Joseph Dominik Rogg

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Joseph Dominik Rogg

Joseph Dominik Maximin Otmar Kaspar Rogg (born January 22, 1777 in Frauenfeld , † September 8, 1816 ibid) was a Swiss councilor.

biography

Joseph Dominik Rogg was the son of the town clerk and innkeeper Joseph Leontius Dominik Ferdinand Rogg (1745–1799) and Maria Josefa, née. Keller (1755–1782). A direct ancestor of his was the mayor Johann Conrad Rogg . In 1801 he married Beatrix Dominica, b. Egloff (1778–1833), whose brother, Carl Martin Egloff, was the father of the blind poet Luise Egloff . The grandfather of Beatrix Dominica Egloff was Franz Caspar Benedikt Egloff (doctor and professor in Innsbruck ). A son of Joseph Dominik and Beatrix Dominica Rogg-Egloff, Dominik Rogg , was a Thurgau councilor, district court president and monastery administrator.

In 1798/99 Rogg stayed in Germany for further training (study of law); In 1799 he was accepted into the first degree of the Freemason Lodge "Joseph for Unity" in Nuremberg . In 1800 he was elected to the Education Council, in 1803 as justice of the peace of the Frauenfeld district , in 1805 as a member of the school council. In 1813 he was elected to the Grand Council of the Canton of Thurgau , and in 1815, when the revised state constitution was introduced, as one of the three Catholic members and successor to his relative Placidus Rogg , to the Small Council (government council, judicial and police commission).

Rogg was the owner of the traditional “Schäfli” inn in Frauenfeld, which was owned by the Rogg family for 234 years, from 1692 to 1926.

literature

  • Angelus Hux : The house "Zum Stadtschryber" and the Rogg von Frauenfeld family. Festschrift 90 years of Raiffeisenbank Frauenfeld, 2012; ISBN 978-3-03789-002-8
  • Verena Baumer-Müller: The last convent of the Dominican Sisters at St. Catherine ; in: Thurgau Contributions to History vol. 131 (1994) ; Pp. 5-140

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Historisches Museum Thurgau, Bürgerarchiv Frauenfeld, estate of the Rogg family
  2. "Collection of files from the time of the Helvetic Republic (1798–1803)", edited by Johannes Strickler and Alfred Rufer, 16 volumes, Bern 1896–1911 and Friborg 1940–1966; Volume 16, p. 29 (272)
  3. '' Swiss Monthly Chronicle '', year 1816, Nekrolog; Zurich 1817; P. 177