adiunctus immunitatum fere omnium restitutionem continet. Syndico ac Prorectore Ioanne Conrado Heroldt ad Norgoviam nob. Germano-Franco. 5th edition Joannes Battista Pasquati, Padua 1638
    • Johann Raimund von Lamberg (Ed.): Instituta et priuilegia from excell. mo Senatu Veneto, Almae Vniuersitati DD Iuristarum Patauini Archigijmnasij concessa in libros quinque digesta , quorum ultimus postremo adiunctus immunitatum fere omnium restitutionem continet. Syndico et ProRectore Ioanne Raimundo A Lamberg L.B. 6th edition Joannes Battista Pasquati, Padua 1645; see. esp. p. 3 ( Google Books ) and Liber qvintus , pp. 90–115, esp. pp. 90–107 ( Google Books )
  • Joannes Gritti: Oratio pro solemni restauratione Patauini Archilycei , Habita in basilica cathedrali a Ioanne Gritti patricio Cretense , Almae Vniuersitatis iuristarum decreto anno epochae Christianae 1638, Syndico ac prorectore illustrissimo domino Io. Conrado Heroldt nobile Germano Franco, Ad illustriss. et excellentiss. d. Ioan. Baptistam Grimanum Patauii praefectum. Joannes Battista Pasquati, Cristoforo Zanetti, Padua 1638
  • Siste Viator obstupesce (= stop, wanderer, remember! ) And tombstone no. 9 on earth . In: Johann Carl Paricius: The very latest and proven news from that of salvation. Rom. Reichs Freyen city of Regensburg . Seiffart, Regensburg 1753, pp. 215–217 and 221 ( Google Books )

Works

  • (Handwriting) Giovanni Conrado Herold: De nobilibus Germanis Francis (or similar), Padua 1639
  • (Handwriting) Johann Konrad Herold: Description of the laidig ship undergang on the Bruggen zue Thonnenstauff on July 21st, 1645. (In-depth report by Joh. Conr. Heroldt (formerly Vicerector in Padua ...) about the accident in which his wife Lucretia Camilla and his son Johann Francis found their end ... Epitaphia for the two unfortunate ones and another son), around 1645/46 ; University Library Göttingen (Histor. 114, sheets 222–244)
  • Giovanni Conrado Herold: Responsorio Del Gloriosissimo S. Antonio Di Padoa . Interpretato. Con Diuotissimi Affetti, & Orationi per li sette giorni della settimana, e l'Officio dalla sua Santa Vita nuouamente raccolto. Luca Straub, Munich 1655 ( digital copy from the Bavarian State Library, Munich)

literature

  • Giacomo Filippo Tomasini: Gymnasivm Patavinvm Iacobi Philippi Tomasini episcopi Æmoniensis libris 5. comprehensum… De Gymnasii origine… De Professoribus . Nicolaus Schiratti, Utini 1654, pp. 454, 456f, 468, 471 and 486 ( digitized in the Internet Archive )
  • Johann Carl Paricius: The very latest and proven news of that of salvation. Rom. Reichs Freyen city of Regensburg . Seiffart, Regensburg 1753, pp. 215–217 and 221 ( Google Books )
  • Sebastian Dachauer : History of the church at Petersberge and the castles Falkenstein, Kirnstein and Auerburg . In: Upper Bavarian Archive for Fatherland History 2 (1840), pp. 356–401, esp. P. 400
  • Luigi-Ignazio Grotto dell'Ero (arr.): Della Universita di Padova cenni ed iscrizioni . Crescini, Padua 1841, p. 14f ( Google Books )
  • Biagio Brugi: Giovanni Conrado Heroldt. Sindaco e prorettore della Università dei Giuristi in Padova (1636–1639) . In: Atti e memorie della Reale Accademia di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti in Padova 8 (1891/92), 217–222 ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Gustav C. Knod: News. Humanism. Universities . In: Zeitschrift für Kirchengeschichte 16 (1896), pp. 681–707, especially p. 702
  • from Höpflingen and Bergendorf . In: Genealogical Pocket Book of Austria's Noble Houses 2 (1906/07), pp. 161–165, esp. P. 162 ( digitized in the Internet Archive)
  • Michael Strich : The Kurhaus Bavaria in the age of Ludwig XIV. And the European powers , vol. I. Duke Maximilian Philipp of Bavaria (1638–1705) . (Series of publications on Bavarian national history 13). Publishing house of the commission, Munich 1933
  • Lucia Rossetti ( arrangement ): Gli stemmi dello studio di Padova . Lint, Triest 1983, pp. 12, 78, 81, 296 and 322
  • Peter Pfister : The Collegiate Foundation for Our Lady in Munich (1495–1803) . In: Georg Schwaiger, Hans Ramisch (eds.): Monachium sacrum: Festschrift for the 500th anniversary of the Metropolitan Church to Our Lady in Munich , Vol. I. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Berlin 1994, pp. 291–473, esp 310, 403-405 and 449f

Remarks

  1. = Legum et Physicae Studiosus in the "philosophical course" according to the study regulations Ratio atque Institutio Studiorum Societatis Jesu for the Jesuit schools .
  2. ^ Later royal notary in the Duchy of Berry .
  3. ^ Later captain general of Venice in the war for Crete .
  4. Perhaps from the Breslau patrician family Hoffmann von Hoffmannswaldau .
  5. From Tarvisio .
  6. See Lodovico Dolce (1508–1568) or the diplomat Agostino Dolce (1561–1635) from Venice. Gian Vincenzo Dolce († 1554) was a canon in Padua since 1516.
  7. This is perhaps Francesco Stefano (François-Etienne; Etienne II; Franciscus Stephanus) Dulci from Orvieto ( d'Urbietum ), 1609–1624 Archbishop of Avignon .
  8. Violation of the heraldic color rule .
  9. Baron Johann Raimund II von Lamberg-Greifenfels (* 1625; † around 1697) to Orteneck and Ottenstein, Prince Archbishop of Salzburg Chamberlain and Councilor, raised to the rank of imperial count in 1667, 1663–1697 caretaker in Laufen an der Salzach , father of Auxiliary Bishop Johann Raimund from Lamberg .
  10. ^ Giacomo Filippo Tomasini (1595–1655), Canon Regular from Padua, Bishop of Cittanova d'Istria .
  11. Wrongly claims a relationship to "Johann Konrad auf Schönau, Councilor of Duke Maximilian Philipp of Bavaria and Protonotarius Apostolicus".
  12. Director of the Archivio Antico dell'Università di Padova .

Individual evidence

  1. a b c Cf. Maximilian Gritzner (edit.): Status surveys and acts of grace of German sovereigns during the last three centuries , Bd. IC A. Starke, Görlitz 1880, p. 31.
  2. a b cf. Hermann Seis: Hexenjagd in Ellingen , Vol. II. (Ellinger booklets 17). Stadtarchiv, Ellingen 2002, pp. 7–10; Hermann Seis: Johann Jacob Heroldt: "I, Johann Jacob Heroldt, the right doctor ...", Ballleirat in Ellingen; his biography, his duties and his family . (Ellinger issues 24). City archive, Ellingen 2003.
  3. a b c Cf. Helmut Wolff: History of the Ingolstadt Faculty of Law 1472-1625 . (Ludovico Maximilianea 5). Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1973, pp. 193, 321 and 344.
  4. ^ Enrolled in Dillingen on September 25, 1584 as "Joannes Jacobus Heroldus Sueuus".
  5. Enrolled in Cologne on April 6, 1590 as Joh. Jac. Herolt Horbensis ad Nicrum ; Arnold Schatz, Johann Michael Cronenburger, Johann Jacob Heroldt: Ex titulo digest. quae in fraudem creditorum facta sunt, ut restituantur, conclusiones aliquot , quas… praesidibus… Arnoldo Schatz… Ioanne Michaele Cronenburgero… proponit ac tuebitur Ioannes Iacobus Heroldt… anno… MDLXXXX. o. O. [Johann Gymnich III. or Gottfried von Kempen, Cologne 1590/91].
  6. Enrolled in Ingolstadt in 1620 under the “nobiles” as “Ioan. Conrad. Herald, Ellingan. "
  7. Summary content of the Comedy vnnd Triumph, from the Hayligen, Ignatio de Loyola… and Francisco Xaverio… from the laudable Academic Congregation Beatiss. Virginis Annunciatae at Ingolstatt . Gregor Hänlein, Ingolstadt 1622, pp. 39 and 42 ( Google Books ).
  8. Cf. on the following Biagio Brugi: Giovanni Conrado Heroldt. Sindaco e prorettore della Università dei Giuristi in Padova (1636–1639) . In: Atti e memorie della Reale Accademia di Scienze, Lettere ed Arti in Padova 8 (1891/92), 217–222, esp. P. 221.
  9. Cf. Winfried Dotzauer: Germans in Western European university and commercial cities . In: Johannes Bärmann, Karl-Georg Faber, Alois Gerlich (eds.): Festschrift Ludwig Petry , Vol. II. (Historical regional studies 5.2). Steiner, Wiesbaden 1969, pp. 89–159, especially p. 143.
  10. ^ Entry from August 21, 1627; Württembergische Landesbibliothek Stuttgart (Cod. Don. G II 9, sheet 116) ( digitized version of the Württembergische Landesbibliothek Stuttgart).
  11. ^ Entry from November 2, 1529; Archives Départementales du Cher, Bourges (Ms. 422, sheet 77).
  12. Giacomo Filippo Tomasini: Gymnasivm Patavinvm Jacobi Philippi Tomasini episcopi Æmoniensis libris 5. comprehensum . Nicolaus Schiratti, Utini 1654, p. 57.
  13. a b Cf. Christoph Meiners: History of the origin and development of the high schools of our continent , Vol. III. Röwer, Göttingen 1804, pp. 130f ( Google Books ).
  14. ^ On the terms of office of Andrea Gloria: I podestà e capitani di Padova dal 6. Giugno 1509 al 28 April 1797 . Giovanni Battista Randi, Padua 1861, p. 28 ( Google Books ).
  15. ^ Letters and files from Venice and Padua, 1636–1639. In: Freiherr Johann Raimund von Lamberg (ed.): Instituta et priuilegia from excell. mo Senatu Veneto, Almae Vniuersitati DD Iuristarum Patauini Archigijmnasij 6th edition Joannes Battista Pasquati, Padua 1645, pp. 90-107.
  16. From Rethymno on Crete, doctorate in 1640; see. Lucia Rossetti ( arrangement ): Gli stemmi dello studio di Padova . Lint, Triest 1983, p. 326.
  17. From Silesia; Entry in the register for Hieronymus Felbaum on July 29, 1643 in Padua; Württembergische Landesbibliothek Stuttgart (Frommann Collection, Cod. Hist. 2 ° 889-16, sheet 59).
  18. Cf. Giacomo Filippo Tomasini: Gymnasivm Patavinvm Iacobi Philippi Tomasini episcopi Æmoniensis libris 5. comprehensum… De Gymnasii Patavina Commentaria . Nicolaus Schiratti, Utini 1654, pp. 468, 486 and 488, also Index ( Hofman ).
  19. ^ Entry from June 10, 1637; Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel (314 extrav. 8 °, sheet 62) ( digitized from the Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel).
  20. a b cf. Don E. Herrold: The Herrolds . Tulsa, Oklahoma 1992 p. 30. The manuscript that is to be kept in the University of Padua cannot be verified by the library.
  21. a b c d Cf. Johann Carl Paricius: The very latest and best news from that of salvation. Rom. Reichs Freyen city of Regensburg . Seiffart, Regensburg 1753, pp. 215-217 and 221; all subsequent reports are dependent on this representation.
  22. Cf. Felix Mader (arrangement): City of Regensburg . (The art monuments of Bavaria 2,22,1). Oldenbourg, Munich 1933, pp. 195f; Walther Zeitler: Regensburg shipping . Mittelbayerische Druckerei- und Verlags-Gesellschaft, Regensburg 1985, p. 48.
  23. Michael Strich : The Kurhaus Bavaria in the age of Ludwig XIV. And the European powers , vol. I. (series of publications on Bavarian regional history 13). Publishing house of the commission, Munich 1933, p. 15.
  24. See Ernest Geiss: History of the parish of St. Peter in Munich . Königlicher Central-Schulbücher-Verlag, Munich 1867, p. 398.
  25. Documents of October 2, 1660, April 28, 1661 and June 1, 1683; Bavarian Main State Archives Munich (KUFrauenchiemsee, documents no. 1443 and 1446–1468).
  26. a b Desire, or The Soul's Treasure . In this every Christian who is taught in a lovely and very funny conversation and who is misled to know God, to fear, and to love out of his heart, and to achieve eternal bliss by such divine means. Johann Ostermayr, Ingolstadt 1667, esp. P. 22 ( digitized version of the Eichstätt University Library); 2nd edition Johann Ostermayr, Ingolstadt 1680.
  27. See Wilhelm Nutzinger: Neunburg Vorm Wald . (Historical Atlas of Bavaria I / 52), Commission for Bavarian State History, Munich 1982, p. 202.
  28. Miquel Comalada: Espill de la vida religiosa . Hans Rosenbach, Barcelona 1515 ( Google Books ); 2nd edition Jorge Costilla, València 1529.
  29. ^ A representative of the Devotio moderna in the 15th and 16th centuries Century; see. Llorenç Alcina: El "Spill de la Vida religiosa" de Miguel Comalada OSH In: Studia monastica 3 (1961), pp. 377-382.
  30. From Antwerp; see. Michael Embach: The writings of Hildegard von Bingen . (Erudiri Sapientia 4). Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 2003, pp. 193f.
  31. Le Thresor de dévotion . Lyon, Claude Nourry dit Le Prince undated (around 1551); Guillaume Chaudière, Paris 1578 ( Google Books ).
  32. ^ Sebald Mayer, Dillingen 1559 ( digitized version of the Bavarian State Library in Munich); Johann Mayer, Dillingen 1583 (under the title Desiderius. Dialogus vere pius, et cumprimis iucundus, de expedita ad Dei Amorem via . Ex Hispanico in… Germanicum… sermonem conuersus); Egidius Viver, Bruchsal 1602 (edited by Valentin Pistorius; Google Books ); Burchard Kluck, Cologne 1610; Butgenius, Cologne 1619.
  33. See Wolfgang Kaps: Education and Upbringing of the Children of the Neuburg Count Palatine Philipp Wilhelm . Neuburg an der Donau 2009, esp.p. 2f ( PDF ; 539 KB).
  34. ^ Letters from Joan Conrad Heroldt, 1671. In: Monika Gussone, Eberhard Lohmann, Peter K. Weber (arr.): The archive of the barons v. Spiering in the Wegberg City Archives. Inventory . (Inventories of non-governmental archives 41). Rheinisches Archiv- und Museumsamt-Archivberatungsstelle, Pulheim-Brauweiler 2002, No. 1666, p. 221, and No. 1797, p. 236.
  35. Cf. Otto Rieder : The Palatinate-New Burgess escort to Regensburg and to the convent under testing . In: Negotiations of the Historisches Verein für Oberpfalz and Regensburg 59 (1907), pp. 1–288, esp. Pp. 38 and 274; Ludwig Weingärtner: The fratricide of Freiherr von Spiering on Fronberg in the office building in Burglengenfeld . In: Annual volume on history and culture in the district of Schwandorf 18/19 (2007/2008), pp. 158–166 ( online ; accessed on August 1, 2018).
  36. See Sebastian Dachauer: History of the church on the Petersberge and the castles Falkenstein, Kirnstein and Auerburg . In: Upper Bavarian Archive for Fatherland History 2 (1840), pp. 356–401, esp. P. 400.
  37. a b c Cf. Peter Pfister: The collegiate foundation for Our Lady in Munich (1495–1803) . In: Georg Schwaiger, Hans Ramisch (eds.): Monachium sacrum: Festschrift for the 500th anniversary of the Metropolitan Church to Our Lady in Munich , Vol. I. Deutscher Kunstverlag, Berlin 1994, pp. 291–473, esp 403f.
  38. Receipts from the carpenter (Kistler) Georg Millner and Hanns Schäffler from Audorf dated November 12, 1676 a. a .; District Archives Munich (Kl. Lit. Petersberg, 582/12); Anton Bauer: The master of the high altar on the Petersberg near Brannenburg . In: Das Münster 6 (1953), p. 102. Millner also created the shrine altar of the Agidius Church in Degerndorf am Inn in 1659 .
  39. See Peter Volk: Ignaz Günther. Perfection of the Rococo . Pustet, Regensburg 1991, p. 64, after an engraving of the bust of the Prague copper engraver Johann Franz Wussin (1626–1691) with Herold's coat of arms.
  40. Documents dated June 1, 1683 (after the death of the testator); Bavarian Main State Archives Munich (KUFrauenchiemsee, documents no. 1467 and 1468).
  41. Cf. Otto Titan von Hefner : Studbook of the blooming and dead nobility in Germany , Bd. II. Georg Joseph Manz, Regensburg 1863, p. 145; here wrongly "1683" ( Google Books )
  42. a b c Calculated from the Regensburg epitaph and tombstone.
  43. Enrolled in Dillingen on 6./7. July 1608 as “Joan. Leonardus Heroldt ex Mergenthaim ”, 1615 in Ingolstadt as“ Ioan. Leonard. Herold, Ellingens. ".
  44. Hermann Seis: Says the devil, says your daughter too. The witch hunts in the Kommende Ellingen of the Teutonic Order from 1575 to 1630 . Seis, Ellingen 2004, p. 32.
  45. ^ Document dated June 11, 1650; Financial, fruit, wine and natural accounts, 1652/53; State Archives Ludwigsburg (B 232 German Order: Coming Mergentheim II, U 305; Bills II, Neuhaus, Amt, Bills, Bd. 1470).
  46. ^ Carl H. Roth von Schreckenstein: The island of Mainau . Braun, Karlsruhe 1873, p. 143.
  47. Revers Johann Leonhard Herolds as advice, 1657; Annual money and wine bills, 1658–1669; State Archives Ludwigsburg (B 273 I: German Order, Mergentheim Government: Servants I, Bü 347; B 231 German Order: Bills I, St. George's Brotherhood, Vol. 523-533).
  48. ^ Enrolled as a 12 year old in Dillingen in August 1625 as "Nob. … Ellinganus… fil. ... Joan. Jacobi consiliarii commendatoris “; 1629 as “Ioan. Godefrid. Herolt, Elling. ”In Ingolstadt.
  49. See documents of September 30, 1621, October 27, 1622 and August 24, 1626; Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Department State Archive Ludwigsburg (inventory B 532 I Wiblingen, Benedictine monastery, Bü 178–180).
  50. Document dated December 31, 1616; Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Department State Archive Ludwigsburg (inventory B 532 I Wiblingen, Benedictine monastery, Bü 177; cf. 176).
  51. See documents of division about Unterweiler from 1634 and 1647, files 1604–1688, 1712–1718; Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Department State Archive Ludwigsburg (holdings B 532 I Wiblingen, Benedictine monastery, Bü 181 and 329).
  52. Documents and files 1655–1665, 1671–1675, 1680, 1685, 1693, 1694; Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Department State Archives Ludwigsburg (holdings B 532 I Wiblingen, Benedictine monastery, Bü 182–183, 197, 200, 798–800).
  53. Documents and files 1693, 1694–1702; Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Department State Archive Ludwigsburg (holdings B 532 I Wiblingen, Benedictine monastery, Bü 185–188, 325–326, 801, 803).
  54. Cf. Werner Schiedermair (Ed.): Oberschönenfeld Monastery - the chronicle of Elisabeth Herold . Josef Fink, Lindenberg 2011.
  55. Cf. Catalogus Librorum Impressorum Bibliothecae Bodleianae in Academia Oxoniensi , Vol. III. Typographeum Academicum, Oxford 1843, p. 57.
  56. Bonn University and State Library (Sav 3440).
  57. ^ Wilhelm Meyer (edit.): Directory of the manuscripts in the Prussian state , Bd. I Hanover , Part 2 Göttingen , Tbd. 2. A. Bath, 1893, pp. 37f.