Segebodo Crispin († 1388)

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Segebodo Crispin and his wife Elisabeth, b. Warendorp

Segebodo Crispin († 1388 ) was councilor of the Hanseatic city of Lübeck.

Life

Segebodo Crispin was the son of the Lübeck citizen Segebodo Crispin II, and the grandson of the Lübeck mayors Segebodo Crispin († 1323) and Hermann Morneweg .

In 1349 Segebodo III. Crispin elected to the Lübeck council. In 1363 he was involved in the negotiations chaired by Duke Albrecht II of Mecklenburg about a settlement in the sovereign disputes between the city of Hamburg and Count Adolf VII of Holstein in Lübeck. In 1366 he was one of the city's representatives in matters relating to the Rector of Rellingen . In Neubrandenburg he negotiated with Duke Albrecht because of his participation in the Second Waldemark War of the Hanseatic League against King Waldemar IV of Denmark. In 1375 Segebodo Crispin represented the city in the settlement negotiations between Duke Albrecht of Saxony-Wittenburg and the Dukes of Braunschweig in the War of the Lüneburg Succession . He also represented the city at all Hanseatic days from 1363 to 1381.

He owned the Lübschen estates Groß Steinrade, Bliesdorf and Wulmenau; also half of Krummesse and Kronsforde each .

He was married to Elisabeth, a daughter of Councilor Gottschalk Warendorp , and lived in the house at Breite Straße 46 . The councilor Johann Crispin was his son.

The Crispins are counted among the co-founders of the Katharinenkloster Lübeck , whose construction they supported with considerable funds. The northeastern choir aisle of the Katharinenkirche was built directly as a family chapel according to recent research. The medieval family portraits from this chapel show Segebodo Crispin and his wife, several generations of the Crispins with their wives and are now in the medieval collection of the St. Anne's Museum . After the frescoes in the chapel, the panel paintings were transferred to the wooden panels around 1440 and painted over by the painter Gregor von Gehrden in 1577 . The names of the people depicted were mixed up in the individual panel paintings. The assignment is therefore only possible via the family coat of arms of the wives.

literature

  • Uwe Albrecht , Jörg Rosenfeld and Christiane Saumweber: Corpus of medieval wood sculpture and panel painting in Schleswig-Holstein, Volume I: Hanseatic City of Lübeck, St. Annen Museum . Ludwig, Kiel 2005, ISBN 3933598753 , p. 174 ff.
  • Emil Ferdinand Fehling : Lübeck Council Line. Lübeck 1925, No. 364
  • Carl Julius Milde : Seal of the Middle Ages from the archives of the city of Lübeck. Lübeck 1862, p. 4 ff. ( Online in the Google book search)
  • Heike Trost: The Katharinenkirche in Lübeck: Franciscan architecture in the brick area. From the architecture of the mendicant order to the citizen church . Butzon and Bercker (Edition Coelde), Kevelaer 2006 (= Franciscan Research, Volume 47), also: Dissertation, University of Bonn, 2004, ISBN 978-3-7666-2106-1

Individual evidence

  1. Consolation: Katharinenkirche (lit.), p. 190