Johann Philipp Heberer

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Johann Philipp Heberer (born June 7, 1625 in Schweinfurt ; † September 30, 1701 in Weißenburg in Bavaria ) was a jurist (JCtus) as well as a high prince from Eichstädter and highly respected councilor and then the oldest consultant and syndicus in the imperial city of Weißenburg .

Live and act

family

Heberer came from a family whose members have rendered services to the public good and various free and imperial cities of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation for more than a hundred years .

His great-great-grandfather was E (h) rhardt Heberer (approx. 1525–1581), who was married to Veronica Lösch. Erhard Heberer has worked in various functions as mayor and hospital cellar as well as in other functions in the city council of Schweinfurt since 1556 and is in 1581. Erhard Heberer is apparently related to the reformer Philipp Melanchthon . Johann Heberer from Bretten had married Katharina Schwarzerdt (1520-before 1578). She was the daughter of Georg Schwarzerdt (1501-around 1565), the brother of the reformer Philipp Melanchthon (Schwarzerdt). The Heberer couple were parents of the travel writer Michael Heberer

The father of Johann Philipp Heberer was Johann Elias Heberer (1589–1634) the son of the Syndicus, town clerk and historian of the city of Schweinfurt Johann Heberer (1568–1628) in Schweinfurt. This was the son of E (h) rhardt Heberer (approx. 1525–1581), who was married to Veronica Lösch. Johann Heberer was married to Margarethe Holdt (Heldt?), The daughter of Johann Holdt (Heldt?).

His father Johann Elias Heberer was married to Anna Barbara Höllerich (1602–1635), the daughter of the cloth shearer and councilor Johann Höllerich (1541–1614) and his wife Barbara Goebel.

One uncle was the notary (Not. Publ) Johann Heberer (1608–1675), who was the administrator of Bergrheinfeld near Schweinfurt at the time of his marriage in 1633 . He was a member of the council in Schweinfurt from 1673 to 1684.

Another uncle was Marcus Heberer , from 1628 town clerk and town councilor in Schweinfurt.

Another uncle was Johann Erhard Heberer (1604–1663), during the Thirty Years War Swedish administrator of the Mainburg office, trader, councilor and mayor in Schweinfurt.

Johann Philipp Heberer was married to Anna Helena Mechl. From the marriage come the Lic. Wolfgang Wilhelm Heberer († 1721), Royal Polish and Electoral Saxon and Hofgräflicher Pappenheimischer Rat, Syndicus, Consistorial President a. Fiefdom provost and imperial quartermaster of the Holy Roman Empire and Johann Wolfgang Heberer (1675–1730), consultant and syndicus in Weißenburg in Bavaria.

Life and meaning

Heberer studied from 1643 jurisprudence at the University of Altdorf and obtained his doctorate in 1652 with a dissertation on the process and property law to Dr. iur. utr. He dedicated his dissertation to the council consultant in Schweinfurt, Dr. Johann Höfel (1600–1683) and his aforementioned relatives, the town clerk, syndicus and lawyer Marcus Heberer , councilor Johann Erhard Heberer and the notary Johannes Heberer .

At first he was a high-princely Eichstädter and high-county cardboard-local highly respectable councilor. In 1655 he was appointed city syndicus in the free imperial city of Weißenburg in what is now Bavaria and held this office for almost 50 years until his death in 1701.

1704 his son Johann Wolfgang Heberer was appointed as his successor to the city syndic.

Dissertation and other works

  • Heberer, Johann Philipp, Disputatio Inauguralis De Novi Operis Nunciation, Altdorf 1652, full text digital [12]
  • Walther, Georg Christoph; Walther, Walpurga; Jungerman, Ludovicus; Felwinger, Joh. Paul; Heberer, Johann. Philipp; Facius, Joh. Philippus; Lützen, Mixturus Canthius of; Celadon; Nebucadnezzar, Pandalivcon; PUV; CGH; CSP; Cazazius, wedding poems of honor and joke to singularly arbitrary pleases To the Wohlehrenvesten / Großachtbarn and highly learned Mr. Georg Christoph Walthern Beyder right Doctorn and bey der Heyl. ReichsStatt Nürnberg Advocaten Alß Er himself married to the well-honored and virtuously gifted virgins Walpurg Rumplerin; Which happened on Aug 9, 1652nd year. Well-intentioned set up by his good patrons / friends and past Tischpurschen, Altdorff 1652, www.Gateway-Bayern.de, catalog, [13]

References and comments

  1. ^ Verein für Computergenealogie eV database, descendants of Johann Philipp HEBERER, accessed on March 10, 2015, digital [1]
  2. Quotation from Johann Nicolaus Sonnenmayer, Der im Tod entroste Consulent ..., (corpse inscription on Johann Wolfgang Heberer ), Weissenburg am Nordgau, 1730, Nuremberg City Library, signature Gen. H 53,2
  3. ^ Mohr, Otto, Council of the City of Schweinfurt from 1553 to 1802, accessed on August 24, 2019, [2]
  4. Andreas Mühlich, Chronik der Stadt Schweinfurt: compiled from various manuscripts, Volume 2, 1818, pp. 259, 271, 281 [3] probably eliminated by death
  5. Volker PressHeberer, Michael. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 8, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1969, ISBN 3-428-00189-3 , p. 170 ( digitized version ).
  6. Johann Werner Krauss, Antiquitates et Memorabilia Historiae Franconicae: Therein the particularity of the origins, furnishings and peculiarities of the city and Diaezes Königsberg, Sonnenfeld, Behringen and Schalkau (Google eBook), Hildburghausen 1755, p. 46 [4] Krauss interprets the relationship in one Name article about Marcus Antonius Heberer, the son of Marcus Heberer, that the Schweinfurt family Heberer are related to Philipp Melanchthon (* 1497 in Bretten ; † 1560 in Wittenberg) and Michael Heberer (* around 1560 in Bretten; † after 1623). Johann Heberer from Bretten and Erhard Heberer from Schweinfurt were probably brothers. More detailed evidence is currently not available.
  7. ^ Verein für Computergenealogie eV database, descendants of Johann Philipp HEBERER, accessed on March 10, 2015, digital [5]
  8. ^ Andreas Kraus, History of Franconia up to the end of the 18th century, Volume 1; Volume 3, Munich 1997, p. 1071, preview: [6]
  9. ^ Verein für Computergenealogie eV database, descendants of Johann Philipp HEBERER, accessed on March 22, 2015, digital [7]
  10. Otto Mohr, 2005/2007, The City Council of Schweinfurt 1553–1802, Councilors, digital: [8]
  11. ^ Mohr, Otto, City Council of Schweinfurt from 1553 to 1802, accessed on August 24, 2019, [9]
  12. ^ Verein für Computergenealogie eV database, descendants of Erhard HEBERER, accessed on March 10, 2015, digital [10]
  13. Jump up ↑ Johann Nicolaus Sonnenmayer, The Consulent, Confirmed in Death ... (Johann Wolfgang Heberer), Weissenburg am Nordgau, 1730, Nuremberg City Library, signature Gen. H 53.2
  14. Georg Voltz, Chronicle of the City of Weissenburg in Nordgau and the Wülzburg Monastery (Google eBook), Weissenburg 1835, p. 14 digital: [11]