Johannes Mockel

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johannes Mockel (born July 3, 1567 in Kirchheim unter Teck , † February 11, 1631 in Reutlingen ) was a lawyer, innkeeper, cook, corpse guide, school founder, winemaker, neo-Latin poet and councilor in Tübingen .

Life

Johannes Mockel was the oldest child of the pastor and superintendent of the offices of Tübingen and Bebenhausen Mag. Sebastian Mockel (1537-1606) from Beilngries in the diocese of Eichstätt - a son of Leonhard Mockel († 1551) - and (Christina 1566 in Tübingen) of Christina Wurtzelmann († after 1606). His mother, a daughter of the goldsmith Dieterich (Theodor) Wurzelmann from Wimpfen , grew up in Tübingen after the early death of her father. Erhard Schnepf in Tübingen was married to her aunt Margaretha Wurzelmann (* around 1503; † 1569); Dietrich Schnepf calls Magister "Mockellius" his relative ( affinis ). Among Johannes Mockel's siblings were the pastor Matthäus Mockel (1571–1637) and Elisabetha Mockel (* 1573; † before 1623), who married the subdeacon Magister Georg Philipp Heiland (1571–1635) from Göppingen in 1594, a son of Samuel Heiland .

Study and marriage

“Joannes Mugelius Kirchensis ” enrolled on May 17, 1582 in Tübingen. He acquired the Baccalaureat on September 25, 1588 as "Mockelius" together with Johannes Kepler and on February 10, 1591, as "Meckel", he received a scholarship from Bebenhausen Monastery .

Restored facade of the former restaurant Zum Goldenen Schaf or Lamm in Tübingen

On September 11th (proclamation on August 26th) 1593 Johannes Mockel married the landlady of the Tübingen inn Zum Goldenen Schaf Margaretha, born Motzer (1561–1627), who was four years his senior . She was the widow (⚭ 1583) of the innkeeper Johannes Lustnauer († 1592) and daughter of the mayor (1582/83) and clerical administrator Martin Mozer (* around 1530/35; † after 1583) from Tübingen and his wife (⚭ 1556) Anna Brussels (around 1535 - 1606) from Oberboihingen . His friends published a commemorative publication for the marriage, to which Johannes Kepler contributed the wedding poem In Nuptias Johannis Mockelii and Zacharias Schäffer a four-part wedding song. From the scholarship and the University of Tübingen in 1593 Mockel was, however, due to his unauthorized marriage as a student “when he was married off with the sheep landlady (= expelled)”.

Innkeeper to the Golden Sheep

Johannes Mockel and his wife continued to run the Zum Goldenen Schaf inn as an innkeeper ( caupo or hospes ad Insigne auratae Ovis ). The house ( Am Markt 7 ) was later renamed to Zum golden Lamm and reopened after a fire in 1974 with a restored facade as the Protestant parish hall of Lamm . In 1596 the innkeeper Mockel was accused of excessive prices. On October 18, 1598, "Mr. Johann Mockel host to the golden sheep" with a black staff and " lament " acted as one of the two corpse leaders at the burial of the student Count Wilhelm Ernst von Waldeck in the collegiate church . He had acquired citizenship (as civis ) through his father and had been a councilor (member of the city council; senator ) of the city of Tübingen since 1628 .

Mockel remained connected to academic life and was in close contact and a. with Martin Crusius , who wrote a poem in six distiches in Latin and also in Greek about his inn sign ( insigne ). Erhard Cellius composed an epigram in the Gasthaus zum Schaf in 1596 on the three Freiherren von Landau brothers who studied in Tübingen after Crusius' "royal" cup had been drunk and "turned off" for their health. Crusius celebrated the wedding of his daughter Theodora (* 1579; † after 1611) in 1599, his 75th birthday in 1601 and his 80th birthday at Mockel in 1606. Mockel hosted and cooked many of the university's academic celebrations and celebratory meals. As in modern catering , he also prepared an “excellent table” with “excellent wine” outside his inn, for example in 1600 in the building of the old auditorium during a three-course dinner for David Magirus , “food cooked in the Senate kitchen ! From Mockel, the innkeeper of the 'sheep'. Praise God! "

Establishment of a school

In the Domus Collegii (building of the Philosophical Faculty), which he rented from Crusius, Mockel set up a school for his own and other children in 1601. The children were taught 7 hours a day by Mag. Johannes Myller from Schwäbisch Hall and probably also by Mockel himself. Among the students were Mockel's own three sons, the son Johann Georg Halbritter (1591–1649) of Professor Johann Halbritter and a son of the court lawyer Johann Jakob Andler the Elder. Ä. (1556-1634). In the same year, Martin Crusius and the " pedagogue " Professor Georg Burckhardt successfully passed an exam on June 11, 1601 at Mockel's request from 14 students.

Two of his three sons studied in Tübingen and became lawyers like him. Johannes Mockel died during a Reutlinger fair ( nundinis Reutlingensibus ). In the invitation of the rector Johann Ulrich Pregizer I of the university to his funeral, Mockel is characterized as follows: "He was a very educated person in Latin, deeply devoted to jurisprudence and highly valued among scholars".

Publications

As a student and especially during his time as an innkeeper, Mockel published various neo-Latin writings and contributions for collective publications. Poems he wrote, among other things for the wedding of Dorothea Liebler (* 1558), a subsidiary of Tubingen professor Georg Liebler , with Hornberger town clerk Johann Mitschelin, the solemn doctor promotion of 33 students in 1593, traditionally with a prandium in Gasthof zum sheep graduated , on the assumption of government of Duke Johann Friedrich von Württemberg , on the death of Martin Crusius or on the death of Maria von Laymingen (1575–1629), the wife of the Tübingen Obervogts and Oberhofmeister of the knight academy Collegium illustrious Hans Joachim von Grünthal .

Mockel spoke with a contribution to a group of - mostly aristocratic, mostly Austrian - students around Friedrich Hermann Flayder , who wanted to perform the moral painting of the novel Argenis by the Scottish-French satirist John Barclay in an adaptation of Hayder with distributed speaking roles as a comedy in the Collegium Illustrious in 1626 to the text book his appreciation for their project. The acting troupe consisted of: Johann Baumann, Wolfgang Georg II. Gilleis (1607–1651), Wolfgang Erasmus (1613–1636) and Friedrich Jakob von Grünthal (1614–1638) - both sons of the academy director Hans Joachim von Grünthal -, Friedrich von Holstein († around 1634) and his court master Michael von (der) Lyth, the four-year-old son Georg Friedrich Flayder (* 1621; † after 1626) of the author as Cupid , Johann Lutz von Freiburg, Sigismund von Herberstein, Karl Helmhard Jörger von Tollet , Maximilian Kölnpöck (* around 1605; † 1683), Ludwig Christoph Müller, Wolff Dietrich and Johann Wilhelm von Rathsamhausen zum Stein , the exile Johannes Pfanner (* around 1605/10; † before 1656) and Wolfgang von Weyler.

Inscription stone on the Österberg

On the premises of Corps Borussia Österbergstrasse 12 in Tübingen- Österberg there is a Latin inscription, slightly damaged in the lower left area, which Johannes Mockel placed there around 1610:

The inscription stone on the Österberg
Photo by Hugo Kocher
In: Tübinger Blätter 55 (1968), p. 46
(digitized version of the University Library of Tübingen )

Link to the picture
(please note copyrights )

Auspice Deo
hanc vineae partem ab aevo solitu
dinem ut et hortum supra iacentem
primus omnium excoluit domum
horti funditus extruxit vineamque
totam canone alias perpetuo
quintave parte vini liberavit
Iohannes Mockelius civis et ad
[ov]em deauratam hospes Tubing
[ensis ]annis a MDCIIII usq'ad
[annum MDC]X(?) vicibus commutatis.

“Under the divine guidance, this part of the vineyard, which has been a desert since prehistoric times, as well as the garden above it was the first of all to lay out the garden house from scratch and detached the entire vineyard from its previous perpetual validity  - 15 of the wine Johannes Mockel, citizen and innkeeper of the Golden [Sch] af in Tübing [en,] in the years from 1604 to [year 16] 10 (?), After his fate had turned. "

family

Johannes Mockel and Margaretha Motzer (1561–1627) had four children together, all of whom were born in Tübingen:

  1. Friedrich Richard Mockhel (1594–1643), lawyer and diplomat, office director of the County of Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Pfedelbach and Swedish resident in Alsace ,
    ⚭ 1621 Agnes Kielmann, a daughter of the Württemberg privy councilor Johann Kielmann von Kielmansegg (1568–1633) from Stuttgart and ( ⚭ 1592) Margarete Vogler (1574–1633),
  2. Johann Albert Mockel (1596–1622),
  3. August Mockel (1599–1659), enrolled in Tübingen on October 29, 1616, lawyer and Chamber Councilor of Württemberg, fled to Strasbourg in 1634 with his family and his sister Corona after the battle of Nördlingen , in 1644 Swedish revenue administrator ( Praefectus redituum ) for Alsace, 1649 Swedish Minister (= envoy) in Strasbourg, ⚭ I. 1626 Anna Dorothea Beuerlin (* 1606; † around 1636) from Schwäbisch Hall , daughter of Vogts zu Comburg Johann Heinrich Beurlin (1580–1631) and his wife Anna Maria Moser von Filseck (1581–1634), ⚭ II. Around 1636/37 Barbara Kummerell (1614–1638) from Ulm, daughter of tradesman Hans David Kommerell (1575–1655) from Tübingen and Sabina Ammann (1579–1657), and ⚭ III. 1640 Susanna Margareta Diepold († after 1649), only daughter of the Hohenlohe-Waldenburg and Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürstischen Chancellor of Öhringen Daniel Diepold († 1647) and his wife Barbara († 1641); The children born in Schwäbisch Hall came from the marriage with Anna Dorothea Beuerlin:



    1. August Friedrich Mockel (1628–1694), Mayor of Heilbronn ,
      ⚭ Maria Magdalena Jeßlin (* around 1635; † after 1683), a daughter of Michael Jesslin (1597–1677), Mayor of Heilbronn, and Margarete Sigelin,
      see
      for his descendants August Friedrich Mockel ,
    2. Christoph Jakob Mockel (1630–1704), municipal kit attendant and thirteen in Strasbourg,
      ⚭ I. 1655 Salome Frantz (1634–1665), a daughter of Johann Joachim II. Franz (1598–1666), secretary of the Council of Fifteen, and ( ⚭ 1621) Dorothea Dachtler (1603–1672) from Strasbourg,
      ⚭ II. 1666 Anna Maria Brackenhofer (1646–1708), daughter of Ammeister and thirteen children Andreas Brackenhofer and Apollonia Wencker; 18 children (6 from ⚭ I. and 12 from ⚭ II.), One third of whom lived to be an adult, named after his great-uncle:
      1. (from ⚭ I.) Friedrich Reichard Mockel (1656–1716), 1693 assessor of the Grand Council, 1704 assessor of the Grand Council (Ratherr) in Strasbourg, ⚭ 1683 Susanna Kauw (1657–1709),
    3. NN. (* / † after 1630), died young,
  4. Corona Mockel (1602–1636), died shortly after fleeing in Strasbourg.

Margaretha Motzer had five children (stepchildren of Johann Mockel) from her first marriage to Johannes Lustnauer in 1583, including the monastery administrator of Bebenhausen Martin Lustnauer (1586–1635), Anna Maria Lustnauer (1588–1619), married (⚭ 1605) to court preacher Bernhard Ludwig Löher (1580–1631) in Stuttgart, and the court pharmacist in Bamberg Joseph Lustnauer (* 1592; † after 1631). Of these five children, they survived the two sons.

The marriage predecessor Johannes Lustnauer

Johannes Lustnauer († 1592) is said to have been married to Juliane König (1526–1580), daughter of Professor Johannes König , after part of the literature . Then he would have brought some stepchildren into the marriage with Margaretha Motzer and would have been around 1520 was born. In fact, around 1540, Juliane König had married the future mayor ( consul ) Joachim Lustnauer (1521–1591), Johannes Lustnauer's father and predecessor and co-operator of the Zum (golden) sheep inn . Heinrich Lustnauer (1552–1631) and Johannes (Hans) Lustnauer (* around 1557; † 1592) were sons of Juliane König and Joachim Lustnauer. The previous owner of Am Markt 7 and the father of Joachim Lustnauer was the white tanner Hans Lustnauer from Ammergasse .

According to a note from Pastor Georg Reipchius (* around 1529; † 1598) in the Sindelfingen church book, Johannes (Hans) Lustnauer had “a big mouth” and was nicknamed “Johan de Munde”. In 1583, the Tübingen upper and lower bailiff commented on the disputes he had with Nicodemus Frischlin in relation to the Württemberg upper council . In the same year Johannes Lustnauer was punished as innkeeper Zum golden Schaf zu Tübingen, because he had arranged too lavish farewell feast for noble students, and received conditions because of the "carousing of the students". He died of the plague.

swell

  • Siegwalt Schiek, Wilfried Setzler (ed.): The oldest Tübingen marriage book 1553-1614 . (Contributions to the history of Tübingen 11). Theiss, Stuttgart 2000 ( Google Books ; limited preview)
  • Johannes Kepler, Zacharias Schäffer, Ulrich Bollinger: In nuptias ornatissimi et doctissimi viri, D. Ioannis Mockelii, civis et cavponis Tvbingani, & c. et honestissimae, lavdatissimaeqve vidvae, Margaritae, & c. Tvbingae celebratas. September 11th anno XCIII . Georg Gruppenbach , Tübingen 1593
  • Wilhelm Göz, Ernst Conrad (Ed.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. I 1596–1597 . H. Laupp, Tübingen 1927 ( Google Books ; limited preview); Vol. II 1598-1599 . H. Laupp, Tübingen 1931 ( digitized version of the University Library of Tübingen), ( Google Books ; limited preview); Reinhold Stahlecker, Eugen Staiger (Ed.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. III 1600–1605 . H. Laupp, Tübingen 1958 ( Google Books ; limited preview)
  • Death entry for Margaretha Motzerin from 1627: University Archive Tübingen (UAT 10 / 12.3 Programmata Funeralia, Vol. III, Sheet 283) ( digital copy of the University Library Tübingen).
  • Johann Ulrich Pregitzer I .: Christian funeral sermon Bey der Begraebnus Weyland of the earnest Christian and Viltugendsamen Frawen Margarethae, the honorary legal scholar and foretell Mr. Johannes Mockelii Rhatsverwandten zu Tuebingen… So… September 9th… 1627… passed away . Philibert Brunn, Tübingen 1627
  • Death entry for Johannes Mockelius from 1631: University Archives Tübingen (UAT 10 / 12,3 Programmata Funeralia, Vol. IV, Bl. 311) ( digitized version of the University Library Tübingen)
  • Günther Schweizer: People and families in Tübingen - a genealogical database . Tübingen 2019, p. 1239, 2011, 2013, 2251 and. ö. ( PDF of the Tübingen City Archives)
  • Family foundations Paul Wolfgang Merkel and Werner Zeller ( joint TNG database online ; accessed on July 18, 2020).

Works

  • Hymenaeus Honorem et Laudem nuptiarum, virtute et ingenio ornatissimi Iuuenis, Ioannis Mütschelij, clarissimi & consultissimi viri . Georg Gruppenbach, Tübingen 1591
  • Carmen de laudibus inclytae academiae Tubingensis, in gratiam et honorem, cum doctorum, tum honestorum trigintatrium Iuuenum, cùm summis in Philosophiâ honoribus . Philipp Gruppenbach, 1593
  • Ad Illustrissimum Principem, Dominum Iohannem Fridericum, Ducem Wirtenbergensem & Teccensem … Iohannis Mockelij Ciuis et ad Ovem deauratum Hospitis Tübingensis, Pro Felicissimi Regni Auspiciis, Pium & Christianum Votum . Philipp Gruppenbach, Tübingen 1608
  • XIX. Nuper ut Authumnum… In: Vitus Müller u. a .: Oratio de Vita et obitu Praeclarissimi… D. Martini Crusii, Tubingensis Academiae per annos octo et quadraginta Professoris nobilissimi ac celebratissimi . Publice habita Tubingae XXIV. Novembris, Anni M.DCVII. Philipp Gruppenbach, Tübingen 1608, p. 94 ( digitized version of the Saxon State Library - Dresden State and University Library)
  • Generosis & Nobiliss. Dominis, qui in hac Comœdiâ egerunt, humilimè offert . In: Friedrich Hermann Flayder : Argenis Incomparabilis J. Barclai . In Comoediam redacta & acta In Illustri Collegio Tubingae. Werlin, Tübingen 1626, p. 4 ( digitized version of the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel)
    • (English translation) Johannes Mockel, a citizen of Tubingen, humbly offers this poem to the high-born and noble gentlemen who acted in this comedy . In: Mark Riley: Friedrich Hermann Flayder's comedy Argenis (1626). A hypertext critical edition . 2017, Act 1 ( online at The Philological Museum, hosted by The Shakespeare Institute of the University of Birmingham; accessed July 20, 2020)
  • Rana (scripta versibus) . Philibert Brunn, Tübingen 1627
  • X. Et quocunq [ue] oculos vertam ... : In: Johann Ulrich Pregizer I., Johann Georg Nockher: Zwo Christian Sermons, Bey very popular gathering of the Adelichen Conducts and honor memorials of the ... Frawen Dorotheae Mariae von Grünthall Born of Laymingen, Deß ... Mr. Hanß Joachim von Grüntenblick Hall auff Krembs-Egg to Hertenegg and Dußlingen & c. … Which to… Tübingen November 6th. This for the current 1629th year ... fell asleep, ... held . o. O. [Werlin, Tübingen 1630], p. 88 ( Google Books )

literature

  • N: From the Österberg. A 300 year old inscription plaque . In: Tübinger Blätter 60 (1905), p. 71 ( digitized version of the Tübingen University Library)
  • Walter Berndt: An old inscription stone on the Österberg (with a photo by Hugo Kocher). In: Tübinger Blätter 55 (1968), p. 46f ( digitized version of the Tübingen University Library)
  • Reinhold Rau: Around the Tübingen market square . In: Tübinger Blätter 56 (1969), pp. 15–26, esp. 25 ( digitized version of the Tübingen University Library)
  • Wolfram Hauer: Local school development and urban living environment. The school system in Tübingen from its beginnings in the late Middle Ages to 1806 . (Contubernium - Tübingen Contributions to the History of University and Science 57). Steiner, Stuttgart 2003, pp. 257 and 418f ( Google Books ; limited preview)
  • Friedrich Seck, Monika Balzert: Johannes Kepler - Complete Poems . Olms, Hildesheim 2018, pp. 60–65 and 333–337 ( Google Books ; limited preview)

Remarks

  1. 1559 matriculated in Tübingen, 1563 Repetens musicus in the monastery, 1566 deacon in Kirchheim unter Teck, 1569 pastor in Ofterdingen.
  2. 1597 pastor in Pflimmern and 1606 in Ofterdingen.
  3. ^ Son of Mayor Joachim Lustnauer from Tübingen.
  4. son of Michel Motzer.
  5. ↑ The person who precedes the corpse at a funeral and who is responsible for its dignified transport and laying out.
  6. Son of Hofmeister Marx Mitschelin († around 1591).
  7. Daughter of Erasmus von Laimingen and Agnes von Plüming, tomb in the collegiate church in Tübingen.
  8. ^ From Stuttgart, 1621 Baccalaureus in Bebenhausen, 1624 admission to the Tübingen monastery , 1632 deacon in Waiblingen, 1635 pastor in Untertürkheim, son of David Baumann.
  9. 1624 matriculated in Tübingen.
  10. ^ Grave slab in the town church Balingen .
  11. ^ Both registered in Tübingen in 1625.
  12. Also "von Holnstein", 1621 legitimized son of the Archbishop of Bremen Johann Friedrich von Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorf with Anna Dobbel, 1625 as a student at the Collegium in Tübingen, 1626 in Strasbourg.
  13. Michael von der Lieth zu Elmlohe, since 1625 court master of Friedrich von Holstein in Tübingen.
  14. ^ Later mayor of Memmingen.
  15. 1623 together with his Preceptor and again in 1628 matriculated in Tübingen, 1632 in Strasbourg.
  16. 1620/21 in Altdorf, 1621 together with his brother Karl Wilhelm Jörger von Tollet matriculated in Tübingen, 1624 registrar there; In 1626 Hieronymus Mattison from Regensburg enrolled “in illustri colleg. bey den Herr Freyherrn Geörgern ”, son of Karl Jörger († 1623) and Anna von Hofmann.
  17. 1624 matriculated in Tübingen, ⚭ I. 1631 Anna Catherina von Clam, ⚭ II. Anna Catherina (or Anna Magdalena) von Grünthal (* 1613), daughter of Wolf Nikolaus von Grünthal.
  18. From Tübingen, registered in Tübingen in 1628, “professoris filius”, probably the son of Matthäus Müller († after 1636) and Barbara Bidembach (* 1590), a daughter of Felix Bidembach and Barbara Brentz.
  19. Both registered in Tübingen in 1623, sons of Samson von Rathsamhausen († 1622) and (⚭ 1600) Magdalena von Seebach.
  20. From Vienna, 1624 matriculated in Tübingen, 1627 in Basel, 1634 there Dr. med., later a doctor in Ulm.
  21. 1625 enrolled in the illustri collegio in Tübingen; probably Wolfgang von Weyler († 1633), son of the Württemberg captain Ludwig von Weiler (1584–1635).
  22. Original text in capitals , broken gaps [...] added after the literature.
  23. daughter of Theophil Dachtler .
  24. From Kronstadt ( Brașov ) in Transylvania, since 1553 pastor in Sindelfingen.
  25. Ulrich Bollinger (1569–1612), enrolled in Tübingen in 1585, since 1590 preceptor at the Bebenhausen monastery school.
  26. Johann Georg Nocker (1573–1645), pastor Alpirsbach 1598, 1602 in Lustnau, 1620 in Dußlingen, 1639 in Mähringen.
  27. According to a communication from Ludwig Gummert (1864–1932) from Hattingen, corps student in Tübingen, chief physician at the municipal women's clinic in Essen.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Johann Georg Sigwart: Funeral sermon Bey the burial, Weilund the venerable and wolf scholar, M. Sebastiani Mockelij, past pastor and special superintendent of Offtertingen ... who passed away on June 10th of this ... 1606th year. Philipp Gruppenbach, Tübingen 1606 ( digitized version of the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel).
  2. ^ Norbert Hofmann: The artist faculty at the University of Tübingen 1534–1601 . Mohr, Tübingen 1982, p. 136f ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  3. ^ Franz Hüttner: Self-biography of the parish priest Wolfgang Ammon († 1634) von Marktbreit . In: Archiv für Kulturgeschichte 1 (1903), pp. 50–98, 214–239 and 284–325, especially pp. 59–61 ( digitized version in the Internet Archive).
  4. ^ Siegwalt Schiek, Wilfried Setzler (ed.): The oldest Tübingen marriage book 1553–1614 . (Contributions to the history of Tübingen 11). Theiss, Stuttgart 2000, No. 726, p. 57.
  5. ^ Letter from Dietrich Schnepf to Wilhelm Holder from 1582; Ludwig Melchior Fischlin: Memoria theologorum Wirtembergensium resucitata . Georg Wilhelm Kühn, Ulm 1710, Supplementa, p. 246f ( Google Books ).
  6. ^ Siegwalt Schiek, Wilfried Setzler (ed.): The oldest Tübingen marriage book 1553–1614 . (Contributions to the history of Tübingen 11). Theiss, Stuttgart 2000, No. 2394, p. 142.
  7. ^ Württembergische Kirchengeschichte Online , No. 3201, 5551, 5552.
  8. ^ Siegwalt Schiek, Wilfried Setzler (ed.): The oldest Tübingen marriage book 1553–1614 . (Contributions to the history of Tübingen 11). Theiss, Stuttgart 2000, No. 2379, p. 141.
  9. a b c “15. Nov. [1592] died in Tüwingen peste the landlord to the sheep (addition by a new hand: to the golden lamb Johannes Lustnauer); had a big mouth, called Johan de munde. "; Adolf Rentschler (Ed.): Sindelfingen Chronicle of Pastor Georg Reipchius, 1553 to 1598 . Röhm, Sindelfingen 1958, No. 684, p. 96.
  10. daughter of Georg Brussel († before 1553), widow of Jacob Betz, "Hanss Betzenn sune von Gmundt ".
  11. ^ Siegwalt Schiek, Wilfried Setzler (ed.): The oldest Tübingen marriage book 1553–1614 . (Contributions to the history of Tübingen 11). Theiss, Stuttgart 2000, No. 107, p. 23, No. 155, p. 26, and No. 1780, p. 112; Wolfram Hauer: Local school development and urban living environment . Steiner, Stuttgart 2003, p. 257.
  12. ^ Friedrich Seck, Monika Balzert: Johannes Kepler - all poems . Olms, Hildesheim 2018, pp. 60–65 and 335f.
  13. a b c Friedrich Seck, Monika Balzert: Johannes Kepler - Complete Poems . Olms, Hildesheim 2018, pp. 333–337.
  14. Files concerning excessive price demands by the Schafwirt zu Tübingen , 1596; Main State Archive Stuttgart (A 206 Altwürttembergisches Archiv, Oberrat: Older Office Files, Bü 4716).
  15. ^ Horst Schmidt-Grave: funeral speeches and funeral sermons Tübingen professors (1550–1750) . Steiner, Wiesbaden 1974, pp. 83 and 85 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  16. Johann Georg Sigwart: Funeral Sermon Bey the burial, Weilund the venerable and wolf-scholar, M. Sebastiani Mockelij . Philipp Gruppenbach, Tübingen 1606, p. 23.
  17. Entry from August 30, 1599; Wilhelm Göz, Ernst Conrad (ed.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. II 1598–1599 . H. Laupp, Tübingen 1931 p. 342.
  18. At the time in question, Heinrich (1582–1601), Ehrenreich (1583–1620), Gottfried (1584–1630) and Joachim (* 1587; † between 1607 and 1623) Freiherren ( barones ) von Landau, sons of Achaz von Landau (* 1545; † 1596 or 1602) zu Rappottenstein and (⚭ 1582) Clara von Roggendorf (* 1560; † after 1587) zu Mollenberg, at the Collegium Illustre and the University of Tübingen.
  19. "meum Regium poculum"; Crusius had received the silver cup in 1594 as a gift from students.
  20. Entry from January 28, 1597; Wilhelm Göz, Ernst Conrad (Ed.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. I 1596–1597 . H. Laupp, Tübingen 1927, p. 276; see. Vol. III 1600-1605 . H. Laupp, Tübingen 1958, pp. 225 and 398; Gabriele Jancke: Hospitality in early modern society. Practices, Norms and Perspectives of Scholars . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2013, pp. 130 and 369.
  21. ^ Wilhelm Göz, Ernst Conrad (Ed.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. II 1598–1599 . H. Laupp, Tübingen 1931, p. 381f.
  22. ^ Karl Klüpfel : History and description of the University of Tübingen , Vol. II. Ludwig Friedrich Fues, Tübingen 1849, p. 90 ( Google Books ).
  23. Numerous entries in Crusius' diary, some with detailed menu sequences; Gabriele Jancke: Hospitality in early modern society. Practices, Norms and Perspectives of Scholars . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht , Göttingen 2013, pp. 130, 339f, 408.
  24. "O quot optima fercula! O quam bonum vinum. Cibi, cocti in culina Senaculi. A caupone ouis Mockelio. Louse deodorant "; Reinhold Stahlecker, Eugen Staiger (Eds.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. III. H. Laupp, Tübingen 1958, p. 181.
  25. Reinhold Stahlecker, Eugen Staiger (Ed.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. III. H. Laupp, Tübingen 1958, pp. 245 and 257.
  26. Perhaps related by marriage ( socer ) to Professor Michael Ziegler ; see. Entry dated January 26, 1599; Reinhold Stahlecker, Eugen Staiger (Eds.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. II. H. Laupp, Tübingen 1931, p. 167.
  27. a b Reinhold Stahlecker, Eugen Staiger (Ed.): Diarium Martini Crusii , Vol. III. H. Laupp, Tübingen 1958, p. 280.
  28. ^ Friedrich Seck, Monika Balzert: Johannes Kepler - all poems . Olms, Hildesheim 2018, p. 344.
  29. ^ "Fuit homo in Latinis doctissimus, et Jurisprudentiae studiosissimus, et Literatorum amantissimus"; Programmata Funeralia , Vol. IV, Bl. 311.
  30. Cf. on the corresponding celebration in 1598 Josef Forder: The church customs in the earlier Tübingen doctorates . In: Tübinger Blätter 46 (1959), pp. 15–22, especially p. 17 ( digitized version of the Tübingen University Library).
  31. ^ John Barclay: Argenis . Buon, Paris 1621; Edition Elzevir, Leiden 1627 ( digitized in the Internet Archive) a. a.
  32. ^ Mark Riley: Friedrich Hermann Flayder's comedy Argenis (1626). A hypertext critical edition . 2017 (with English translation of the text), especially Introduction ( online ) and Commentary Notes ( online at The Philological Museum, hosted by The Shakespeare Institute of the University of Birmingham; accessed July 20, 2020).
  33. Johannes Mockel: Generosis & Nobiliss. Dominis, qui in hac Comœdiâ egerunt, humilimè offert . In: Friedrich Hermann Flayder: Argenis Incomparabilis J. Barclai . Werlin, Tübingen 1626, p. 4
  34. Friedrich Hermann Flayder: Argenis incomparabilis J. Barclai . Tübingen 1626, Personae Dramatis ( digitized version of the Herzog August Library Wolfenbüttel)
  35. a b Otto von Munthe af Morgenstierne: Bemærkninger om Ærkebiskop af Bremen, Hertug Johan Friedrich af Holstein Gottorps illegitimate Afkom af Navnet of Holstein . In: Personalhistorisk tidsskrift 62 (1941), pp. 81–94, esp. P. 86 ( PDF of the Slægtsforskernes Bibliotek).
  36. Matthäus Müller († between 1636 and 1659) from Kempen, enrolled in Tübingen in 1595, doctor of medicine and professor at the University of Tübingen since 1620, warned about his lifestyle in 1623, suspended in 1629, released in 1630, fled with his brother-in-law Wilhelm Bidembach in 1630 / 31 to front Austria in the Rottenburg Carmelite monastery, later in Vienna; Heinrich Günter: The edict of restitution of 1629 and the catholic restoration of Altwirtembergs . Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1901, p. 67 ( Google Books ; limited preview).
  37. a b c d beneficiaries of the Bayer Family Foundation ; see. Ferdinand Friedrich Faber: The Württemberg Family Foundations , Vol. IV. Franz Köhler, Stuttgart 1853, p. 69 ( Google Books ).
  38. ^ Johann Heinrich Boeckler , Johann Joachim Frantz: Vivat Memoria Viri Nobilissimi… Dn. Avgvsti Mockelii Consiliarii Würtembergici… Vitam Mortalem Orsvs Est Anno Svperioris… MDCLIX . Johannes Pickel, Strasbourg 1659.
  39. ^ Dedication from Johann Rebhan , Johann Balthasar Schlingwolf: Isagoges Iustinianeae . Disputation VI. De adquisitione rerum Dominii ex iure civili . Johann Andreae, Strasbourg 1644 ( Google Books ).
  40. ^ Purchase contract of February 2, 1649; State Archives Ludwigsburg (B 342 Deutscher Orden: Kommende Horneck / Neckaroberamt, U 245; see U 173 and U 246); August von Lorent: Wimpfen am Neckar . A. Werther, Stuttgart 1870, p. 115 ( Google Books ); see. Johannes Scheffer: Ioannis Schefferi Argentoratensis vita . (Äldre Svenska biography 1. Uppsala universitets årsskrift 1915, volume 2). Almqvist & Wiksell, Uppsala 1915, pp. 1–36, esp. P. 20: “Sueticus apud Argentoratenses minister” ( digitized in the Internet Archive).
  41. Johann Jakob Moser : Genealogical messages from his own and all families descended from the same . Steinkopf, Stuttgart 1752, pp. 133 and 224 ( Google Books ).
  42. Johann Michael Irnsinger: The most respectable regent tree ... Bey ... corpse burial of the weyland high-noble, stern, prudent and high-wise Mr. Augusti Friderici Mockels, this praiseworthy deß H. Reichs-Statt Heilbronn, past highly deserved mayor , ... Which on August 7th in the year of Christ 1694 - fell asleep ... Majer, Heilbronn 1694.
  43. Most gloriously run… life run Deß weyland… Mr. Christoph Jacob Mockels, been… Dreyzehners . Johann Welper, Strasbourg 1704 ( Google Books ).
  44. a b Dedicated to: Johann Joachim Zentgraf , Johann Philipp Bez: De legum Ebraeorum forensium contra idololatriam usu politico in rep. Johann Friedrich Spoor, Strasbourg 1693.
  45. Most gloriously run… life run Deß weyland… Mr. Christoph Jacob Mockels, been… Dreyzehners . Johann Welper, Strasbourg 1704, p. 7; ( Google Books ).
  46. Threni Ad Tumulum Nobilissimae Et Pientissimae Virginis, Dominae Coronae Mockelianae , Quam Deus Ter Opt. Max. ... ad coeleste beatorum Consortium ... avocavit Argentorati, 9. Maii 1636. ... aetatis 35. Wilhelm Christian Glaser, Strasbourg 1636 ( Digitalisat the Herzog August Wolfenbüttel Library).
  47. Martin Lustnauer, secretary of the Württemberg duchess Sibylla von Anhalt in Leonberg, married Euphrosyna Brenz (1588–1658), daughter of Christoph Brenz from Stuttgart in Tübingen in 1611; Siegwalt Schiek, Wilfried Setzler (ed.): The oldest Tübingen marriage book 1553-1614 . (Contributions to the history of Tübingen 11). Theiss, Stuttgart 2000, No. 3626, p. 219.
  48. ^ Johann Ulrich Pregitzer: Luminous sermon on Martin Lustnauer . Tübingen, 1636; University Library Tübingen (Sign. L XVI 70.4).
  49. a b Wolfram Hauer: Local school development and urban living environment . Steiner, Stuttgart 2003, p. 418f (or typographical error "Johannes Lustnauer († 1591) ( sic!, Not: 1592)" instead of "Jeremias Lustnauer († 1591)"?).
  50. a b c "Hainrich Lustnawer, Joachim Lustnawer's Consulis filius von Tübingen", ⚭ I. 1577 Margareta Eschenmayer († 1580), a daughter of Matthias Eschenmayer († before 1577) from Stuttgart, ⚭ II. 1581 Margaretha Saal, daughter of Christof Hall from Wildbad; Siegwalt Schiek, Wilfried Setzler (ed.): The oldest Tübingen marriage book 1553-1614 . (Contributions to the history of Tübingen 11). Theiss, Stuttgart 2000, No. 1424, p. 93.
  51. On the language used by consul in the 16th century Rudolf Seigel: Court and Council in Tübingen . Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1960, p. 41.
  52. Gottfried Friedrich Kümmerle: Display of those grave inscriptions and monuments which are located in and next to the collegiate or St. Georgen Church as well as in the Castle and Hospital or St. Jakobs Church in Tübingen . Schönhardt, Tübingen 1827, p. 24 ( Google Books ) after epitaphs in the hospital church ; Rudolf Seigel: Court and Council in Tübingen . Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1960, pp. 42 and 66.
  53. The editor of Adolf Rentschler (ed.): Sindelfinger Chronik des Pfarrer Georg Reipchius, 1553 to 1598 . Röhm, Sindelfingen 1958, note on no. 684, p. 96, considers "Schafwirt Johannes (also Joachim) Lustnauer" to be one and the same person; however, different death dates have been recorded for both.
  54. ^ Günther Schweizer: People and families in Tübingen . Tübingen 2019, pp. 2011–2013.
  55. Johann Ulrich Pregitzer: Christian corpse preaching Bey of the funeral Weylund des Ehrnvesten Weisen vnd Vorgechten… Heinrich Luschnawer's court relative at Tübingen: Which… 1631… fell asleep . Werlin, Tübingen 1632.
  56. Document, 1583; Main State Archive Stuttgart (A 206 Altwürttembergisches Archiv, Oberrat, Bü 4712 a).
  57. ^ Student files, 1583–1585, with a decree of August 8, 1583 because of the student carousing; Main State Archives Stuttgart (A 206 University of Tübingen, Bü 4745).
  58. University Library Tübingen (Sign. L XVI 72.4); Wolfram Hauer: Local school development and urban living environment . Steiner, Stuttgart 2003, p. 586.
  59. St. Gallen Abbey Library (Sign. SGST 17248.25).
  60. ^ University library of Tübingen (Sign. L XV 84.2 No. 2).
  61. Cf. Martin Kazmeier: The Anatolian Hill . In: Tübinger Blätter 60 (1973), pp. 19-21, esp. P. 21 ( digitized version of the Tübingen University Library).