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'''Egloff Etterlin''' (c. 1400 – c. 1470) served as secretary of the city of [[Lucerne]] from 1427 until 1452, and during 1458/9 as judge.
'''Egloff Etterlin''' (c. 1400 – c. 1470) served as secretary of the city of [[Lucerne]] from 1427 until 1452, and during 1458/9 as judge.


A native of [[Brugg]], Egloff received Lucerne citizenship in 1422. He married Agnes Stutzenbergin, daughter of [[Basel]] merchant Klaus Stutzenberg, and, after his first wife's death in 1439, Mechthild von Löwenbach as his second wife.
A native of [[Brugg]], Egloff received Lucerne citizenship in 1422. He married [[Agnes Stutzenbergin]], daughter of [[Basel]] merchant [[Klaus Stutzenberg]], and, after his first wife's death in 1439, [[Mechthild von Löwenbach]] as his second wife.


Besides acting as city scribe, he was the delegate to the [[Tagsatzung|Swiss Diet]] and to [[Duchy of Milan|Milan]]. During the [[Council of Basel]] he sought connections to merchants of [[Verona]], and later entered business relations with Milan in the interest of his father-in-law. He is the author of the "Silver Book" (''Silbernes Buch''), an extensive [[cartulary]] which was richly ornamented in 1505. Introducing Italian methods of book-keeping, he greatly facilitated the organisation of the Lucerne chancery, allowing the administration of the growing [[canton of Lucerne|territory of Lucerne]] and its presidency in the Swiss Diet. Egloff is the father of [[Chronicle of the Swiss Confederation|chronist]] [[Petermann Etterlin]]. It is uncertain whether Egloff himself was the author of a (lost) chronicle. Egloff died at some point between 1469 and 1477.
Besides acting as city scribe, he was the delegate to the [[Tagsatzung|Swiss Diet]] and to [[Duchy of Milan|Milan]]. During the [[Council of Basel]] he sought connections to merchants of [[Verona]], and later entered business relations with Milan in the interest of his father-in-law. He is the author of the "Silver Book" (''[[Silbernes Buch]]''), an extensive [[cartulary]] which was richly ornamented in 1505. Introducing Italian methods of book-keeping, he greatly facilitated the organisation of the Lucerne chancery, allowing the administration of the growing [[canton of Lucerne|territory of Lucerne]] and its presidency in the Swiss Diet. Egloff is the father of chronist [[Petermann Etterlin]] who authored the [[Chronicle of the Swiss Confederation]]. It is uncertain whether Egloff himself was the author of a (lost) chronicle. Egloff died at some point between 1469 and 1477.


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 16:28, 18 November 2023

Egloff Etterlin (c. 1400 – c. 1470) served as secretary of the city of Lucerne from 1427 until 1452, and during 1458/9 as judge.

A native of Brugg, Egloff received Lucerne citizenship in 1422. He married Agnes Stutzenbergin, daughter of Basel merchant Klaus Stutzenberg, and, after his first wife's death in 1439, Mechthild von Löwenbach as his second wife.

Besides acting as city scribe, he was the delegate to the Swiss Diet and to Milan. During the Council of Basel he sought connections to merchants of Verona, and later entered business relations with Milan in the interest of his father-in-law. He is the author of the "Silver Book" (Silbernes Buch), an extensive cartulary which was richly ornamented in 1505. Introducing Italian methods of book-keeping, he greatly facilitated the organisation of the Lucerne chancery, allowing the administration of the growing territory of Lucerne and its presidency in the Swiss Diet. Egloff is the father of chronist Petermann Etterlin who authored the Chronicle of the Swiss Confederation. It is uncertain whether Egloff himself was the author of a (lost) chronicle. Egloff died at some point between 1469 and 1477.

References

[edit]
  • Gregor Egloff: Etterlin, Egloff in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland, 2005.
  • K. Wanner, "Schreiber, Chronisten und Frühhumanisten in der Luzerner Stadtkanzlei des 15. Jh", Jahrbuch der Historischen Gesellschaft Luzern 18, 2000, 2–44.