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Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier Founder with two daughters. On the banner: O mater dei misere(re) mei (O Mother of God, have mercy on me).

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

around 1497

Founder with two daughters. On the banner: O mater dei misere(re) mei (O Mother of God, have mercy on me).


1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

photo 2015, Theo Noll

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier Overall view

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

around 1497

Overall view


1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

photo 2015, Theo Noll

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier The Saints Elisabeth and Katharina

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

around 1497

The Saints Elisabeth and Katharina


1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

photo 2015, Theo Noll

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier Beggar

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

around 1497

Beggar


1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

photo 2015, Theo Noll

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier The Mystical Marriage of St. Catherine

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

Info

around 1497


The Mystical Marriage of St. Catherine


photo 2015, Theo Noll

1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier Maria and Barbara

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

around 1497

Maria and Barbara


1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

photo 2015, Theo Noll

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier Saints Barbara and Kunigunde (patron saint of Kunigunde Lehenmaier)

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

around 1497

Saints Barbara and Kunigunde (patron saint of Kunigunde Lehenmaier)


1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

photo 2015, Theo Noll

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier Founder's family and inscription with dates of death

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

Info

around 1497


Founder's family and inscription with dates of death


photo 2015, Theo Noll

1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier Donor with inscription: Miserere mei, Deus - God, have mercy on me

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

around 1497

Donor with inscription: Miserere mei, Deus - God, have mercy on me


1.710 / 5.000The work is attributed to a Nuremberg workshop in the Wolgemut area. Hans Lehenmaier died on December 15, 1492, his wife Kunigunde on June 30, 1497. As one of the mayors of the town of Neumarkt in the Upper Palatinate, Hans Lehenmaier, together with the knight and mayor Martin von Wildenstein, the other mayor Heinrich Frickenhofer, and Ulrich Zechmayr, acted as arbitrators for the manslaughter of Hans Wintersteiner, innkeeper of Seligenporten. According to the sworn letter dated October 2, 1472, the three participants in the crime pledged to finance 30 funeral masses at the site where the innkeeper was buried by Candlemas (February 2, 1473), and to also pay five pounds of wax for this purpose. As an anniversary for the deceased, five masses were to be held over the next five years. Furthermore, the perpetrators were required to finance a pilgrimage to Rome and Aachen and erect a stone cross at a location to be determined by the innkeeper's relatives. They were required to pay the innkeeper's widow 70 guilders in fixed installments. The widow and heirs of the deceased were not to be burdened with the costs incurred in connection with the imprisonment in Neumarkt, where two of the perpetrators were imprisoned. The stone cross still preserved today on the road to Pavelsbach (Neumarkt district) may be identical to the cross mentioned in 1472, since one of the perpetrators, Fritz Eyben (also called Eyban), who had to bear the largest share of the costs and was probably the main culprit, came from this place. The sentence is published by Franz Lehmeier: Stone Crosses. Witnesses to Medieval Justice, in: Die Oberpfalz 45 (1957), pp. 91-92. In 1487, Hans Lehenmaier served as a lay judge.

Location: Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Parish Church of St. John

Realization: Wolgemut, - Umkreis -

photo 2015, Theo Noll

- Umkreis -
Wolgemut

Further works

Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier
Epitaph for Hans and Kunigunde Lehenmaier

Werkstatt
Wolgemut

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A project of the Förderverein Kulturhistorisches Museum Nürnberg e.V. (Association for the Promotion of the Museum of Cultural History Nuremberg - registered association)

The Förderverein Kulturhistorisches Museum Nürnberg e.V. supports the establishment of a museum of cultural history in Nuremberg. In anticipation of this it presents selected works of Nuremberg art in digital form. The Association will be happy to welcome new members. You will find a declaration of membership on our website.

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