By his wife Johanna Barbara of an unknown maiden name he had ten children, of whom two sons, Johannn Valentin (1698–1722) and Ignatz Marianus (1706–1784) came to important positions: Johann continued the family tradition of employment at the Court of Justice in Wetzlar, while Ignatz became a secretary to the Government of the Electorate of Mainz.
Mainz | Electorate of Saxony | University of Mainz | Electorate of Cologne | Electorate of Hesse | Electorate of Bavaria | Electorate of Brunswick-Lüneburg | Mainz Hauptbahnhof | Mainz Cathedral | Electorate of Mainz | Albert of Mainz | University of Applied Sciences Mainz | Mainz Anonymous | Ginninderra electorate | Thames (New Zealand electorate) | Molonglo electorate | Gold Fields (New Zealand electorate) | Electorate of Baden | Whangarei (New Zealand electorate) | Timaru (New Zealand electorate) | Tauranga (New Zealand electorate) | Siegfried I (Archbishop of Mainz) | Salentin's successor converted to Protestantism, triggering a war in the Electorate. In one of the first major sieges of the war, the Godesburg | Republic of Mainz | Palmerston North (New Zealand electorate) | Pakuranga (New Zealand electorate) | Onehunga (New Zealand electorate) | New Plymouth (New Zealand electorate) | Mount Albert (New Zealand electorate) | Manukau (New Zealand electorate) |
It can be traced back to Raphaël Nathan Bischoffsheim, an army contractor native of Tauberbischofsheim, in the Electorate of Mainz.
Count Christian, Louis Casimir's youngest brother then besieged Altenkirchen and the Electorate of Mainz besieged Hachenburg.
It did not really serve as a parish church then, but as a symbol for the power of the Electorate of Mainz proximate to the royal court at Frankfurt.