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The first Lutheran Pastor
in Banat:
Johann Karl Reichard
(1700-1753)
In the Hessian Staves Archives of
Darmstadt (Abt.XI. Fol. 61-64) is the original letter to be found written back
on 20th of April 1722 by the Emperor Karl VI of the Austrian Empire
to his uncle the Landgrave Ernst-Ludwig of Hesse-Darmstadt in which he invites
his uncle Ernst-Ludwig to send him 600 of his subjects to his Domain in the
Banat, even though the Hessians were of Evangelical faith as their Landgrave
himself.
Miners were needed foremost for the silver
and copper mines around Banat’s southern Military border, north of New Palanka
on the Danube, which were re-opened by 1722. Lieutenant Johann Franz Krauss
suggested establishing freehold German mining cities in Orawitza, Lippa and
Moldowa, as the Serbs and the Romanians already worked the surrounding
farmland.
As the copper, iron, lead and silver mines
were re-opened new towns were established in Lugosch, Boksan, Dognatschka,
Gallina, New-Moldowa, Reschitza, Szaszkabanya,Devitsch, Hauerdorf, and
Orawitza. The first ethnic German villages were Denta, Langenfeld in 1717,
Facsad in 1718, Kudritz in 1719, Neupetsch, Groda, Jahrmarkt, Detta, Burzias
in 1720.
The first settlers arrived from the area
of Upper Hungary, from Siebenbürgen, the Zips and lower Hungarian mining towns
as well as from Sachsen. The Sachsens were Lutherans, as well as the newest
settlers coming from Hesse and Franken (upper Bavaria) duchies. After his
arrival in Banat, pastor Johann Karl Reichard wrote on 3rd of June
1724 to the pastor Surdorff in Adelsheim, Hesse: “Around the Pajlanka here in
Banat are already 10 German village established.”
The Lutherans of Langenfeld invited Pastor
Reichard to be their spiritual leader and with the permission of Count of
Mercy young Pastor Reichard left his hometown of Gross-Rohrheim in the
Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt and together with other 18 families (all together
82 members) headed for Banat.
Those 18 families were the following:
Johannes Orth
with wife and 5 children;
Johannes Knorr
with wife;
Johannes
Baumann with wife and 2 children;
Heinrich
Österreicher with wife and 5 children;
Hans Peter
Rindfuss with wife and 5 children;
Conrad Rindfuss
with wife and 1 child;
Heinrich
Schmitt with wife and 5 children;
Johann Schmitt
with wife and 4 children;
Johann Jacob
Weiss with wife and 2 children;
Hans Seebald
Lass with wife and 6 children;
Georg Niclol
Ramgen (died AD 1724) with wife and 4 children;
Peter Kroh with
wife and 3 children;
Heinrich
Schönbein with wife;
Anton Kohl with
wife,
Nicolaus
Handschuh with wife and 3 children;
Nicolaus Daub
with wife and 1 child;
Gertrud Freyler
von Franenhausen, widow;
Ludwig
Gottfried Guth (he returned home in 1725)
Pastor Reichard
held the first sermon in Langenfeld on the Turk’s cemetery on the 5th
Sunday after Trinitatis. From all six German villages, from Langenfeld,
Petrillowa, Orawitza, Russova, Hauerdorf and Saalahusen streamed the faithful to
be part of Banat’s first Lutheran sermon. The contemporary letters of those days
describing the event mentioned that more than 600 souls attended, most of them
in tears and some even crying loudly.
Pastor-Reichard's-Letters
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