Johann Lothar von der Hauben

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Family coat of arms

Johann Lothar von der Hauben (* 1655 ; † January 25, 1723 ) was a German baron and canon and canon in Worms.

Origin and family

He came from the old Palatinate noble family von der Hauben and was the son of Hans Georg von der Hauben († 1691) and his wife Katharina Megenzer von Velldorf . Of his five brothers, Johann Ernst (1648–1677) and Johannes († 1700) also served as canons of Worms . The best- known brother was Lieutenant Field Marshal Johann Georg von der Hauben († 1717), one of the three highest-ranking Christian soldiers who died in 1717 off Belgrade . Further siblings are Johann Friedrich, who fell in the battle of Malplaquet in 1709 as the imperial colonel and commander of the regiment "Altbaden" , which was subordinate to Margrave Ludwig Georg Simpert of Baden-Baden , and Johann Carl († 1726) who was the last survivor to inherit the family property and with which the sex died out in the male line.

Chronogram hoods 1.jpg
Traditional epitaph inscription from the Thesaurus Palatinus , above it the chronogram with the hidden year 1723

Life

Johann Lothar von der Hauben entered the clergy. He became canon in Worms , as well as the capitular at the Wormser Martinsstift and at the Ritterstift Wimpfen . At the Martinsstift he also held the office of curator .

In 1715 Johann Lothar von der Hauben, as Worms cathedral capitular, advanced to the scholaster of the cathedral monastery. He held this position until his death.

The cleric died in 1723, presumably in Worms, and was buried in St. John's Church, which is part of the cathedral . This was torn down around 1807 and the epitaph that was formerly there was lost. His inscription, with a chronogram , is handed down in Volume 2 of the Thesaurus Palatinus , by Johann Franz Capellini von Wickenburg († 1752).

Regensburg or Freising Prince-Bishop Maximilian Prokop von Toerring-Jettenbach (1739–1789) was his great-nephew through his brother Johann Georg von der Hauben .

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ Epitaph inscription in the Thesaurus Palatinus , p. 80, front and back .