Johann XXV. from Dalberg

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Johann XXV. Dalberg (* before 1618 ; † 13. January 1670 , buried in the Dominican church in Mainz ) was Electoral Mainz advice and bailiff in Nieder-Olm and Gau-Algesheim . He belonged to the first generation of the von Dalberg family who held the title of baron .

origin

Johann XXV. was a son of Wolfgang Dietrich von Dalberg (* around 1570; † July 1, 1618, buried in Mainz Cathedral ), also electoral Mainz councilor and senior bailiff, the latter in Rieneck , Nieder-Olm and Gau-Algesheim. The mother of Johann XXV. was probably the first wife of Wolfgang Dietrich, Magdalena, daughter of Hartmann von Kronberg and Magdalena Brendel von Homburg . She died on August 28, 1616. The father's second marriage was concluded on February 26, 1618 with Anna Ursula, daughter of Hans Gottfried von Wallbrunn and Maria Elisabeth Wolf von Sponheim, and was short-lived as the father had already been two years later died. The stepmother then decided to enter the Poor Clare Monastery in Mainz. Johann XXV., At that time still a small child, and his seven siblings grew up under the tutelage of relatives.

family

Johann XXV. married twice: on January 31, 1644 Anna Antonetta (* 1626; † September 18, 1659 or September 28, 1659), daughter of Damian von der Leyen and Katharina Waldbott von Bassenheim , then, after their death, on April 17, 1662 or April 17, 1667 Ursula Maria († April 17, 1667), daughter of Johann Philipp von Hoheneck and Margareta Barbara, a daughter of Wolfgang Friedrich I. von Dalberg . Children from these marriages were:

  1. Anna Katharina Franziska (from her father's 1st marriage, * December 4, 1644; † July 30, 1679 in Speyer , buried in the Jesuit Church in Speyer ) married Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg (* March 15, 1635; † December 24 or 26, 1693, buried in the Dominican Church in Mainz). He became President of the Reich Chamber of Commerce in 1671 .
  2. Maria Ernestina (from her father's first marriage, * April 12, 1646; † May 12, 1696) became a nun in the Oberwerth monastery near Koblenz .
  3. Johannes Franz (from the second marriage of the father, baptized on December 16, 1663) died early.

Act

Johann XXV. was Kurmainzischer councilor and Oberamtmann in Nieder-Olm and Gau-Algesheim. He took over these offices from the functions of his father. Johann XXV. was one of four male agnates that the Dalberg family had on September 22, 1653 and who were jointly led by Emperor Ferdinand III on that day . received the title of imperial baron. In addition to Johann XXV. were that:

His attempt to become president of the Reich Chamber of Commerce failed. There was a Roman Catholic and a Protestant president, both of whom represented the chamber judge , the highest judge of the court. Johann XXV. was provided for a second Roman Catholic presidential post of the court in 1664 and again in 1665. Since this second position proved to be not financially viable, the project was canceled. Before the existing position of the Roman Catholic President became vacant, Johann XXV died. His entitlement was transferred to his son-in-law, Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg , who then became president in 1671.

See also

literature

in alphabetical order by authors / editors

  • Friedrich Battenberg : Dalberg documents. Regesta on the documents of the treasurers of Worms called von Dalberg and the barons of Dalberg 1165–1843 Volume 14/3: Corrigenda, indices and family tables (by Dalberg and Ulner von Dieburg) = Repertories of the Hessian State Archives Darmstadt 14/3. Darmstadt 1987. ISBN 3-88443-238-9
  • Johannes Bollinger: 100 families of the chamberlain from Worms and the lords of Dalberg . Bollinger, Worms-Herrnsheim 1989. Without ISBN.
  • Detlev Schwennicke: European family tables. Family tables on the history of the European states . New series, vol. 9: Families from the Middle and Upper Rhine and from Burgundy . Marburg 1986. Without ISBN, plate 57.

Individual evidence

  1. Bollinger, p. 59.
  2. Schwennicke.
  3. Bollinger, p. 50.
  4. ^ So: Bollinger, p. 50.
  5. Bollinger, p. 50.
  6. Bollinger, p. 59.
  7. Battenberg: Repertories 14/3, Plate VIII.
  8. Bollinger, p. 59.
  9. Bollinger, p. 59.
  10. Battenberg: Repertories 14/3, Plate VIII.
  11. Schwennicke.
  12. Schwennicke.
  13. Bollinger, p. 59.
  14. Schwennicke.
  15. Schwennicke.
  16. All information about him according to: Bollinger, p. 59, not in Schwennicke.
  17. Bollinger, p. 56.
  18. Bollinger, p. 56.
  19. Schwennicke; Bollinger, p. 56.
  20. Sigrid Jahns: The Reich Chamber of Commerce and its judges. Constitution and social structure of a highest court in the Old Kingdom 1. Böhlau, Cologne 2011. ISBN 978-3-412-06503-4 , p. 129 (note 79), 137, 678.