Johann Reichard Brömser from Rüdesheim

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Reichard Brömser of Rudesheim (* 1566 , † 20th March 1622 ) was an imperial and kurmainzerischer advice Vizedom in Mainz and upper office man in Koenigstein im Taunus .

On June 12, 1601, Johann Reichard Brömser von Rüdesheim was appointed senior bailiff of the Königstein office. The most important task of his four-year term of office was the beginning of the Counter Reformation in office. On August 6, 1603, the first Catholic mass since the Reformation was celebrated in the parish church of Königstein in the presence of the elector and his court . In 1604 he became Vice Cathedral in Mainz. From 1608 to 1618 he was Vice Cathedral of the Rheingau . On 25 May 1614 he was appointed Kurmainzer steward appointed and thus was at the head of the Privy Council, that the Government of the electorate. He retained this function until his death on March 20, 1622. He also represented the electoral state at the Reichstag and as a diplomat.

family

Johann Reichard Brömser von Rüdesheim came from the Rüdesheim noble family of Brömser and was the son of Heinrich Brömser (*. Approx. 1601, † 1668). He married Margarethe von Cronberg († 1609) in 1588. His son Henrich Brömser († November 25, 1668) became an imperial councilor, Mainz privy councilor, court judge and vice cathedral in Mainz. The middle of the three daughters, Anna Sidonia († August 4, 1619), married Hermann von Kronberg. Their first daughter Anna Maria (born October 1, 1609) married the Königstein Oberamtmann Johann Dietrich von Rosenbach in 1636 .

literature

  • Friedrich Stöhlker: The Kurmainzer Oberamtmen in Königstein (1581–1781); in: Heimatliche Geschichtsblätter, Königstein im Taunus, 1957, No. 4, pp. 40–42
  • Christian von Stramberg, Anton Joseph Weeidenbach: Memorable and useful Rhenish antiquarius: which depicts the most important and pleasant geographical, historical and political curiosities of the entire Rhine river, from its outflow into the sea to its origin, Volume 10, Part 2, 1861, p 474, online

Web links