Reynerus Holloger

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Reynerus Holloger (also Reiner or Reimar) ( bl. 1465–1501) was Council Secretary of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck .

Life

Holloger came from a Rostock council family in the 14th century and was one of the four sons of Rostock citizen Reineke Holloger. From 1465 he studied at the University of Rostock , where he received his bachelor's degree in the 1473 summer semester at the Philosophical Faculty .

He was council secretary in Lübeck and led there as prothonotary Lübeck Oberstadt book from October 1483 to February 1492. Other Council Secretaries at the time of his ministry in Lübeck was the chronicler Theodericus Brandes , who simultaneously studied with him in Rostock, and Johannes de Bersenbrugge . After Hollogers resignation, Theodericus Brandes continued the Oberstadtbuch for a short time. After the death of Council Secretary Johannes de Bersenbrugge († 1493) it was taken over by the newly appointed Council Secretary Hartwich Brekewoldt .

In 1492 Holloger resigned from office. He probably returned to Rostock and is possibly identical to Reimar Holloger, who was provost of the Rostock cathedral monastery and pastor of the Marienkirche in 1499 and was sent to Rome as ducal councilor in 1496, and the Magister Reynerus Hollogher, clericus Zwerinensis diocesis, publicus apostolica et imperiali auctoritate notarius , who is listed in 1501 as a member of the Güstrow brotherhood S. Gregorii and S. Augustini and who drafted the statutes for this brotherhood.

literature

  • Friedrich Bruns : The Lübeck syndicists and council clerks until the constitutional amendment of 1851 in ZVLGA Volume 29 (1938), p. 133

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Georg Christian Friedrich Lisch : About the Rostock patriciate. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology, Volume 11 (1846), pp. 169–205 (p. 192) (digitized version )
  2. Entry 1465 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  3. ^ Entry in the deanery book 1473 in the Rostock matriculation portal
  4. Oliver Auge: Scope of action for princely politics in the Middle Ages: the southern Baltic Sea region from the middle of the 12th century to the early Reformation period . 2009, p. 188
  5. ^ Georg Christian Friedrich Lisch: A Kalands book of the city of Güstrow. In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology 44 (1879), pp. 3–32; P. 27