Johann Wilhelm Reinhardt (Chamber Director)

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Johann Wilhelm Reinhardt (born June 4, 1627 in Langendorf ; died August 18, 1703 in Merseburg ) was a Saxony-Merseburg chamber director and civil manor owner.

Life

He was the son of Simeon Jud Reinhardt and his wife Rosina from the former monastery village of Langendorf near Weißenfels . In 1677, Reinhardt can already be verified as a member of the Princely Saxon-Merseburg Chamber of Commerce. At this point in time he was already in possession of the Webau manor in the Weißenfels office , which had previously belonged to the von Wahren noble family. By 1701 at the latest, Reinhardt had already risen to the position of chamber director of Duke Johann Georg von Sachsen-Merseburg. After he died on August 18, 1703, the funeral sermon given at his funeral was printed.

Johann Wilhelm Reinhardt left the Webau manor to his feudal heirs, the two sons Christian and Christian Wilhelm Reinhardt, from whom the former took over the Webau manor and worked as the district administrator at the court in Merseburg. Christian Reinhardt died on September 15, 1710 on the estate in Webau, leaving behind only one daughter. Henrietta Wilhelmina Reinhardt married the legal scholar Johann Gottfried Bauer and moved to the trade fair city of Leipzig .

literature

  • Christoph Weidlich : Biographical news from the legal scholars living now in Germany. 1st chapter. Halle: Hemmerdeische Buchhandlung 1781. S. 41. ( Online )
  • Georg Christoph Hamberger, Johann Georg Meusel : The learned Teutschland or lexicon of the now living German writers. 5th edition, 1st volume. Lemgo: Meyersche Buchhandlung 1796, p. 158. ( Online )
  • Heart-sensitive priest tears over the most blessed passage from this mortality of an incomparable priest-patron; Was the Weyland [...] Johann Wilhelm Reinhardt [...] , Merseburg, 1703.

Individual evidence

  1. Hertz-sensitive priest tears over the most blissful passage from this mortality of an incomparable priest-patron; Was the Weyland [...] Johann Wilhelm Reinhardt [...] , Merseburg, 1703.