Philipp Reinecke (bailiff)

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Philipp Reinecke (full name Christian Ludwig Philipp Reinecke or Christian Ludewig Philipp Reinecke ; born June 26, 1785 , † October 16, 1843 in Hanover ) was a Hanoverian bailiff and landowner.

Life

The bailiff Reinecke in Barsinghausen bought the Rotebeeken-Hof in Gestorf in 1808, shortly before the so-called “ French era ” . Philipp Reinecke, who was born during the personal union between Great Britain and Hanover at the time of the Electorate of Braunschweig-Lüneburg , was his heir. In addition, Reinecke was the master of Linderte , where he owned a Freihof .

With his wife Therese (Therese Sophie), née Tiedemann (* July 19, 1786; † November 23, 1863 in Hanover), his children included his son of the same name and heir, Philipp Reinecke , who worked in Hanover .

At the time of the Kingdom of Hanover , Reinecke was the first official of the Hanover office as an official .

At the time of the redemption laws in the Kingdom of Hanover, Reineicke sold his Freihof in Linderte after 1835, for which, among other things, the office of the court was abolished. He sold the land in smaller, affordable plots for the farmers to interested parties in Linderte, Vörie and Hiddestorf . That is why the municipality of Linderte , which is now a district of Ronnenberg , set him a monument in 1850 "out of gratitude and admiration": the Amtmann-Reinecke monument . It is one of the architectural monuments in the city of Ronnenberg.

Reinecke's farm in Gestorf, which was sold after 1840, was later expanded to become the so-called Rittergut III .

Archival material

Archives by and about Philipp Reinecke can be found, for example

  • as a file for the period 1836 to 1841 under the title sale of a Freihof zu Linderten by the bailiff Reinecke in Hanover to the municipality of Linderte, the abolition of the office of this court, the formation of two courtyards from the Reineckescher Hof, which were between the brothers H. and Chr. Garbe and the separation of the row courtyard and the associated wood in the Lower Saxony State Archives (Hanover location) , archive signature NLA HA Hann. 80 Hanover No. 06748

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Inscription on the obelisk of the Amtmann-Reinecke monument
  2. a b c d Hans Mahrenholtz : Gravestones of the Nikolaifriedhof, addendum , in: Hannoversche Geschichtsblätter , New Series Volume 16 (1962), pp. 243–260; here: p. 256; limited preview in Google Book search
  3. ^ State and address calendar for the Kingdom of Hanover for the year 1836 , Hanover: print and publisher by E. Berenberg, 1836, p. 453; Digitized via Google books
  4. ^ A b c German Gender Book (Genealogical Handbook of Burgerlicher Familien) , Volume 135 (1965), p. 393; limited preview in Google Book search
  5. a b Heimatbund Gestorf: Der Rotebeeken-Hof , accessed on January 14, 2020
  6. ^ A b Die Kunstdenkmäler der Provinz Hannover , Volume 1, Issue 3: Die Kunstdenkmale des Kreis Springe , self-published by the Provincial Administration, Theodor Schulzes Buchhandlung, Hannover 1941, p. 73; limited preview in Google Book search
  7. ^ Die Kunstdenkmäler der Provinz Hannover , Volume 1, Issue 3: Die Kunstdenkmale des Kreis Springe , self-published by the Provincial Administration, Theodor Schulzes Buchhandlung, Hannover 1941, p. 73; limited preview in Google Book search
  8. ^ A b Peter Simon: From the Thirty Years' War to the 19th Century, in: Peter Hertel et al. (Ed.): Ronnenberg. Seven Traditions - One City. Ronnenberg 2010, ISBN 978-3-00-030253-4 , p. 71 f.
  9. a b Details of the Arcinsys Lower Saxony Bremen archive information system