Dietrich Arnsborg – Wikipedia

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Dietrich Arnsborg (also: by Arensborg ) (* around 1475 in Hanover, † 1558 ibid), among other things, was involved in the introduction of the Reformation in the city of Hanover. [first]

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Dietrich von Arnsborg was a “son of the new citizen of the same name and, in 1473 [in Hanover], who was first called in 1486 in the shot registers [the city]”. In 1498 the junior was also listed for the first time. [first]

Two years later, Arnsborg became the master of the city’s guard in 1500 and in 1504 bricklayers. [2] A good two decades later from 1525 to 1540, Arnsborg was both elected older man and the word holder of the “meanness”, the community of Hannover’s uninvited citizens, “whom he, although no longer as a word holder, still belonged until 1548”. [first]

Dietrich Arnsborg had already been instrumental in the introduction of the Reformation in Hanover: On June 26, 1533, the word holder sweared the citizens gathered on the market square between the then town hall and the market church, to the new ecclesiastical teaching initiated by Martin Luther. [first] Arnsborg is said to have called up the citizens: All deodas who thinks Nu Fordan an Evangelical Broder to Syn un by the Evangelio to Blywen, the Böhre syne hand in the Höge. As a result, the adoption of the new teaching was unanimously. This cuddly scene was seen on the base of the Luther monument at the Marktkirche in a relief presentation that was no longer preserved. [3] [4]

This oath marked the beginning of the Reformation “from below”, against the will of the old believer clerus and the Catholic sovereign Erich, Duke of Braunschweig-Lüneburg and the ruling prince of Calenberg-Göttingen. [5] The oath was repeated on August 20 of the year on the old town hall; [6] In the same year, the city’s council, which has been in the previous belief, had to give way to Catholic Hildesheim at the time. [5] Anton von Berckhusen became the first mayor of Hanover after the Reformation. [7]

Arnsborg, whose will has been handed down on February 28, 1558 in the “City Protocol Book”, died “probably” between February 28 and March 16, 1558. [first]

  • For some of the picturesque design of the city director Heinrich Tramm, who was still built at the time of the German Empire in Hanover, the Swiss painter Ferdinand Hodler: In his monumental painting unanimity From 1913, the Worthalter Arnsborg focuses on an increased podium between the assembled – pure male – citizens. Tramm held on the painting, originally created for the Mayor’s Hall, despite numerous hostility. The work survived both National Socialism and air strikes on Hanover in the Second World War and today takes a wall in Hodler hall of the town hall in full width. [8]
  • Unlike the painting of Hodler, which was created in 1913, which emphasizes the grassroots democracy, emphasizes the history frieze at around the same time at the facade of the new town hall, which is referring to the tram square, the more autocratic, anti-determination of urban autonomy: not the citizens of 1533, but the “as early as 1525 for primarily fiscal reasons for the Reformation, which was subsequently found in Lüneburg Duke Ernst, [who] had nothing to do with the Stadthannover citizens’ reformation […],” [9] was in the very right image relief by the sculptor Peter Schumacher immortalized. [ten]
  • The one laid out in 1929 in the Hanover district of Kleefeld Arensborgstraße According to the address book of the city of Hanover, “after an old Hanoverian patrician family” is said to have been named, according to which archivist Helmut Zimmermann “more correctly after the word holder of Much (the not guild -bound citizen) in the Reformation period”. [11]
  • Franz Wiebe: Dietrich Arnsborg, a study on the history of the Reformation in Hanover. In: Hanoverian history sheets , New Episode 12 (1959), pp. 113–178
  • Helmut Zimmermann: Arnsborg, Dietrich (from). In: Dirk Böttcher, Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen: Hanoverian biographical lexicon. From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9, pp. 32f.; partially preview About Google books
  • Helmut Zimmermann: Arnsborg, Dietrich (from). In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (ed.) And.: Stadtlexikon Hanover. From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hanover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9, p. 36.
  • Cornelia Regin (hrsg.): Cornelia Regin. Spray and power. Commemorative publication on the 100th anniversary of the inauguration of the new town hall in Hanover , in line Hanoverian studies. Series of the Hanover City Archives , Vol. 14, Hannover: Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung, 2013, ISBN 978-3-7752-4964-5; in it u. a.:
    • Gerhard Schneider: Ferdinand Hodler and his painting for the new town hall in Hanover , S. 167–199
    • Carl-Hans Hauptmeyer: Authoritarian versus autonomous? In: Urban self -administration and town hall – a historical longitudinal section , Pp. 37–52, especially p. 51
  1. a b c d It is Helmut Zimmermann: Arnsborg … (see literature)
  2. The brick lord was an urban office. The brick lord was responsible for the supervision of the bricks. [first] [2]
  3. Franz Hinrich Hesse: Homelands. A companion by hiking through the city of Hanover and the area, according to the location, origin, meaning, etc. , Helwingsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Hannover (no. J.; Around 1929), p. 7, No. 37 (Arensborg, Dietrich)
  4. Illustration of the monument with the base from the time of origin
  5. a b The Reformation and its consequences. In: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (ed.): History of the city of Hanover. From the beginning to the beginning of the 19th century , Hanover: Schlütersche, 1994, ISBN 3-87706-364-0, pp. 126–136, here in particular p. 126; online above Google books
  6. 1533. In: Hanover Chronicle , S. 37; online above Google books
  7. Klaus Mlynek: Berckhusen, from (van) (1) Anton. In: Hanoverian biographical lexicon , S. 50; online About Google books
  8. Gerhard Schneider: Ferdinand Hodler and his painting for the new town hall in Hanover (see literature)
  9. Carl-Hans Hauptmeyer: Authoritarian versus autonomous? (see literature)
  10. Helmut Knocke, Hugo Thielen: Tramplatz 2. In: Hanover art and cultural lexicon , S. 206ff.
  11. Helmut Zimmermann: Arensborgstraße. In: The street names of the state capital of Hanover , Verlag Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 1992, ISBN 3-7752-6120-6, p. 28

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