Winand Bock from Pomerania

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Winand Bock von Pommern (* 1329 in Pomerania (Mosel) , † February 5, 1415 in Trier ) was a German canon and canon in Trier.

Life

Winand Bock of Pomerania received on 20 June 1330 by the Trier Archbishop Baldwin of Luxembourg in Pomerania on the Moselle an archbishopric House "curtis" and a tower "turri" to feud , with the support of the structural Entertainment , the opening law and the prohibition of After-loan . For this purpose he had half a farm in Brieden , where Matthias Walpode was a co-heir and other allodial goods in the parish of Pomerania. On July 31, 1372 Winand BvP was under Pope Gregory XI. appointed canon of Trier , although he had to give up the parish church in Alt-Bettingen in the Eifel .

On March 9, 1382, after disputes with the cathedral chapter, he was invested in a canonical (outdated for used), an office he held until 1409. From September 30, 1412 until his death in 1415, he was still active as a curator in Trier.

Former castle house in Pomerania

The former is located near the Moselufer Castle House in Pomerania originally consisted of a rectangular tower block of 15 x 11 meters base as well as a residential building with a floor area of 21.5 x 10 meters. The tower consisted of 4 floors and had a blunt pyramid roof . The house was originally two-storey, had four two-part windows and a stair tower that protruded halfway towards the Moselle front, was 4.20 meters high and had a spiral staircase made of red sandstone . The castle house, last from the "Leyensche Kellnerei" , also called "Bockturm" , was demolished in 1878 because of its location when the new railway line Koblenz - Trier was built.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. 1330 Winand called Bock von Pommern was enfeoffed with the "turris" to Pomerania (LHAKo 1 C 2, No. 616), at: pommern-mosel.de
  2. Cathedral chapter 1295–1378: Trier canons list No. 206 Winand Bock from Pomerania at: dhi-roma.it
  3. Ernst Wackenroder : The art monuments of Rhineland-Palatinate, third volume, part 2, the art monuments of the district of Cochem, part 1, German art publisher Munich 1959, Pomerania, former. Archbishop's Castle House, pp. 674–678.