Jost Pfyffer (merchant, died 1584)
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Jost Pfyffer | |
|---|---|
| Died | 7 August 1584 |
| Occupations | Merchant, politician |
| Family | Pfyffer |
Jost Pfyffer (died 7 August 1584 in Lucerne) was a Lucerne merchant and politician, member of the prominent Pfyffer family.
He served as avoyer of Lucerne and was a leading figure of the French party in the city, before being implicated in the Pfyffer-Amlehn conspiracy and sentenced to perpetual banishment.
Jost Pfyffer was the son of Hans Pfyffer, a tailor, cloth merchant, grocer, and member of the Small Council, and of Margaretha Kiel. He was the brother of Kaspar Pfyffer. He married four times: Dorothea Sonnenberg, Anna Maria Cloos, Anna Heinserlin, and (in 1582) Margaretha von Moos. He likely completed an apprenticeship as a tailor and subsequently worked as a cloth merchant, trader, rentier, and financier.[1]
Pfyffer was elected to the Grand Council from 1543, then to the Small Council of Lucerne (1550–1569 and 1573–1584). He served as Baumeister (1557–1558) and as avoyer in alternation with Niklaus Amlehn (1559–1569), and was a delegate to the Federal Diet (1560–1568). He also held several bailiff (Vogt) posts: Kriens and Horw (1543–1545), Büron (1547–1549), Entlebuch (1551–1553), Lugano (1554–1556), and Rothenburg (1557–1559).[1]
Captain Pfyffer was the representative of the French party in Lucerne. After the death of Lux Ritter in 1559 he took over the distribution of French pensions, and was ennobled by Charles IX of France in 1563.[1]