Johann Trauterbuhl

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Johann Trauterbuhl , also Trauttenbuel, Trautenbull, Trautenbuhl , (born March 25, 1521 in Halberstadt , † November 2, 1585 in Halle (Saale) ) was a German legal scholar and politician.

Life

Johann Trauterbuhl was the son of the royal Brunswick council in Goslar and later in Halberstadt Ludwig Trauterbuhl. His father introduced him to law at an early age. Together with his brother Christoph, he moved to the University of Wittenberg in October 1534 to devote himself to the study of law. In 1542 he moved to the University of Leipzig . From there he went to Italy, where he continued his legal studies at the University of Padua , since 1545 at the University of Ferrara and in 1546 at the University of Bologna .

He returned to Ferrara, where he received his doctorate in law on October 3, 1547 . In 1548 he went back to Wittenberg and became professor of law there at the restored university . After he had also been rector of the university in the winter semester of 1550 , his brother received his doctorate in 1551 under his direction and he became a full professor of the law faculty. But he soon left Wittenberg again. In Muecheln it bought the local manor.

He can be found in 1554 as a ducal councilor and envoy from Lüneburg. In 1560 he became archbishop chancellor of Mainz, was also for some time in Langensalza and in 1563 chancellor of the archbishopric of Magdeburg in Halle (Saale) . He was in this position for over 30 years. He took part in the church visits and had been sent to the Reichstag in Augsburg to negotiate religious peace. In 1587 a wooden epitaph was erected for him in the St. Ulrich Church in Halle. It represents his family. On this epitaph one recognizes nine male and six female persons. You can read about his twelve descendants at Dreyhaupt's Genealogical Tables.

literature

  • Gustav C. Knod: German students in Bologna. (1289-1562). R. von Decker Verlag, 1899
  • Johann Christoph von Dreyhaupt : Genealogical tables, or, gender registers of both their noblest noble families, who were adorned with knight goods in the Saal-Creyse: as well as their noblest old and new, partly dead, noble, patrician and commoner families of Halle. Emanuel Schneider, Halle, 1750
  • Johann Christoph von Dreyhaupt: Pagus Neletizi et Nudzici, or detailed diplomatic-historical description of the former primacy and Ertz-Stifft, but now secularized by the Duchy of Magdeburg, which belongs to the Duchy of Magdeburg, and of all the cities, palaces, offices, Manors, aristocratic families, churches, monasteries, parishes and villages, especially the cities of Halle, Neumarckt, Glaucha, Wettin, Löbegün, Cönnern and Alsleben; From Actis publicis and credible ... news, collected diligently, reinforced with many unprinted documents, adorned with copperplate engravings and abstracts, and provided with the necessary registers. Emanuel Schneider, Halle, 1749/50, vol. 2, p. 740, item 622
  • Johann Gottlob Wilhelm Dunkel: Historically critical messages from deceased scholars and their writings. Cörnerische Buchhandlung, Köthen, 1757, vol. 3, p. 586, item 2692
  • Helmar Junghans: Directory of the rectors, vice-rectors, deans, professors and castle church preachers of Leucorea from the summer semester 1536 to the winter semester 1574/75. In: Irene Dingel, Günther Wartenberg : Georg Major (1502–1574) - A theologian of the Wittenberg Reformation. Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, Leipzig, 2005, ISBN 3374023320
  • Fritz Roth : Complete evaluations of funeral sermons and personal documents for genealogical and cultural-historical purposes. Vol. 1, R 174, p. 77