Laemmlin

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The Laemmlin , also Lemlin , were an old patrician family from Heilbronn , who also had property in Horkheim and Talheim . The family is first mentioned in the early 13th century and died out in the early 17th century.

history

The Laemmlin are mentioned for the first time in 1220 with Konrad Laemmlin at the forefront of a Heilbronn patrician list. A Hartmud Laemmlin is mentioned in 1281, 1283, 1284, 1285 and 1289. Another Hartmud and Heinrich and Volmar Laemmlin are mentioned later. A Volmar and his wife Liutgardis donated two vineyards to the Maulbronn Monastery in 1290 to maintain an eternal light in the cemetery near the Kilian's Church in Heilbronn . The cemetery at Kilian's Church is mentioned for the first time in the deed of donation. The later Hartmud and his brother held the office of judge in Heilbronn in 1298 and appointed the mayors. Another Volmar Laemmlin had to do with the Count Palatine Ruprecht economically and financially and married Agathe, the daughter of Hans Erer . The couple owned farms and goods in Lauffen am Neckar , which they sold in 1353 to the knight Hofwart von Lauffen. Around 1374 the Laemmlin, along with the Gebwin , Wigmar , Schletz and von Waiblingen, were in dispute with the imperial city of Heilbronn.

The family owned Horkheim in the 15th and 16th centuries, including Horkheim Castle and 35 houses with farms. Volmar Laemmlin and his wife Agnes vom Bach donated a benefice in the castle chapel of Horkheim Castle in 1469 , which was occupied by a chaplain until around 1520. In the 16th century, the family also had shares in Talheim , where a branch of the family was located. Another Volmar Laemlin is mentioned in 1537 and 1541 in Talheim. He was married to Barbara von Rinderbach († 1561), the widow of Wilhelm von Gemmingen , who was shot near Landsuhl in 1523 , and in 1563 he donated a burial chapel at the cemetery in Horkheim. The tombstone of his son and daughter-in-law, Philipp Christoph Laemmlin († 1596) and Anna Maria von Venningen († 1585), was originally in that chapel and is now kept in the Georgskirche in Horkheim . There is also the gravestone of Georg Friedrich Laemmlin, a 27-week-old boy who died as the last descendant of the family in 1605. With his surviving father, the Ulm Vogt Georg Valentin Laemmlin, who sold Horkheim Castle to Georg Seybold in 1622 in the year of his death , the family died out completely.

Individual evidence

  1. Wilhelm Steinhilber: The Heilbronn parish cemetery at St. Kilian . In: Swabia and Franconia. Local history supplement of the Heilbronn voice . 6th year, no. 10 . Heilbronner Voice publishing house, October 29, 1960, ZDB -ID 128017-X .
  2. http://www.landesarchiv-bw.de/plink/?f=1-36383
  3. Monument topography Baden-Württemberg, Volume 1.5, Heilbronn district, p. 192
  4. http://www.landesarchiv-bw.de/plink/?f=1-40958

literature

  • Gerhard Köbler : Historical lexicon of the German countries. The German territories from the Middle Ages to the present. 7th, completely revised edition. CH Beck, Munich 2007, ISBN 978-3-406-54986-1 , p. 370.
  • Helmut Schmolz , Hubert Weckbach: Heilbronn. History and life of a city . 2nd Edition. Konrad, Weißenhorn 1973, ISBN 3-87437-062-3 .
  • Albrecht Schäfer: The Heilbronn patriciate at the time of the family rule until 1371 . In: Heilbronn Historical Association. 21st publication 1954.
  • History book of the community Talheim in the district of Heilbronn . Talheim community, Talheim 1995.
  • Gerhard Kuppler: From church history. In: One thousand years of Horkheim , Heilbronn 1976

Web links