Paschasius Marggraf

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Paschasius Marggraf (born September 25, 1673 in Groß-Ballerstedt in the Altmark , † May 14, 1739 in Werben ) was a German Protestant pastor and superintendent . He is the progenitor of an important family of pharmacists.

ancestry

The oldest verifiable representative of the family is Christoph Marggrave, who was mentioned in 1623 as a Musquetirer ( musketeer ) in Neuruppin . Hans Marggrafe, born between 1605 and 1610, was a citizen and shoemaker in Neuruppin and probably the son of Christoph Marggrave. Andreas Marggraf (approx. 1635–1696), son of Hans Marggrafe and Anna Diter, became pastor after studying at the University of Frankfurt (Oder) , first in Ballerstedt in the Altmark, and later in Neuhausen , north of Perleberg in the Prignitz . In 1683 he gave the funeral sermon for Mrs. Ilsabe Sibylla von der Marwitz, née. Ganß zu Putlitz, the court master at the Zerbster court. His probably eldest son Otto Andreas became "Chirurgus" ( surgeon ) in Berlin , received citizenship there in 1718 and was the progenitor of the Marggraf medical dynasty . Paschasius was the second son. The third son Henning Christian Marggraf (1680–1754), court pharmacist and assessor at the Ober-Collegium medicum in Berlin, took up the pharmacist profession and was the father of Andreas Sigismund Marggraf . He is considered the last important chemist of the era of the phlogiston theory and discovered the sugar content of native plants.

Paschasius Marggraf married Elisabeth Rücker (1679–1742). The following children came from the marriage:

  • Christiane Dorothea Marggraf (1702–1773), who married the widowed merchant Christian Tilebein (1682–1755) from Berlin in 1722. They were the parents of the Szczecin merchant Gotthilf Friedrich Tilebein , whose brother Johann Wilhelm Tilebein (1723-1808), whom "Heaven had blessed with a large family", was a preacher in Rühstädt in Prignitz.
  • Christian Jacob Marggraff (1703–1768) pharmacist in Osterburg in the Altmark. His daughter Christiane Dorothea Marggraff married the pharmacist George Christoph Schrader. The marriage lasted only a year. The son, Johann Christian Carl Schrader (1762-1826), was an important writer and member of the Royal Court Pharmacy Commission with the title of Senior Medical Assessor.
  • Hanna Sophia Marggraf (1712-1759). She married Johann Christian Hupe (1699–1777), member of the council, mayor as well as proconsul and account holder in advertising
Village church in Schenkendorf
Johanniskirche Advertise
  • Gotthold Leberecht Margrave, Mayor, Chamberlain and Ziesemeister in Werben

Life

After studying theology in Rostock from 1695 and from 1699 in Frankfurt (Oder), Marggraf chose the profession of pastor like his father and worked first in Schenkendorf near Berlin from 1701 and then from 1715 as a deacon and from 1720 as senior pastor and from 1739 as "inspector “In Werben (Altmark) at the local church of St, Johannis . The activity as an inspector corresponds to that of a superintendent .

Grave slabs of the married couple Paschasius Marggraf and Elisabeth Rücker in the Johanniskirche in Werben, created after 1739 and 1742

Marggraf is buried in the church in Werben. His tombstone has the following inscription:

“The bones of him are probably resting here. Honored and highly educated Mr. Paschasii Markgraffen, past inspector and pastor. here. He was faithful in the service of his Lord, pure and thorough in teaching, righteous in faith, blameless in life, undaunted in suffering, confident in death. God granted him the life in Ballerstedt 1673 on the 26th of September, the preaching office in Schenkendorf near Berlin 1701, to recruit the diaconate in 1715, the inspectorate and pastorate in 1720, a blessed one in 1739 on May 14th, since he was 37 years in the ministry, 6th Months, in this world 65 years, 7 months, 18 days. 2 Corinth. cap. 6 v 9. VI As the dying, and see we live. He married Elisabeth Rukkerin, born in Schwanbek 1702 on January 18th, and fathered 6 sons and 5 daughters with her, but only 2 sons and 3 daughters live from them. One son is a pharmacist in Osterburg; the other son is here in Werben Mayor and Ziesemeister. The eldest daughter is married to Mr. Kaufmann Tielebein in Berlin; the other daughter is married to Mr. Mayor Hupe here in Werben; the third daughter is to Mr. Uden, pastors in Iden, located in the commercial inspection, married. "

- Gravestone of Paschasius Marggraf in the church in Werben

Detailed descriptions of the gravestones of Paschasius Marggraf, his wife Elisabeth Marggraf and their daughter Johanna Sophia Hupe can be found on the homepage of the Altmärkischer Verein für Vaterländische Geschichte zu Salzwedel e. V.

plant

  • Paschasius Marggraff: Funeral sermon to Dorothea Juliana Freifrau von Loeben, born von Krosigk , Berlin 1711, Herzog August Bibliothek, 38304 Wolfenbüttel, signature Xa 4 °. 1:20

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Andreas Marggraf, Piorum Laetitia Post Tristitiam, Fideliter Constantibus Promissa, That is: Devout Christians and dear children of God, blessed change of temporal suffering ... Lastly ... Honor certificate of ... Fr. Ilsabe Sibylla Gänsinn / Noble women of Putlitz ... Women Obrist- Wachtmeisterinnen von der Marwitz / Wittwen ... / Which in the year 1683. fell asleep on the 31st day of the month of Ianuarii ... on April 21st ... / And then in a mourning consolation held on the following Sunday ... and commemorative sermon… praised by Andrea Marggrafen / ht Dienern at the Word of God zu Neuhausen / Klützo and Krick , Berlin 1683, digital VD 17: [1] To Ilsabe Sibylla von der Marwitz, geb. Ganß zu Putlitz compare: Katrin Gäde in the name article for the deceased in: Eva Labouvie (ed.) Women in Saxony-Anhalt: A biographical-bibliographical lexicon from the Middle Ages to the 18th century , Berlin 2016, ISBN 978-3-412- 50128-0 , p. 216 digital (preview) [2] The previous pages are unfortunately not shown in the preview.
  2. ^ Marggraf, Henning Christian, index entry in: Deutsche Biographie, [3] accessed on July 21, 2016
  3. Otto Altenburg : The Tilebeins and their circle. Szczecin bourgeois culture in the 18th and 19th centuries, primarily in the time of Goethe. Leon Saunier's bookstore, Stettin 1937, p. 13, digitized
  4. Jan Drewitz, family history, accessed on July 21, 2016, 10th line of ancestors (No. 1832–1836) and 9th line of ancestors (No. 916–917) [4]
  5. ^ Georg Edmund Damm, contribution to the history of the pharmacy in Osterburg in the Altmark, Deutsche Apothekerzeitung, 1936, 81st year no. 96, pp. 1284–1285. ( Digitized version )
  6. Nekrolog, in: Critical Repertory for the Entire Medicine , Volume 12, Berlin 1826, p. 312, digital: [5]
  7. Johann Christoph Bekmann, Historical Description of the Chur and Mark Brandenburg, Second Volume, Berlin 1753, p. 29, digital: [6]
  8. Johann Christoph Bekmann, Historical Description of the Chur and Mark Brandenburg, Second Volume, Fifth Part, Book 1, VIII, Berlin 1753 p. 30. digital [7]
  9. ^ Enrollments of Paschasius Marggraf in the Rostock matriculation portal
  10. ^ Johann Christoph Bekmann, Historical Description of the Chur and Mark Brandenburg, Second Volume, Fifth Part, Book 1, VIII, Berlin 1753 pp. 20-22.digital [8]
  11. ^ Paschasius Marggraf: digital
  12. ^ Elisabeth Marggraf: digital
  13. Johanna Sophia Hupe: digital

Web links