Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg

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Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg

Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg (born March 15, 1635 , † December 24, 1693 ) was President of the Imperial Court of Justice and, as a widower, became canon in Worms .

origin

He came from the knightly von Dalberg family and was a son of Philipp Balthasar von Dalberg (1597–1639) and his wife Magdalena, born von Warsberg († 1647). The parents of Philipp Franz Eberhard were buried in the Worms Martinskirche .

family

Philipp Franz Eberhard married Anna Katharina Franziska von Dalberg on November 19, 1662 (* December 4, 1644, † July 30, 1679 in Speyer , buried in the Jesuit Church in Speyer ). She was a daughter of Johann XXV. von Dalberg and Anna Antonetta von der Leyen , a sister of the Archbishops of Mainz Karl Kaspar von der Leyen and Damian Hartard von der Leyen . Philipp Franz Eberhard and his wife had a number of children:

  1. Damian Eckbert (* June 11, 1665, † December 28, 1725) was from 1675 to 1695 canon in Worms , from 1676 canon of Mainz and Würzburg , 1677 Canon in Trier and was 1695 domkustos in Mainz.
  2. Johann Karl Franz Anton (baptized September 5, 1663; † December 3, 1663)
  3. Johann Franz Eckbert (* around 1666, † soon)
  4. Johann Eckbert Heribert (born August 1, 1667; † soon).
  5. Johann Heribert (born August 20, 1668; † December 29, 1712 in Würzburg ) became canon in Würzburg in 1683.
  6. Franz Anton (* October 16, 1669; † February 27, 1725 in Königshofen , buried in Königshofen) was first canon in Speyer from 1680 to 1711 , then resigned from this office and became major general and commander of the Königshofen fortress .
  7. Hugo Ferdinand (* 1670; † 1671)
  8. Philipp Wilhelm (* March 22, 1671, † 22 May 1721 in Bruchsal ) was 1695 canon in Worms and Mainz, canons in St. Alban's Abbey, Mainz and choir master in Ritterstiftskirche St. Feratius in Bleidenstadt .
  9. Friedrich Eckbert (*, † 1672)
  10. Franz Eckbert (* February 28, 1674; † July 14, 1741, buried in the Dominican Church in Mainz) was canon in Trier from 1683, it is unclear how long. In 1699 he was senior bishop of Speyer in Kirweiler and Deidesheim , imperial and electoral privy councilor . He married twice, first before 1701 Maria Franziska Juliana von Fuchs -Bimbach († 1706). After her death, he married again on June 12, 1708 in Mainz, namely Maria Luisa von Dalberg (baptized on August 5, 1686 in St. Emmeran in Mainz, † September 12, 1760). She was a daughter of Friedrich Dietrich von Dalberg (* around 1637, † July 7, 1712), Kurmainzischer council and vice cathedral in Mainz.
  11. Damian Casimir (born November 11, 1675 in Speyer ; † August 18, 1717, killed in front of Belgrade , also buried there) was Commander of the Teutonic Order , commander of the high and German master regiment under Prince Eugene of Savoy . He fell in 1717 as sergeant-general in the battle of Belgrade .
  12. Maria Katharina Ernestina (* 1676, † 1703, buried in the Dominican Church in Mainz) married Johann Friedrich Eckbert von Dalberg on June 14, 1700 († February 11, 1719, buried in the Würzburg Cathedral).
  13. Adolf von Dalberg (born May 29, 1678 in Speyer ; † October 3, 1737 at Hammelburg Castle , buried in Fulda Cathedral ) was prince abbot of Fulda Monastery from 1726 to 1737 . There he founded the Adolphs University named after him .
  14. Wolf Eberhard II zu Herrnsheim and Abenheim (* May 30, 1679; † December 12, 1737, buried in Herrnsheim) was imperial privy councilor, imperial and Palatinate court councilor , electoral palatinate chamber president and from 1722 to 1737 senior magistrate in Oppenheim , Lauterecken and Veldenz . On January 8, 1713, he married Anna Maria, daughter of Johann Hermann Greiffenclau zu Vollrads (born November 9, 1695, † October 8, 1768 in Herrnsheim , buried in Herrnsheim). Her descendants formed the family branch of the Dalberg zu Herrnsheim .

Live and act

Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg studied law . At the coronation of Leopold I in 1658, he received the knighthood .

The attempt of the father-in-law of Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg, Johann XXV. von Dalberg to become president of the Reich Chamber of Commerce failed for the last time in 1665. There was a Roman Catholic and a Protestant president, both of whom represented the chamber judge , the highest judge of the court. In 1664/65 a further presidential position was to be created for each of the two denominations, but this turned out to be unaffordable. Before the existing position of the Roman Catholic President became vacant, Johann XXV died. 1670. His entitlement was transferred to his son-in-law, so that in 1671 Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg became president. He initially held office in Speyer and retained this office when the court was moved to Wetzlar in 1689 . He was the first imperial knight to hold this office.

Philipp Franz Eberhard was one of four male agnates that the Dalberg family had on September 22, 1653, when they were together by Emperor Ferdinand III. received the title of imperial baron. In addition to Philipp Franz Eberhard, they were

When his wife died in 1679, Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg entered the clergy. He became canon and provost in Worms, an office that was connected with the position of chancellor of the University of Heidelberg . In the latter, he replaced the physician Georg Franck von Franckenau , who remained prorector.

literature

in alphabetical order by authors / editors

  • Archive for History, Genealogy, Diplomatics and Related Subjects , Volume 3, p. 247, Association of Scholars and Friends of German History and Tribal Studies, 1847; (Digital scan)
  • Johannes Bollinger: 100 families of the chamberlain from Worms and the lords of Dalberg . Bollinger, Worms-Herrnsheim 1989. Without ISBN.
  • Detlev Schwennicke: European family tables. Family tables on the history of the European states . New series, vol. 9: Families from the Middle and Upper Rhine and from Burgundy . Marburg 1986. Without ISBN, plate 57.
  • Christian von Stramberg, Anton Joseph Weidenbach: Memorable and useful Rheinischer Antiquarius , 2nd section, 16th volume, Koblenz 1869; (Digital scan)

Web links

Remarks

  1. Schwennicke, plate 58, considers the paternity of Philipp Franz Eberhard to be uncertain, Bollinger, p. 61, assumes it.
  2. Bollinger, p. 61: * August 28, 1668.
  3. Bollinger, p. 61: † end of 1725.
  4. ^ Bollinger, p. 61: buried in Würzburg.
  5. Bollinger, p. 61: * July 22, 1671.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Genealogical website about the mother
  2. ^ Website of the father's epitaph
  3. ^ Website of the mother's grave inscription
  4. Bollinger, p. 59.
  5. Genealogical website for the wife
  6. Peter Gärtner: History of the Bavarian-Rhineland Palatinate castles and the families who formerly owned them , Volume 2, p. 185, Speyer, 1854; (Digital scan)
  7. Schwennicke.
  8. All information from Bollinger, pp. 60f.
  9. Bollinger, p. 61.
  10. Bollinger, p. 61.
  11. Schwennicke.
  12. Bollinger, p. 61.
  13. Schwennicke.
  14. Schwennicke.
  15. Schwennicke.
  16. Assessment by Bollinger, p. 61.
  17. Schwennicke.
  18. Bollinger, p. 61.
  19. Bollinger, p. 62.
  20. So: Schwennicke: European family tables , plate 57, the same, ibid., Plate 58, calls them Anna Luise.
  21. Bollinger, p. 63.
  22. Schwennicke.
  23. Bollinger, p. 62.
  24. Bollinger, p. 62.
  25. Schwennicke.
  26. Schwennicke.
  27. Schwennicke.
  28. Sigrid Jahns: The Reich Chamber of Commerce and its judges. Constitution and social structure of a highest court in the Old Kingdom 1. Böhlau, Cologne 2011. ISBN 978-3-412-06503-4 , p. 129 (note 79), 137, 678.
  29. Karl Murk: "So that the Splendor will be preserved". Relationship networks and supply strategies of the Dalberg in the 17th and 18th centuries . In: Kurt Andermann (Hrsg.): Ritteradel in the Old Kingdom. Die Kämmerer von Worms named by Dalberg = work of the Hessian Historical Commission NF Bd. 31. Hessische Historische Kommission, Darmstadt 2009. ISBN 978-3-88443-054-5 , pp. 185-201 (186).
  30. Bollinger, p. 56.
  31. Bollinger, p. 56.
  32. Schwennicke; Bollinger, p. 56.
  33. ^ Josef Leinweber: Adolf von Dalberg. Abbot - quasi-bishop - sovereign . In: Society for Middle Rhine Church History (ed.): Archive for Middle Rhine Church History 40 (1988), p. 140.
  34. ^ Georg Wilhelm Zapf: Johann von Dalberg Bishop of Worms , Augsburg, 1799, p. 14; (Digital scan of the Chancellorship of Philipp Franz Eberhard von Dalberg)