Justus Heinrich Hattorf

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Justus Heinrich Hattorf (also Justus Henrich Hattorf ; born 1638 ; died September 25, 1691 in Osterode am Harz ) was a German Protestant clergyman .

Life

Justus Heinrich Hattorf was the son of the council chamberlain and councilor of the city of Osterode Heinrich Hattorf (born September 18, 1602 in Osterode; died October 21, 1681 there; son of the princely factor on the Harz mountains Heinrich Hattorf (1551-1613) and his wife Elisabeth, married in 1593 Dortmund) and his Dorothea Roden, who married on November 2, 1629 (died June 29, 1644; daughter of the patrician Hartwig Roden and Apollonia Hesse) who worked in Duderstadt. Hattorf's brother Ernst Hattorf (1632-1713) was Princely Grubenhagenscher Land Syndic and Mayor of the city of Osterode.

Hattorf's place of work: St. Mary's Church in Osterode am Harz

Hattorf studied at the University of Jena , where he worked in 1664 as a respondent to the philosophical disputation De postpraedicamentis written by the theologian Friedemann Bechmann .

After completing his studies, Hattorf worked as a pastor at the Marienkirche in his hometown of Osterode in the Harz Mountains. He also worked as a consistorial councilor .

family

On October 11, 1670, Justus Heinrich Hattorf married Anna Leve Hoffmeister. With her he had three sons raised to the nobility in 1733 ;

  • Melchior Heinrich von Hattorf (born December 23, 1673 in Osterode; died December 31, 1738 in Hanover); Electoral Braunschweig-Lüneburg court and chancellery council, heir to Uslar, Verliehausen and Relliehausen
  • Johann Philipp von Hattorf (1676–1741; married to Anna Margarete Tülfs from 1701); Metallurgical inspector on the Harz
  • Martin Friedrich von Hattorf (1681–1740, married to Juliane von Crauel); Head factor, hut inspector and chief magistrate.

Fonts

  • Friedemann Bechmann (author), Justus Heinrich Hattorff (resp.): De postpraedicamentis , Jenae: Werther, 1664

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d e f g h Joachim Lampe: Aristocracy, court nobility and state patriciate in Kurhannover. The circles of senior civil servants at the central and court authorities of the Electorate of Hanover 1714–1760 (= Publications of the Historical Commission for Lower Saxony and Bremen , Volume 24) (= Studies on the history of the estates of Lower Saxony , Volume 2), Volume 2: Lists of civil servants and pedigrees , Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1963, p. 250; limited preview in Google Book search
  2. ^ Fritz Roth: Complete evaluations of funeral sermons and personal documents for genealogical and cultural-historical purposes. A source and research work on genealogy and cultural history , Volume 6: Treated persons with the numbers R 5001 - R 6000 , Boppard / Rhein, [Schützenstr. 15]: F. Roth, 1970, p. 500; limited preview in Google Book search
  3. Information about the Karlsruhe Virtual Catalog (KVK)