Imhoff family


The Imhoff, Imhof or Im Hof family is a noble patrician family that belonged to the wealthy trading dynasties and ruling oligarchy in the Free Imperial City of Nuremberg during its Golden Age in the Renaissance. The Imhoff Trading Company was one of the most important European traders between the 15th and 17th centuries. It maintained branches and trade connections throughout Europe and financed European courts with loans.

History

The family was originally from Lauingen where they belonged to the patrician families. Hans im Hof is the first mentioned member and Sigmund Imhof was mayor of Lauingen in 1277. The city belonged to the hereditary Duchy of the Hohenstaufen emperors. After the death of their last offspring, Conradin, in 1268, Lauingen fell to Louis II, Duke of Bavaria, following which a number of young patricians left the city, including Konrad and Hans II Imhoff, to settle in the free imperial city of Nuremberg. Hans II married Lucia Gross, a granddaughter of the famous Nuremberg patrician Konrad Gross, donator of the Heilig-Geist-Spital, and was accepted as a citizen and incorporated into the ruling Nuremberg patriciate. The Nuremberg Imhoff family belonged to the circle of families that had an exclusive access to the Inner Council of Nürnberg, to which the family sent representatives between 1402 and 1806, with only short interruptions. The family was related to other protestant patrician families of Nuremberg like the Tucher or Haller.
The Imhoffs became prosperous through long-distance trade by supplying the markets and trade fairs in Frankfurt, Cologne, Strasbourg, in the Upper Palatinate and in Bohemia from Lauingen. The Nuremberg "Imhoff Trading Company" was first mentioned in 1381 in trade between Venice, Nuremberg and Eastern Europe. They worked closely together with other Nuremberg traders such as the Gross, Mendel, Pfinzing, Stromer and Pirckheimer families. Their retail range was extensive and mainly included spices, colors, precious metals, silk, canvas and cloth, wine, tobacco, leather and skins, weapons and Nuremberg handicraft products, the latter mostly in exchange. The family was also invested in the mining industry in Saxony and Silesia.
Hans IV Imhoff founded a second trading company which, from the second half of the 15th century, concentrated on the trading centers of Western Europe. He had eight sons who not only maintained the older trading branches in Venice, Salzburg, Linz, Prague, Brno and Olomouc, but also founded new retail branches in Naples, Aquila, Messina, Lyon, Zaragoza, Lisbon, Antwerp and Amsterdam. In 1510 the Imhoffs founded a factory to sell Italian saffron in Bari. A brother of Hans V, Ludwig, went there and founded an Italian branch that remained in Bari until its extinction in 1719. In the saffron trade the Imhoffs became big competitors of the Tuchers. In 1505 three Imhoffs, as well as members of the Hirschvogel and Welser families, took part in an expedition on the first trade trip of Upper German merchants to India.
Hans V also entered the banking business. He was a close friend of Willibald Pirckheimer, Lazarus Spengler, Albrecht Dürer, Adam Kraft and Eobanus Hessus, and supported them financially. His grandson Willibald Imhoff, also a grandson of Willibald Pirckheimer, became a famous art collector. He was portrayed by Titian, and after the death of Andreas Dürer Imhoff was able to acquire numerous works by Albrecht Dürer.
The family also spread to Bavaria and Austria, as well as Saxony, Braunschweig, Hanover and the Netherlands. The Augsburg branch became quite influential, however, unlike their Lutheran Nuremberg cousins, they were catholic. They provided several mayors to the city and were related to the Fugger family. The new Augsburg Town Hall was commissioned by mayor Hieronymus Imhoff in 1609. He supported the Counter-Reformation and was therefore arrested by Swedish troops during the Thirty Years' War.
The Imhoff family donated numerous works of art in Nuremberg and elsewhere.
Imhof is a common name in Germany, and not all persons named Imhoff belong to the patrician family. Several branches of the family still exist.

Family members