Nobility: Letter Wassenberg 1641, Man From Pallandt, Repair Post IN Beeck

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You are bidding on one letter of 1641 from Wassenberg (Heinsberg district).


Written by a representative of the noble family by Pallandt. -- It is probably about a descendant of Wilhelm von Pallandt, mayor of Wassenberg (d. 1634), and / or Dietrich von Pallandt, 1610/11 as bailiff at Wassenberg verifiable. Possibly the author was also a magistrate at Wassenberg?


Without addressing, but directed to the Lords of Beeck auf Beeck (Wegberg).


DatedWassenberg, 3. June and 7 June 1641.


Verso later synopsis: "Orders to the Lehn-Botten to put the post that Beecker tore up back in its place."


It is not clear whether "post" is meant here in the modern sense or not. Posts for postmen / stagecoaches, since it is difficult to tear them out. Maybe a hut or similar. meant for this one?


Excerpts:

3. June 1641: "It was ordered that local rulers, towards tomorrow; Tuesday at the right cheerful time, be at Beeck's disposal to post a post there, so the neighbors had been ripped off in the previous way and to inform the neighbors that they were aware of all the attacks the thing under penalty of 25 ggr. useful and to contain."


17. June 1641: "[...] you will give the chiefs, and residents, of the village Beeck under 10 ggr. Strictly ordered to parry my last recossin{?} in matters of {???} Beecken, Contra common{?} recommended within three days{?}."


Signed each "Palland."


Format: 20.5x19cm.


Condition:paper somewhat stained; with small tears in the area of ​​the fold. BiPlease also note the pictures!

Internal note: Solar2207 folder 2


About the postal system in the Thirty Years' War (source: wikipedia):

In the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) the post office was of exceptional importance. Lamoral of Taxis, who died on April 16. On January 1, 1608, he was made a baron, was elevated to the hereditary rank of count in 1624, but died shortly thereafter. In the same year (1624) the first Danish postal regulations were published, which also applied to Schleswig and Holstein. The overhead line was in the hands of four merchants with the title of postal administrator. The Danish postal system was nationalized in 1640. In 1631, the Swedes occupied Saxony and took over its postal system. 1636 demanded Emperor Ferdinand III. (1608-1657) at the Reichstag in Regensburg an opinion on the retention of the merchant and butcher posts. The report came to the conclusion that corporate and municipal posts could not be banned everywhere. Nevertheless, on 12 August 1637 the secondary posts were banned for the whole empire. With the approval of the courts in Brunswick, Hanover and Kassel, the haulier Rötger Hinüber in Hildesheim set up a postal connection between Hamburg, Bremen, Hanover, Brunswick and Kassel and was appointed ducal Brunswick-Lüneburg postmaster in Hildesheim in 1641. In 1644 a Mecklenburg-Schwerin state post office was established with the Schwerin–Rostock line. In 1645 the Taxisschen Reitpost was allowed to pass through Braunschweig territory on the postal route from Frankfurt (Main), Kassel, Braunschweig, Lüneburg to Hamburg.

In the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) the post office was of exceptional importance. Lamoral of Taxis, who died on April 16. On January 1, 1608, he was made a baron, was elevated to the hereditary rank of count in 1624, but died shortly thereafter. In the same year (1624) the first Danish postal regulations were published, which also applied to Schleswig and Holstein. The overhead line was in the hands of four merchants with the title of postal administrator. The Danish postal system was nationalized in 1640. In 1631, the Swedes occupied Saxony and took over its postal system. 1636 demanded Emperor Ferdinand III. (1608-1657) at the Reichstag in Regensburg an opinion on the retention of the merchant and butcher posts. The report came to the conclusion that corporate and municipal posts could
In the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) the post office was of exceptional importance. Lamoral of Taxis, who died on April 16. On January 1, 1608, he was made a baron, was elevated to the hereditary rank of count in 1624, but died shortly thereafter. In the same year (1624) the first Danish postal regulations were published, which also applied to Schleswig and Holstein. The overhead line was in the hands of four merchants with the title of postal administrator. The Danish postal system was nationalized in 1640. In 1631, the Swedes occupied Saxony and took over its postal system. 1636 demanded Emperor Ferdinand III. (1608-1657) at the Reichstag in Regensburg an opinion on the retention of the merchant and butcher posts. The report came to the conclusion that corporate and municipal posts could
In the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) the post office was of exceptional importance. Lamoral of Taxis, who died on April 16. On January 1, 1608, he was made a baron, was elevated to the hereditary rank of count in 1624, but died shortly thereafter. In the same year (1624) the first Danish postal regulations were published, which also applied to Schleswig and Holstein. The overhead line was in the hands of four merchants with the title of postal administrator. The Danish postal system was nationalized in 1640. In 1631, the Swedes occupied Saxony and took over its postal system. 1636 demanded Emperor Ferdinand III. (1608-1657) at the Reichstag in Regensburg an opinion on the retention of the merchant and butcher posts. The report came to the conclusion that corporate and municipal posts could
Autogrammart Schriftstück
Erscheinungsort Wassenberg
Material Papier
Sprache Deutsch
Autor von Pallandt
Original/Faksimile Original
Genre Geschichte
Eigenschaften Erstausgabe
Eigenschaften Signiert
Erscheinungsjahr 1641
Produktart Handgeschriebenes Manuskript