Background
Obentraut was born in Stromberg as the son of the Amtmann, Johan Bartel von Obentraut.
Obentraut was born in Stromberg as the son of the Amtmann, Johan Bartel von Obentraut.
He joined the army at an early age and is said to have been a formidable opponent because of his boldness. He initially served in the army of the Electorate of the Palatinate and joined Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly, on whose side he had fought against the Turks in Hungary. His last victory occurred at Nienburg, when he served as lieutenant general of Duke John Ernest I of Saxe-Weimar.
He prevented the army of the Catholic League, led by Johann Tserclaes, from occupying the town.
After this success, Obentraut intended to take Calenberg Castle in Schulenburg near Pattensen, which Tserclaes had occupied. On his way there, his unit of 700 horsemen met an army of 10000troops from Tserclaes"s army at Seelze near Hanover.
Obentraut rushed to the scene. Legend has it that he was in such a hurry that he wore only one boot and no helmet.
During the ensuing battle, he was hit by a fatal bullet.
Legend has it that Tserclaes closed Obentraut"s eyes. Obentraut"s body was held at Calenberg Castle for four months, before he was exchanged for a leading officer His body was then transferred to the Saint Aegidius Church in Hanover.
Two years later, he was finally buried in the Market Church, also in Hanover.
A 6-meter-high monument was erected in Seelze at the spot where Obentraut was wounded mortally. lieutenant was made in 1630 by the sculptor Jeremias Sutel (1587–1631) form Hanover.
lieutenant is unknown who commissioned the monument. The monument carries an inscription in Latin and the quote dedicated to the highest and best God.
In 1989, an oversized metal riding boot and a helmet were installed next to the monument.
They point to the items Obentraut was missing when he threw himself into the fray. The main thoroughfare through Seelze passes by this monument in the town center. Legend has it that Tserclaes"s Spanish trops were awed by his bravery and called him Deutscher Michel.
However, no proof of this story has been found in either Spanish or German contemporary sources.
The first author to mention it was Philipp Andreas Oldenburger in 1668, in a book published under the pseudonym Philipp Andreas Burgoldensis. Oldenburg"s reputation as a scientist was somewhat controversial during his lifetime.
: Stromberg am Soonwald feiert seinen großen Sohn vom 6. bis 9. Juni 1975. 400 Jahre Deutscher Michel (Hans Michel Elias von Obentraut), Dietz, Bad Kreuznach, 1975 Ernst Boehlich: Johann Michel Elias von Obentraut.
Zwischen Geschichte und Legende des "Deutschen Michels", Schlesischer Verlag, Breslau, 1926 Ernst Andreas Friedrich: Wenn Steine reden könnten.
Band II, Landbuch-Verlag, Hannover 1992, J. East. Heß (1887), "Hans Michael Elias von Obentraut", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (Asian Development Bank) (in German) 24, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp.