Hans Buser
Hans von Buus | |
---|---|
Freiherr of Liestal | |
Reign | 1536 – 1544 |
Predecessor | Hans Buser |
Successor | Hans Buser III "Der Canis" |
Born |
Läufelfingen, Prince-Bishopric of Basel, Holy Roman Empire | 23 September 1513
Died |
19 August 1544 31) Liestal, Prince-Bishopric of Basel, Holy Roman Empire | (aged
Burial | Buus, Switzerland |
Spouse | Margarete von Sachsen (1518–1545) |
Issue | Hans Buser "Der Canis" |
Religion | Catholicism |
Hans Buser (23 September 1513 – 19 August 1544), also known as Hans von Buus, was Freiherr of the Amt of Liestal from 1536 until his death in 1544.
Biography
Born in Läufelfingen, he was the first born son to Lord Hans Buser I. He had at least one brother, Oswald, and an unknown number of sisters. He was just 23 years old when his father died and he inherited his lands.[1]
His humble ancestors hailing from the small, local village of Buus in the Amt of Liestal, the young and ambitious Lord Buser sought to increase his family's wealth and influence in both the Prince-Bishopric of Basel and the Holy Roman Empire as a whole.[2] With his brother, he founded the city of Ziefen.[3][4] Using his political pull with the Prince-Bishop, he arranged a marriage to the last daughter of Johann von Sachsen, Margaret. By this connection to the royal family of the Empire, the marriage significantly increased his family's authority in the region and greater respect among the noble houses.[5][6]
He died at the age of 31 after falling ill to a fever. He had at least one son, Hans Buser III (1538-1584), who came to be known as "der Canis" for his bravery and death in the Cologne War in 1584.[7] The Buser family was eventually displaced from Liestal during the Thirty Years' War, and Hans' great-grandson, Georg, moved the family to his maternal homeland in Saxony under the name of Bausser.[8] Most of the family remained there, while others emigrated to Philadelphia in the late 1600s under Matthias Bowser.[9]
Citations
- ↑ J.J. Brodbeck, Gesch. der Stadt L.
- ↑ History of Liestal, Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz
- ↑ Anna Busser
- ↑ Ziefen, Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz
- ↑ J.J. Brodbeck, Gesch. der Stadt L.
- ↑ Lexikon des Mittelalters, vol. IX, col. 50, Munich 1969–1999
- ↑ Holborn, A History of Modern Germany, The Reformation, pgs. 287-290
- ↑ Addison B. Bowser, pg 8-10
- ↑ Addison B. Bowser, Preface
References
- Bowser, Addison Bartholomew (1922). The Bowser Family History. Chicago, IL: Excelsior Printing Co.
- Brodbeck, J.J. (1872). Geschichte der Stadt Liestal.
- Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz.
- Lexikon des Mittelalters, vol. IX, col. 50, Munich 1969–1999.
- Holborn, Hajo (1959). A History of Modern Germany, The Reformation. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.