Justus von Gebhard

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Justus von Gebhard
Wife Gertrud Maria, née von Ryssel

Justus von Gebhard , also Just Gebhard (t) (* 1588 in Kamenz as Justus Gebhard ; † November 8, 1656 in Vienna ) was a lawyer and envoy of Emperor Ferdinand II .

Life

Justus Gebhard was the son of Jobst (Justus M.) Gebhardt (around 1560–1602), an archdeacon of Kamenz, and Katharina Bulling. As a child, Gebhard attended Protestant schools in Austria and Hungary , and then the Princely School in Meissen . In 1591 the family moved to Königsbrück because the father had received a pastor's position there. After finishing school, Justus Gebhard began studying law at the University of Jena . As a graduate , Justus Gebhard first became a Syndicus in Kamenz. There he married Gertraude Marie (also written as Gertrud Maria) von Ryssel (* 1592; † 1624) on February 28, 1614.

From August 12, 1619 Gebhard took over the position of the Syndicus of the city of Zittau . In 1622 he was delegated by the margraviate of Meissen to Prague and Ödenburg in order to approve of Emperor Ferdinand II after the battle of the White Mountain near Prague, through which the margraviate of Meissen had fallen out of favor. On this occasion, Emperor Ferdinand II met the talented legal expert and in 1625 offered Gebhard a job at the imperial court in Vienna. Gebhard was accepted into the Imperial Doctors Bank and received the goods Nebowid ( Nebovidy u Brna ), Krasitz and Kotteschow ( Cottochow , Chotuchow or Chomutov ) as Reichshofrat . In the same year he converted to the Roman Church .

Around 1634 Gebhard von Wallenstein was entrusted with clarifying tasks about events. Gebhard's letters from this period were found in Wallenstein's documents.

At the conclusion of the Peace of Prague , Gebhard took part as envoy in 1635. The following year, on March 20, 1636, the emperor in Vienna elevated him to the knighthood of Petschkau ( Pečky ). The appointment to the Reichshofrat took place on April 15, 1637. Just two years later, in 1639, the authorization for access to the Privy Council took place .

In the period from February to April 1647 Justus Gebhard traveled as the imperial special envoy to the Ulm armistice negotiations. In 1655 Gebhard was officially named in the documents as the Imperial Privy Council , followed by a note dated July 30, 1656 about the award of the baron status. Justus von Gebhard died in Vienna on November 8, 1656, leaving behind a widow named Carlshouerin .

Individual evidence

  1. Adels-Lexikon: or manual on the historical, genealogical and diplomatic, partly also heraldic news from the high and low nobility, especially in the German federal states, as well as from the Austrian, Bohemian, Moravian, Prussian, Silesian and Lausitzian nobility. A to K . Voigt, 1825 ( google.de [accessed October 3, 2017]).
  2. Entry on GEDBAS
  3. Of salvation. Rom. Reichs Genealogisch-Historisches Adels-Lexicon: In it the oldest and most handsome noble, baronial and count families according to their antiquity, origin, distribution in different houses [et] c. in addition to the lives of those most famous people who have emerged from it, in particular state ministers ... to be presented with proven certificates ... 2 . Gleditsch, 1747 ( google.de [accessed October 4, 2017]).
  4. The whole of the unchanged Augsb. Confeßion dedicated priesthood in the Marggrafthum Oberlausitz . Published by Johann Christoph Wirthgens, Buchhändlers, 1777 ( google.de [accessed on October 4, 2017]).
  5. Lexicon of the Upper Lusatian writers and artists who have died and are now living since the fifteen centuries. 2nd ed . Anton, 1801 ( google.de [accessed October 4, 2017]).
  6. ^ Johann Benedict Carpzov: Analecta fastorum Zittaviensium, or historical scene of the praiseworthy old six-city of the Marggraffthum Ober-Lausitz Zittau . JJ Schöp, 1716 ( google.de [accessed October 4, 2017]).
  7. GEDBAS: Justus JUD GEBHARDT. Retrieved October 4, 2017 .
  8. Gebhard, Gertrud Maria von, geb. von Ryssel portrait collection of the Herzog-August-Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel
  9. ^ Christian Adolph Pescheck: Handbook of the history of Zittau . in Commission of the JD Schöpfische Buch- und Kunsthandlung, 1837 ( google.de [accessed on October 4, 2017]).
  10. ^ Martin Opitz: Correspondence and life testimonies: critical edition with translation . Walter de Gruyter, 2009, ISBN 978-3-11-017907-1 ( google.de [accessed October 4, 2017]).
  11. ^ Sources and research on the history of Schleswig-Holstein . In commission from H. Haessel, 1965 ( google.de [accessed on October 4, 2017]).
  12. ^ Sheets for literary entertainment . 1834 ( google.de [accessed October 4, 2017]).
  13. ^ Friedrich Christoph Förster: Wallenstein, Duke of Mecklenburg, Friedland and Sagan, as a general and sovereign in his public and private life: a biography; according to the Duke's handwritten letters and from the acts and documents of the secret state archives in Vienna, Berlin, Munich, and the most distinguished national archives of the Kingdom of Bohemia . Riegel, 1834 ( google.de [accessed October 4, 2017]).
  14. Martin Espenhorst: Peace through language ?: Studies on communicative handling of conflicts and conflict resolution . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2012, ISBN 978-3-525-10194-0 ( google.de [accessed October 4, 2017]).
  15. Karl Friedrich von Frank: Status surveys and acts of grace for the German Empire: ie for the Holy Roman Empire and the Austrian hereditary lands until 1806, as well as imperial Austrian until 1823, with some additions to the "Old Austrian Adels Lexicon" 1823-1918 . Self-published, Schloss Senftenegg, Lower Austria, 1970 ( google.de [accessed October 4, 2017]).
  16. ^ BSB: APW - Search / Gebhardt, Justus - 26 documents. Retrieved October 4, 2017 .