Dietrich Reinkingk Explained

Dietrich Reinkingk
Theodor Reinking
(in Latin sources)
Birth Date:10 March 1590
Birth Place:Windau, Courland
Death Date:15 December 1664
Death Place:Glückstadt, Holstein (HRE)
Occupation:Academic (Law)
Politician
Spouse:1. Catharina Pistorius (1596-1661: m. 1616)
2.Dorothea Schiele (Schele) (m.1663)
Children:11

Dietrich Reinkingk (in Latin sources Theodor Reinking (10 March 1590 – 15 December 1664) was a German constitutional lawyer and politician, much of whose career was adversely impacted by the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648).[1] [2]

He was also an important early contributor to the Reichspublizistik movement, which sought to document and thereby promote and legitimise the constitutional arrangements and processes that operated in the Holy Roman Empire.[3]

Life

Dietrich Reinkingk was born in Windau, a port city and commercial centre now in Latvia, but in 1590 a German town in the Duchy of Courland. His father, Otto Reinkingk, came from a well established Lutheran family[4] of army officers and government officials. His mother, born as Hedewig von Lambsdorf, died in 1603 while Dietrich was still a child. It was also in 1603 that the boy was sent away from home, in order to escape from a plague epidemic. He ended up living with relatives in Osnabrück, where his grandfather had once been an alderman, and which is where he attended secondary school.[2] His subsequent schooling took him to nearby Lemgo and Stadthagen, where in 1610 he wrote a substantial dissertation on his subject, Law.[1]

In 1611 Reinkingk moved on to study at Cologne, and then Marburg, where his subjects were Philosophy and Legal sciences.[1] He received his doctorate for a dissertation entitled De brachio seculari et ecclesiastico in 1616.[5] Soon after this he was working at the Lutheran University of Giessen.[1] [6]

In 1617 Ludwig of Hesse-Darmstadt had Reinkingk appointed to an associate professorship at the Law Faculty of his new university in Giessen. However, Reinkingk left the faculty in 1618 when he was appointed a "Court Councillor" ("Hofrat") at Giessen.[1] Further appointments in Hesse-Darmstadt, now for the court/government administration rather than in the academic world, followed. In 1622 he was appointed an imperial vice-chancellor in Marburg.[1] He obtained a position with Adolf Frederick I, Duke of Mecklenburg, became Chancellor of Mecklenburg, based in Schwerin in 1632.[2] Mecklenburg had come under the influence of Sweden, but the power relationships between the belligerent powers were in a state of some flux during the 1630s, and with a background of shifting alliances and allegiances, by 1635 his role Adolf Frederick's man in Schwerin made him a target for the Swedish army.[2] Swedish troops arrested him in 1635. He was released in 1636, however, and took a post working for the Diocesan administrator of Bremen, better known as Prince Frederick of Denmark, a son of the Danish king.[1] He became a trusted advisor to Prince Frederick, who entrusted him with several important diplomatic missions.[2] As chancellor in the administration of Bremen, Reinkingk took part in peace negotiations at Münster and Osnabrück which eventually led to the end of the war in 1648. More immediately, however, for Reinkingk involvement in the negotiations led to a further period of imprisonment by the Swedes, between 1645 and 1647.[1]

In 1648 the Danish king died and Reinkingk's prince succeeded his father, becoming King Frederick III of Denmark. This led to Reinkingk's appointment as a Danish Privy councillor. He was also made Chancellor of what was known to the Danes as the "German Chancellery”, based in Glückstadt.[1] This amounted to a senior position at the court in Copenhagen coupled with senior administrative responsibilities for the king's southern territories of Schleswig-Holstein, where use in churches of Luther's High German translation of the bible was increasing daily use of German, albeit without entirely displacing Danish and other vernaculars. In 1649[2] or 1650,[1] the year of his sixtieth birthday, Dietrich Reinkingk was appointed to a position he had coveted, as President of the Appeal Court at Pinneberg.[1]

Unlike most of the Danish King's lands Holstein, which was included in Reinkingk's own extensive administrative bailiwick, was part of the Holy Roman Empire (as its most northerly region). In 1655 or 1656[2] the Emperor Ferdinand raised Reinkingk to the imperial nobility.

Personal

Dietrich Reinkingk married Catharina Pistorius on 3 October 1616. She predeceased him on 24 October 1661, by which time their 45-year marriage had produced 11 recorded children. His second marriage, on 25 February 1663, was to Dorothea, born Dorothea Schiele/Scheele and by now the widow of Johann Vieth (1581-1646).[2]

Dietrich Reinkingk died at Glückstadt on 15 December 1664.[1] His remains were buried at nearby Rellingen in the family burial vault,[7] which still (2015) exists.

Writings and teachings

The survival of Dietrich Reinkingk's notability is in large part the result of his written work. In the context of what later came to be known as the Reichspublizistik movement, Reinkingk was the most prominent advocate of imperial conservatism. He rejected rationalist contemporary theories that favoured a distancing from Imperial authority. Reinkingk imputed to the old Roman sources of the law a level of authority equal to that of Holy Scripture, eternal theological fundamentals and Lutheran dogma. His legal teaching was influenced by Lutheran ethics and by biblical theology, but tending towards a unified post-confessional constitutional order.

His objective was to preserve the threatened order spelled out in 1555, and to anchor it constitutionally. He savagely dismissed countervailing modern trends:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Reinkingk (Reinking), Dietrich (Theodorus) von (kaiserlicher Pfalzgraf 1627, Adel 1656) Jurist und Staatsmann . Neue Deutsche Biographie . Martin Otto . Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, München. 2003. 375–376. 28 September 2015.
  2. Web site: Dietrich Reinkingk, 10.3.1590-15.12.1664, jurist, kansler. Den Store Danske, København. Danish. Dansk Biografisk Leksikon. 18 July 2011 . 28 September 2015.
  3. Book: 28. Kaiser und Reich in der Reichspublizistik. Harm Klueting. Das Reich und Österreich 1648-1740. 1999. 3-8258-4280-0. Lit. Verlag.
  4. Book: Politzeiliteratur und -Wissenchaft bis Ende 18. JH.. 180. Hans Maier. Die ältere deutsche Staats- und Verwaltungslehre. C. H. Beck 2nd edition 1980. 1966. 978-3-406-57157-2.
  5. Web site: De brachio seculari et ecclesiastico, seu potestate utraque (image of the cover) . Nicolaus Hampelius (1616) & Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, (2012). 29 September 2015.
  6. Following the dynastically driven partition of Hesse in 1607 this institution was refounded as University for Hesse-Darmstadt (often referred to in sources as "Ludoviciana", after its (re)founder, Ludwig V . Today it has become the Justus Liebig of Giessen.
  7. Book: Geschichte Der Deutschen Rechtswissenschaft - Volume 18 of Gesch. d. Wiss. in Deutschland, neuere Zeit. Fietrich Reinking. Ernst Landsberg. Roderich von Stintzing.

    de:Roderich von Stintzing

    . Druck u. Verlag R.Oldenburg. 195. 1880 . 978-1143374791. 29 September 2015.
  8. Web site: Grimmelshausens 'Der Abentheuerliche Simplicissimus Teutsch": Workshop im Rahmen des Doktoratsprogramms "Medialität in der Vormoderne' . NCCR Mediality. Markus Christen. 20. Universität Zürich. 22 November 2013. 29 September 2015.
  9. "Die moderne Staatsräson ist eine Teufelsräson, das Gesetzbuch Gottes und dessen Observanz hingegen die beste ratio status und Versicherung des Staates." - Dietrich Reinkingk