Sentlinger

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Sentlinger coat of arms
Coats of arms of Konrad III. in the Fürstengang Freising

The Sentlinger family (also Sentilinger or Sendlinger ) was a wealthy Munich patrician family .

history

The family, which comes from what is now the Sendling district of Munich , appears for the first time in 1154 with a Nortpert von Sendlingen ( Nobilis vir Notperus de Sentlingen ) in documents in the Tegernsee Monastery and in a document in Munich around 1170 . In 1239, for the first time, there was evidence of a Sentlinger in the administration of Munich, members of the family sat for a long time on the city's inner council , the highest civic body. Conrad III. the Sendlinger was the 31st bishop of Freising in the years 1314 to 1322. In 1397 there was a civil uprising in Munich, in which Heinrich the Sentlinger accepted the mayor Jörg Kazmair who had fled . The Sentlinger family sided with the Munich dukes Ernst and Wilhelm against the rebellious citizens of the city. In 1399 Matheis Sendlinger came to Schloss Pähl in today's Weilheim-Schongau district , and in 1410 he also acquired Sulzemoos. He is also considered the founder or at least innovator of the Sentlinger Seelhaus in Munich. The Sentlingers were involved in changing money and trading in salt. At the beginning of the 15th century they moved completely from Munich, where they had been banished from the truce , to their property in Pähl. They died out in the male line in 1475 (they are also referred to as being extinct around 1500 ).

coat of arms

The coat of arms shows a red armored, jumping golden unicorn in black . The unicorn growing on the helmet with black and gold covers .

The coat of arms was adopted around 1500 by Jörg Andorfer von Bach und Landsberied , who referred to Walthauser Sendlinger as his dear brother . You can see it on the tombstone of Jörg Andorfer at the Frauenkirche, in the old town hall in Munich, and in the cinema on Sendlinger Torplatz on the ceiling.

literature

  • J. Siebmacher's large and general book of arms, VI. Volume, 1st section, 1st part: Dead Bavarian nobility. Author: GA Seyler. Nuremberg: Bauer & Raspe, 1884, p. 92, plate 91
  • Richard Bauer : History of the City of Munich , Munich City Archives. Beck, 1992.
  • Helmuth Stahleder : Munich patrician . In: "Historical Lexicon of Bavaria" ( online ). Published on February 14, 2013, accessed October 1, 2016.

Individual evidence

  1. J. Siebmacher's large and general book of arms, VI. Volume, 1st section, 1st part; Dead Bavarian nobility; Author: GA Seyler; Publication: Nuremberg: Bauer & Raspe, 1884, p. 92
  2. a b c d Munich City Revolution: Sendlinger (accessed October 4, 2016)