Oberamt Rötteln
The Oberamt Rötteln (also Oberamt Sausenberg and Röteln and from 1682 Oberamt Sausenberg and Röteln zu Lörrach) had been an administrative district of the Margraviate of Baden-Durlach since the 16th century and of the Margraviate of Baden from 1771 to 1803, of the Electorate of Baden from 1803 to 1806 and 1806 to 1810 of the Grand Duchy of Baden . The seat of the Oberamt was initially at Rötteln Castle and, after its destruction, in Lörrach .
Location of the Oberamt
The Oberamt Rötteln bordered in the west on the bailiwick of Schliengen, which belonged to the bishopric of Basel , and the Rhine with Alsace, which was for a long time in front of Austria, on the other bank, as well as in the north on the Baden-Durlach dominion of Badenweiler and the front Austrian Breisgau , which it also bordered in the east. In the south, the Oberamt bordered on the Kameralherrschaft Rheinfelden, which also belonged to Upper Austria , and the city of Basel . It was thus largely surrounded by areas in which the Habsburgs had sovereignty.
The Oberamt belonged to the Baden Oberland and together with the Oberamt Badenweiler and the Oberamt Hochberg it formed the upper margraviate of the margraviate of Baden-Durlach.
Dissolution of the senior office
By the organizational rescript of November 26, 1809, the previous Oberamt Rötteln was dissolved and the new district offices of Lörrach , Schopfheim and Kandern , which together with other offices formed the Wiesenkreis , took its place.
Population numbers
While for 1709 it is expected to have 13,955 inhabitants, for 1790 the number of inhabitants is estimated at 28,316.
surface
The area of the Oberamt amounted to 450 km² and was thus slightly larger than today's state of the Free Hanseatic City of Bremen . It was the largest of all offices in the margraviate of Baden-Durlach.
Due to the spatial size and the number of inhabitants, at the end of the 18th century there were considerations to divide the Oberamt.
economy
The area is described as fertile. In addition to wine , hemp, and grain , flax was also grown and cattle raised . Forestry also played a role in the Landgraviate of Sausenberg. Margrave iron works were operated in Hausen im Wiesental and Kandern . In the foothills of the Black Forest there were deposits of lead , iron and copper .
Subdivisions and municipalities of the Oberamt
The Oberamt comprised the two administrative units of the Margraviate Hachberg-Sausenberg , the Dominion Rötteln and the Landgraviate Sausenberg, which were divided into four quarters. At the end of the 18th century, the Schopfheimer Viertel was split up and a fifth quarter was created with the Steinemer Viertel. In the margraviate of Baden-Durlach, there was only one intermediate instance between the offices and the bailiffs / communities in the offices of Hochburg, Badenweiler and Rötteln in Breisgau. The fifth quarter in the Oberamt Rötteln was a special case due to the large number of communities.
- Herrschaft Rötteln (abbreviated as HR in the table)
- Röttler district
- Hamlet quarter
- Landgraviate of Sausenberg (abbreviated as LS in the table)
- Sausenhard district
- Schopfheimer district
- Steinemer district
Reign of rubella
The Rötteln rule was a territory in the Holy Roman Empire that had belonged to the House of Baden or its branch line Hachberg-Sausenberg since 1315 .
At the time of the noble free von Rötteln, the rule represented a conglomerate of landed property and sovereign rights, whereby the areas belonging to that time cannot be clearly documented. On the other hand, it has been proven that the rulership of the noble free von Rötteln was significantly larger than the administrative unit of the Margraves of Hachberg-Sausenberg, later called Rötteln .
Landgraviate of Sausenberg
The Landgraviate of Sausenberg essentially consisted of the southern parts of the land that fell to Rudolf I of Hachberg-Sausenberg as part of the division of inheritance in the Margraviate of Baden-Hachberg in 1306, with Sausenburg as the dominant center. After the Rötteln rule fell to the Margraves of Hachberg-Sausenberg as a gift in 1315, parts of this rule that can no longer be identified today were assigned to the Landgraviate Sausenberg administrative district. The term Landgraviate comes from the division of the Landgraviate of Breisgau , the southern part of which came to the Margraves of Baden-Hachberg.
Overview table by municipalities / bailiwicks
The following table shows the situation around 1787.
Municipality / Bailiwick | quarter | Remarks | coat of arms |
---|---|---|---|
Rötteln Castle | HR / Röttler | until the destruction in 1678 seat of the upper office (Landvogtei) | |
Sausenburg | LS / Sausenharder | from 1306 to 1315 residence of the margraves of Hachberg-Sausenberg; destroyed 1678 | |
Rubella | HR / Röttler | Seat of a district governor as an intermediary between the Oberamt and the municipality | |
Röttelnweiler | HR / Röttler | ||
Loerrach | HR / Röttler | After the destruction of Rötteln Castle and the construction of administrative buildings, it became the seat of the Upper Office from 1682 | |
Brombach | HR / Röttler | ||
Haagen | HR / Röttler | ||
Hauingen | HR / Röttler | with Rechberg | |
Tumringen | HR / Röttler | with rabbit hole | |
Rümmingen | HR / Röttler | ||
Whiting | HR / Röttler | ||
Schallbach | HR / Röttler | ||
Wollbach (Vogtei) | HR / Röttler | with Hammerstein , Egisholz , Nebenau , Egerten and Reutihof (Rüttihof) | |
Grenzach | HR / Röttler | only district without Grenzach Wyhlen the Rhine Valley to landscape the front Austrian Kameralherrschaft Rheinfelden belonged | |
Because on the Rhine | HR / hamlet | Seat of a district governor as an intermediary between the Oberamt and the municipality | |
Tüllingen | HR / hamlet | ||
Haltingen | HR / hamlet | ||
Ötlingen | HR / hamlet | ||
Markets | HR / hamlet | ||
Binzen | HR / hamlet | ||
Fischingen | HR / hamlet | ||
Eimeldingen | HR / hamlet | ||
Egringen | HR / hamlet | ||
Wintersweiler | HR / hamlet | ||
Welmlingen | HR / hamlet | ||
Blansingen | HR / hamlet | ||
Kleinkems | HR / hamlet | ||
Efringen | HR / hamlet | ||
Churches | HR / hamlet | ||
Wood | LS / Sausenharder | ||
Mappach | LS / Sausenharder | with Maugenhard | |
Tannenkirch (Vogtei) | LS / Sausenharder | with Ettingen, Gupf, Uttnach, Kaltenherberge | |
Riedlingen | LS / Sausenharder | ||
Feuerbach | LS / Sausenharder | ||
Hertingen | LS / Sausenharder | ||
Kandern | LS / Sausenharder | Seat of a district governor as an intermediary between the Oberamt and the municipality | |
Vogelbach [27] (Vogtei) | LS / Sausenharder | with Malsburg-Marzell , Käsacker, Tantenmühle, Lausbühl, Höfe, Lütschenbach, Wambach, Kaltenbach | |
Sitzenkirch | LS / Sausenharder | ||
Obereggenen | LS / Sausenharder | with sonic singing | |
Niedereggenen | LS / Sausenharder | ||
Feldberg | LS / Sausenharder | with Gennenbach and Rhine Valley | |
Vögisheim | LS / Sausenharder | ||
Eyes | LS / Sausenharder | with Hach and Zizingen | |
Stones (bailiwick) | LS / Steinemer | with Hägelberg, Höllstein, Hüsingen, Maulburg , Langenau , Enkenstein ; Seat of a district governor as an intermediary between the Oberamt and the municipality | |
Weitenau (Vogtei) | LS / Steinemer | with cloister courtyard, slaughterhouse, Hofen, Hummelberg, Heuberg, Schrohmühle, Wieslet , Schillighof, Eichholz, Henschenberg, Sallneck , Demberg | |
Tegernau (Vogtei) | LS / Steinemer | with Niedertegernau, Gresgen , Elbenschwand , Bürchau , Holl, Langensee, Hohenegg, Ried, Oberhäuser, Raich , Schwand, Wies , Stockmatt, Kühlenbronn, Fischenberg, Ebigen, Endenburg , Kirchhausen, Lehnacker | |
Neuenweg (Vogtei) | LS / Steinemer | with the front, middle and rear hay bones | |
Schopfheim | LS / Schopfheimer | with courtyards and Gündenhausen; Seat of a district governor as an intermediary between the Oberamt and the municipality | |
Wiechs | LS / Schopfheimer | ||
Oak trees | LS / Schopfheimer | ||
Fahrnau | LS / Schopfheimer | ||
Hausen | LS / Schopfheimer | ||
Raitbach (Vogtei) | LS / Schopfheimer | with Scheuermatt, Kehrengraben, Blumberg, Schweigmatt, Schlechtbach, Sattelhof and Kürnberg | |
Gersbach (Vogtei) | LS / Schopfheimer | with Lochmühle, Neuhaus, Fetzenbach; Hazel with glassworks; Dossenbach , Inzlingen , Stetten |
Senior officials
The Oberamt was a collegial authority, the head of which consisted of two people, the governor and the clerk. The position of governor was reserved for the nobility. If it was once temporarily occupied by a commoner, then this had the title of senior office rotten . The land clerks of the Oberamt Rötteln had been graduates in law since the end of the 15th century. A list of the land clerks with biographical notes can be found at Vorisch. The later Baden-Durlach Chancellor Joseph Hettler and his successor Christoph Leibfried , who held the office from 1599 to 1635 and also worked as a composer, and the legal scholar Michael Praun are among the more important land writers .
The governors
Lists of bailiffs from the Rötteln Oberamt can be found in Schülin and Krieger.
The first Röttler Landvogt, Heinrich von Hauenstein , mentioned by Schülin without evidence for 1382 , cannot be documented in the regests of the margraves of Baden and Hachberg . Presumably Henman von Hauenstein is meant, who as the bailiff of Anna von Freiburg, the second wife of Margrave Rudolf III. von Hachberg-Sausenberg, was used. At Kindler he was also the supreme bailiff of Margrave Rudolf III. mentioned, but also here without receipt. Heinrich von Hauenstein was also included as the first bailiff in the district description. But he cannot be seen as a governor in the sense of a representative of the margrave.
The nobleman Ullmann Renk (e) or Rengk is mentioned in 1394 as the chief bailiff of the margrave at Waldenburg Castle . But he administered the rule of Waldenburg and was not governor of Rötteln.
Oswald von Pfirt, mentioned by Schülin, cannot be grasped in the regesta. Since the family of the Counts of Pfirt had already died out in 1324, it could be a member of the ministerial family of the Lords of Pfirt . However, no Oswald is documented in this sex. In the regesta at the end of 1443 there is a reference to an Oswald Phirter who, as the chief bailiff, had pronounced a death sentence about 60 years ago. It is very likely a member of the Liestal dynasty of the Pfirter, who appeared in the 13th century in the vicinity of the Counts of Thierstein . In this family there was a nobleman Oswald, who was Vogt in Brombach in 1380 . To a bailiff of Margrave Rudolf III. it was probably not the case.
year | Surname | Remarks | coat of arms |
---|---|---|---|
1428 to 1444 | Georg von Tegernau | Supreme Vogt of Margrave Wilhelm von Hachberg-Sausenberg and the guardian government of Count Johann von Freiburg-Neuchâtel | |
1448 | Heinrich Reich von Reichenstein | ||
1451 | Bernhard of Aespach | ??? only at Schülin | |
1453 to 1463 | Peter Reich von Reichenstein | ||
1463 to 1475 | Hans von Flachslanden | ||
1475 | Wilhelm von Runs | ||
1477 | Hans Heinrich of Baden | ||
1490 | Thuringian Empire of Reichenstein | see warrior | |
1493 | Rudolf von Blumeneck | see warrior;
for the family tree see |
|
1497 | Hans Michael von Neuenfels | see warrior | |
1502 | David von Landeck | see warrior | |
1513 | Jakob Nagel from the Alte Schönstein | Warrior; for gender see Kindler | |
1525 | Konrad Dietrich von Bolsenheim | see warrior | |
1527 to 1535 | Fritz Jakob von Anweil | ||
1536 to 1540 | Hans Albrecht von Anweil | see warrior first term | |
1540 | Johann Jakob von Rotberg | see warrior | |
1546 | Ulrich von Hohenheim called Bombach | ||
1551 | Jakob von Rotberg | ||
1553 | Hans Georg Reich von Reichenstein | ||
1556 to 1568 | Hans Albrecht von Anweil | second term | |
1569 | Hans Konrad of Ulm | see warrior; on gender, see Becke-Klüchtzner | |
1587 | Thuringian Empire of Reichenstein | ||
1588 to 1598 | Pancras of Rust | see warriors for gender see Kindler | |
1598 | Hans of Ulm | ||
1607 to 1620 | Christoph Daniel from Anweil | ||
1621 | Georg Wilhelm Stürzel from Buchheim | ||
1625 to 1632 | Hamann of Offenburg | for gender see Kindler | |
1633 | Wolff Reimboldt Wetzel from Marsilien | Landvogteiverweser; for gender see Hellbach | |
1634 | Friedrich Jakob of Remchingen | ||
1636 | Johann Jakob Obser | civil administrator | |
1638 | Georg Wilhelm Waldner von Freundstein | ||
1640 | Hans Jakob Bertram from Hörspach | ||
1643 | Philipp Jakob Waldner von Freundstein | ||
1653 to 1655 | Johann Jakob Vinther | civil administrator, senior bailiff, previously land clerk | |
1655 | Jakob Pauli | civil administrator, senior bailiff | |
1670 to 1674 | Johann Georg von Merckelbach | ||
1674 to 1694 | Reinhard von Gemmingen (1645–1707) | ||
1694 to 1717 | Johann Bernhard von Gemmingen | ||
1717 to 1748 | Ernst Friedrich Leutrum von Ertingen | ||
1748 to 1772 | Gustav Magnus von Wallbrunn | ||
1772 to 1792 | Ludwig Karl von Berckheim | ||
1792 to 1797 | Sigismund von Reitzenstein | ||
1797 to 1809 | August of Kalm | last governor of the Rötteln Oberamt; from 1809 director of the Wiesenkreis |
literature
- Oliver Uthe: Rötteln: first official seat and core of the district of Lörrach . In: Ralf Wagner et al. (Editor), State Palaces and Gardens of Baden-Württemberg (Editor): Burg Rötteln: Rule between Basel and France . JS Klotz publishing house. Neulingen 2020, ISBN 978-3-948424-60-2 , pp. 141–153
- Philipp Ludwig Hermann Röder (Ed.): Geographical Statistical-Topographical Lexicon of Swabia , Volume 2, Ulm 1792, Column 459/460 and 505/506 online Bayerische StaatsBibliothek digital
- Thomas Simon: manorial rule and bailiwick. A structural analysis of late medieval and early modern rule formation (= studies on European legal history. Vol. 77). Klostermann Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1995, ISBN 3-465-02698-5 (Also: Dissertation, University of Freiburg (Breisgau), 1992). in Google Book Search
- Fred Ludwig Sepaintner : District structure in administration and justice. In: Department State Description of the State Archives Freiburg im Breisgau (editor): District descriptions of the State of Baden-Württemberg. The district of Loerrach. Volume IA general part. B. Community descriptions Aitern to Inzlingen. C. Sources and literature . Published by the Baden-Württemberg State Archives Directorate in conjunction with the Lörrach district. Jan Thorbecke Verlag, Sigmaringen 1993, ISBN 3-7995-1353-1 . Pp. 446-454
- Herbert Strittmatter (Author), District Office Lörrach (Ed.): From the Oberamt Rötteln to the District Office Lörrach. Beginnings and historical development of the administrative structure 1382 - 1982/83 , Lörrach-Haagen 1983
- Christian Martin Vortisch: Landschreiber and jurists of the Upper Baden lordship. In: Das Markgräflerland, issue 2/1988, pp. 157–173 digitized version of the Freiburg University Library
- Haagen community (ed.), Fritz Schülin: Rötteln-Haagen , 1965.
- Hermann Schäfer: Two standards of the Landgraviate of Sausenberg and the rule of Rötteln from 1738. In: Das Markgräflerland, issue 1/1951, p. 19 digitized version of the Freiburg University Library
Individual references / comments
- ↑ records of Röteln'schen bailiff of Leutrum. In: Badenia, Volume 2, Heidelberg 1862, p. 97
- ^ Supplement Lit. A: to the organizational rescript of November 26, 1809. In: Großherzoglich Regierungsblatt No. L of December 9, 1809, pp. 403-414; here p. 404; According to the organizational rescript, the new organization should be implemented by April 23, 1810 at the latest
- ↑ s. Schülin p. 88
- ↑ s. Schülin p. 88
- ^ See Karl Wilhelm Ludwig Friedrich von Drais von Sauerbronn : History of the government and education of Baden under Carl Friederich: edited from archives and other sources. Volume 1: Comprehensive the first period of this reign, the Baden-Durlach period: 1746–1771 . Müllersche Hofbuchhandlung, Karlsruhe 1816, p. 32 Google digitized
- ^ See Karl Wilhelm Ludwig Friedrich von Drais von Sauerbronn : History of the government and education of Baden under Carl Friederich: edited from archives and other sources. Volume 2, Müllersche Hofbuchhandlung, Karlsruhe 1818, p. 380 footnote Google digitized
- ↑ s. Röder
- ^ See Karl Wilhelm Ludwig Friedrich von Drais von Sauerbronn : History of the government and education of Baden under Carl Friederich: edited from archives and other sources. Volume 1: Comprehensive the first period of this reign, the Baden-Durlach period: 1746–1771 . Müllersche Hofbuchhandlung, Karlsruhe 1816, p. 33 Google digitized
- ↑ s. Röder, Sp. 505/506
- ↑ Quarter in the sense of district, as today city district
- ↑ see Karl Stiefel : Baden 1648-1952. Volume I, Karlsruhe 1979, pp. 156-157.
- ^ Hof- und Staats-Handbuch Baden - 1775; older state handbooks do not yet show details of the higher offices, so that the date of the introduction of the 5th quarter cannot be derived from this.
- ↑ Rudolf I von Hachberg-Sausenberg had been co-regent since 1311, in 1315 his son Heinrich von Hachberg-Sausenberg was given the rule and in 1316 the last of the lords of Rötteln, Lüthold II von Rötteln, died .
- ↑ s. Simon p. 105
- ↑ s. Simon p. 11
- ↑ see Wilhelm Franck: The Landgraviates of the Holy Roman Empire , Braunschweig 1873, pp. 94-108 in the Internet Archive
- ↑ see Johann Ernst Fabri : Neues geographisches Magazin , Volume 4, Halle 1787, pp. 409-412 Google digitized
- ↑ Example reading aid: HR / Röttler = belonging to the Rötteln dominion, Röttler Viertel
- ↑ Entry Rechberg (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Hasenloch (Aufgommen) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Rüttihof (Wüstung) at Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Maugenhard (living space) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Ettingen (place to live) at Discover Country Studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Gupf (living space) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Uttnach (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Kaltenherberg (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Vogelbach (living space) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Käsacker (place to live) at Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Tantenmühle (Aufgisen) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Lausbühl (Aufgommen) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry courtyards (living space) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Lütschenbach (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Wambach (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Kaltenbach (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Schallsingen (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Gennenbach (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Rheintal (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Hach (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Zizingen (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Hägelberg (old community / suburb) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Höllstein (old community / suburb) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Hüsingen (old community / suburb) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Klosterhof (living space) on Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Schlächtenhaus (old community / suburb) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Hofen (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw ; in the source as a court designated
- ↑ Entry Hummelberg (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Heuberg (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Schrohmühle (living space) on discover geography online - leobw ; in the source as straw mill referred
- ↑ Entry Hummelberg (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Eichholz (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Henschenberg (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Demberg (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry in Niedertegernau (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Holl entry (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Langensee (living space) on Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Hohenegg (living space) on Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Ried (living space) on Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Schwand (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Stockmatt (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Kühlenbronn (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Fischenberg (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Ebigen (living space) on discover regional studies online - leobw ; called Eternals in the Source
- ↑ Entry Kirchhausen on discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Lehnacker entry on Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Vorderheubronn (living space) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Mittelheubronn (living space) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Hinterheubronn (living space) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Höfen (Risen) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Gündenhausen (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Scheuermatt (place to stay) at Discover culture online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Kehrengraben (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Blumberg (living space) at Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Schweigmatt (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Schlechtbach (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Sattelhof (living space) at Discover Country Studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Lochmühle (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Neuhaus (living space) at Discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry Fetzenbach (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ Entry glassworks (place to live) at discover regional studies online - leobw
- ↑ see front table p. 157
- ↑ see front table p. 157
- ↑ s. Schülin pp. 683-684
- ↑ see also Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (Hrsg.): Topographic Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ see Schülin p. 683 and p. 83
- ↑ " marriage Vogt, in some, particularly southern German areas, a person who is set to on the disabled seeds of a woman to watch " Oekonomische Encyclopedia of Johann Georg Krünitz online
- ↑ see Julius Kindler von Knobloch: Upper Baden gender book. Volume 1, p. 551 Digital copy from Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ Anneliese Müller: III. Historical basics, 4th territories department, state description of the State Archives Freiburg im Breisgau (editor): District descriptions of the state of Baden-Württemberg. The district of Loerrach. Volume IA general part. B. Community descriptions Aitern to Inzlingen. C. Sources and literature . Published by the Baden-Württemberg State Archives Directorate in conjunction with the Lörrach district. Jan Thorbecke Verlag, Sigmaringen 1993, ISBN 3-7995-1353-1 . P. 154.
- ↑ see Rudolf Wackernagel : History of the City of Basel , Volume 1, p. 329/330 in the Internet Archive and Albert Krieger (editor), Badische Historische Kommission (Ed.): Topographic Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ see Peter Schenker: Pfirter. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
- ↑ see Julius Kindler von Knobloch: Upper Baden gender book. Volume 1, p. 84 Digital copy from Heidelberg University Library
- ^ Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ^ Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ Family tree
- ^ Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ see also Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (Hrsg.): Topographic Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ see also Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (Hrsg.): Topographic Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ Julius Kindler von Knobloch , Badische Historische Kommission (Ed.): Oberbadisches Geschlechtbuch , Volume 3 (M - R), Heidelberg, 1919, pp. 189–190 Digitized by the Heidelberg University Library
- ^ Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ^ Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ^ Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ^ Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ Edmund von der Becke-Klüchtzner: Stamm-Tafeln des Nobility of the Grand Duchy of Baden: a newly edited book of nobility , Baden-Baden, 1886, pp. 495–499 online
- ^ Albert Krieger (editor), Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Topographical Dictionary of the Grand Duchy of Baden. Heidelberg (1904/1905), Volume 2, Column 682 Digital copy of the Heidelberg University Library
- ^ Digitized version of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ Julius Kindler von Knobloch , Baden Historical Commission (ed.): Upper Baden gender book , Volume 3 (M - R), Heidelberg, 1919, pp. 267–273 digitized version of the Heidelberg University Library
- ↑ see Carl Mennicke: The Margraviate in the Thirty Years' War. In: Blätter aus der Margrafschaft 1915, pp. 15–30; here p. 20 digitized version of the Freiburg University Library ; with Schülin "1633 von Marsilien-Wetzel, Junker Humbrecht (Landvogteiverweser des von Wessenburg)" and at the time of "Claudia von Medici, widow of Archduke Leopold of Austria". According to the letter printed by Mennicke, Wolff Reimboldt Wetzel von Marsilien was Landvogteiverweser on behalf of Margrave Friedrich V of Baden-Durlach
- ^ Johann Christian von Hellbach , Adels-Lexicon, Vol. 2, Leipzig 1826, "Wetzel von Marsilien" Google digitized
Coordinates: 47 ° 38 ′ 17 ″ N , 7 ° 40 ′ 5 ″ E