CRIME OF MANOR DESPOTISM? MURDER OF PATRIMONIAL SCRIBE BY CHARLES MAXIMILIAN OF BLEYLEBEN Cover Image

ZLOČIN Z PANSKÉ ZVŮLE? VRAŽDA VRCHNOSTENSKÉHO PÍSAŘE KARLEM MAXMILIÁNEM Z BLEYLEBENU
CRIME OF MANOR DESPOTISM? MURDER OF PATRIMONIAL SCRIBE BY CHARLES MAXIMILIAN OF BLEYLEBEN

Author(s): Jan Kilián
Subject(s): Criminal Law, Local History / Microhistory, Criminology, 17th Century
Published by: Univerzita Konštantína Filozofa v Nitre, Filozofická fakulta
Keywords: Early modern time; Murder; Nobility; Serfs; Litigation; Family of Bleyleben;

Summary/Abstract: The article deals with the circumstances of the murder committed in 1647 in North Bohemian town Krupka by young Baron Charles Maximilian of Bleyleben against Johannes Brosche, a serf and servant of his father. Thanks to the well-preserved sources, it is possible to trace the course of the case for several years, from the investigation of the crime, but unpunished, to the judicial recovery of compensation and the salary that Brosche was allegedly not paid during his seventeen years of service. At the end of the Thirty Years‘ War, in 1647, the North Bohemian mining town of Krupka was excited by the murder of the patrimonial scribe Johannes Brosche (1607–1647), committed by the young Baron Charles Maximilian of Bleyleben (1616–1648). Brosche was a serf and servant of his father Alexander Regniers of Bleyleben (1578/1579–1649), the imperial colonel and court war council, the owner of the North Bohemian estates Všebořice and Soběchleby. The extraordinary nature of the studied case does not lie in the event itself, but in the preservation of archival sources, which allow a relatively detailed follow-up of the whole case from its beginnings, albeit without gaps and question marks. Bleyleben committed the deed during a visit to the parish house in Krupka, with no apparent cause, apparently drunk. But it was not by far his first aggressive behavior, he had repeated problems with the law and stayed in both home and regular prison (skirmishes, an attempt to provoke a fight, violation of anti-quarantine, knocking a little boy by a horse). On the other hand, Brosche, 39, had been in the service of his father for seventeen years, had four children between the ages of one and thirteen, and he and his wife were among the most popular people in and around Krupka, which was confirmed by their frequent godmother role. The murder took place in a public place, in front of many eyewitnesses who were able to describe exactly what happened. Bleyleben, perhaps in order to prove to the pastor that he could answer the murder before God, had pierced Brosche with his sword.

  • Issue Year: 24/2020
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 339-353
  • Page Count: 15
  • Language: Czech