Ludwig Pincier

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Ludwig Pincier (born January 7, 1561 , † December 26, 1612 ) was a German lawyer in the early modern period and first Lutheran dean of the Lübeck cathedral chapter .

Life

Pincier was a son of the Hessian bailiff to Nidda Hermann Pincier (1532-1570) and his wife Elisabeth (née Zütze, around 1530 - before November 4, 1584) from Wetter near Marburg, widow of Johann Boltz. As a doctor of law he came to northern Germany from Hessian. On October 4, 1589 he received the resigned prebende from Georg Braun and became canon at Lübeck Cathedral . In 1591 he was appointed to the court of the Dukes of Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorf as a councilor, and in 1592 his powers were extended. He was the Archbishop of Bremen's Privy Council. On August 10, 1595, the Lübeck cathedral chapter elected him cathedral dean . His predecessor Michael Kniper, who had held this office since March 7, 1586, died on July 20 of that year.

Pincier was married to Anna Hintze († 1599) for the first time. After her death he married Margaretha von Wietersheim, a daughter of Anton (I) von Wietersheim . His son Hermann Pincier (1591–1661) followed him as bishop's councilor and canon.

His great-granddaughter Margaretha Elisabetha von Pincier († 1731) married the politician Magnus von Wedderkop and was laid to rest with him in the Wedderkop Chapel of Lübeck Cathedral.

Epitaph Dr. Ludwig Pincier in Lübeck Cathedral

epitaph

In 1616 he received a stone epitaph of the late Renaissance in the choir of Lübeck Cathedral, which was made by the Lübeck stone carver Hermann von Rode based on the model of the Glandorpschen and the Zöllnerchen epitaphs in Lübeck's Marienkirche. It shows a picture of the resurrection as a relief. The round gable of the epitaph with the family coat of arms rests on two free-standing columns made of gray marble. The coats of arms of his two wives are under the side obelisks of the gable. In front of the resurrection relief on a console there are kneeling statues of the deceased; on the left the dean with his two sons and on the right the two wives with their daughters. Below is an explanatory plaque with a Latin inscription. The epitaph survived the air raid on Lübeck in 1942 with manageable damage and was restored around 1977.

Fonts (selection)

  • De lege Falcidia, et Senatus consulto Trebelliano enuntiationes… P. Egenolphus, Marburg 1588, OCLC 66766984 (Latin, university publication ).
  • Tamhaia, ad nuptiale festum, quod inter reverendum… Ludovicum Pincierum… Johannis Adolphi… et castissimam lectissimam virginem Annam, omni virtutum genere atqe experientia praestantißimi viri Dn. Bartoldi Hinzii… Egenolph, Marburg 1590, OCLC 935135576 (Latin).

literature

Individual evidence

  1. GND 119788330
  2. Rode, Hermann von . In: Hans Vollmer (Hrsg.): General lexicon of fine artists from antiquity to the present . Founded by Ulrich Thieme and Felix Becker . tape 28 : Ramsden-Rosa . EA Seemann, Leipzig 1934, p. 458 (Presumably the son of the master builder Hans Rode. Hermann von Rode oriented himself towards Robert Coppens . He died in 1628.).
  3. Inscription with translation by Adolf Clasen : Misunderstood treasures: Lübeck's Latin inscriptions in the original and in German , Lübeck 2003, p. 88 ff. ISBN 3-7950-0475-6
  4. Epitaph Dr. Ludwig Pincier ( Memento of the original dated December 8, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. at baufachinformation.de. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / baufachinformation.de