Reinhard von Hanau (cleric)

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Reinhard von Hanau (* unknown; † May 27, 1369 ) was an extensively sponsored cleric in the Bohemian and southern German area.

family

Reinhard von Hanau was the second son of Ulrich II. Von Hanau (* approx. 1280/1288; † 1346) and Agnes von Hohenlohe (* before 1295; † November 29, 1346), daughter of Kraft I. von Hohenlohe . He was thus predestined for a spiritual career, while his older brother, Ulrich III. (* 1310; † 1369/70) followed his father in the government in 1346.

Pedigree of Reinhard von Hanau
Great grandparents

Reinhard I. von Hanau (* before 1243; † 1281)

Adelheid von Hagen-Münzenberg († 1291)

Ludwig von Rieneck -Rothenfels († 1289)

Udehilt von Grumbach and Rotenfels († 1300)

Gottfried von Hohenlohe , Count of Romagna (proven: 1219–1266)

Richza von Krautheim (proven: 1224–1263)

Count Friedrich von Truhendingen - Dillingen († 1274)
2nd ∞
vmtl. Margaretha of Andechs-Meranien († 1271)

Grandparents

Ulrich I. von Hanau (* 1250/60; † 1305/06)

Elisabeth von Rieneck -Rotenfels (* approx. 1260; † approx. 1300)

Kraft I. von Hohenlohe -Weikersheim (proven 1260–1312)
2. ∞
vmtl. Margarethe von Truhendingen -Dillingen

parents

Ulrich II. Von Hanau (* 1280; † 1346)

Agnes von Hohenlohe -Weikersheim (* before 1295; † 1342/44)

Reinhard von Hanau

For the family cf. Main article: Hanau (noble family)

education

It is known from his education that he studied in Bologna in 1340 .

Career

Reinhard von Hanau was in the service of the Bohemian King Johann von Luxemburg († 1346).

His ecclesiastical career has been shaped by the acquisition of a number of ecclesiastical positions and benefices, without him being able to assume any real leadership position:

There is also evidence of benefices in Brno (1338), Saaz (1357) and at the St. Andrew's Chapel in Bamberg.

Reinhard von Hanau began his career in the east of the empire, in Bohemia, and shifted his focus to the west in the course of his life. His area of ​​interest extended from Brno and Olomouc in the east to Mainz and Xanten in the west.

literature

  • Reinhard Dietrich : The state constitution in the Hanauischen = Hanauer Geschichtsblätter 34, Hanau 1996. ISBN 3-9801933-6-5
  • Michael Hollmann: The Mainz Cathedral Chapter in the late Middle Ages (1306 - 1476), Mainz 1990.
  • Wilhelm Kisky : The cathedral chapters of the ecclesiastical electors in their personal composition in the 14th and 15th centuries = sources and studies on the constitutional history of the German Empire in the Middle Ages and Modern Times 1,3 (ed .: Karl Zeumer ), Weimar 1906.
  • Gustav Knod: German students in Bologna 1289 - 1562 , o.O. 1899.
  • Reinhard Suchier : Genealogy of the Hanauer count house . In: Festschrift of the Hanau History Association for its 50th anniversary celebration on August 27, 1894 . Hanau 1894.
  • Friedrich Wachter: General Personal Schematism of the Archdiocese of Bamberg 1007 - 1907 , Bamberg 1908.
  • Ernst Julius Zimmermann : Hanau Stadt und Land , 3rd edition, Hanau 1919, ND 1978.

References

  1. In the older literature there is also the year 1362. This is based on Caspar Anton Schweitzer, Complete extract from the excellent calendars of the former Principality of Bamberg, in: Seventh report on the existence and work of the Historical Association of Bamberg in Upper Franconia of Bavaria, Bamberg 1844, p. 67ff (184). But this is not covered by the source ( Bamberg State Library : RB.Msc.46, p. 18). According to Regsten of the Archbishops of Mainz , 2nd Dept., No. 1908, he still appears as a witness on January 18, 1365. In addition, the 8th of July is indicated as the day of death: Beda Dudik, About Nekrologe der Olmützer Domkirche, in: Archive for Austrian History 65 (1884), pp. 487-589 (550)
  2. Ludwig Clemm , Das Totenbuch des Stifts Ilbenstadt, in: Archives for Hessian History and Archeology, NF 19.2, Darmstadt 1936, pp. 169-274 (252)
  3. Knod, p. 184
  4. ^ Information from the Olomouc State Archives from July 29, 1992
  5. Hollmann, p. 376
  6. Codex diplomaticus et epistolaribus Moraviensis VII, 660
  7. Wachter, p. 182, no. 3729
  8. Hollmann, p. 376
  9. Hollmann, p. 376
  10. Hollmann, p. 376
  11. Hollmann, p. 376
  12. Hollmann, p. 376
  13. Wachter, p. 182, no. 3729
  14. Hollmann, p. 376