As bishop, Goblinus served as an advisor to King
Louis the Great.[1] The charter of November 1376 renewing the statutes of the nineteen guilds of
Nagyszeben (Sibiu),
Segesvár (Sighișoara),
Szászsebes (Sebeș) and
Szászváros (Orăștie) was drafted by the bishop and the royal bailiff,
Johann von Scharfeneck.[1][2][3][4] Goblinus engineered the signing of a peace convention between the Saxons of Nagyszeben and the local
Vlachs at Kereszténysziget on 9 January 1383.[5] In 1383, Queen
Mary bestowed on Goblinus, his three brothers and three sisters a crown estate comprising the Saxon village of
Omlás (Amnaș) and four Vlach villages in the mountains.[1] In 1384, Goblinus founded a
Pauline monastery in the village of
Tótfalud (Tăuți).[6]
^Renáta Skorka, "The Buda Decision: Lessons from the Quarrel between the Sibiu Tanners and Shoemakers," Anuarul Institutului de Cercetări Socio-Umane Sibiu25 (2018): 33–45.
^John Foisel, Saxons Through Seventeen Centuries: A History of the Transylvanian Saxons (Central Alliance of Transylvanian Saxons of the United States, 1965), p. 63.
^Daniela Marcu-Istrate, Church Archaeology in Transylvania (ca. 950 to ca. 1450) (Brill, 2022), p. 268.
^Ela Cosma, "Enacted Jus Valachicum in South Transylvania (14th–18th Centuries)," Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai - Historia67, 1 (2022): 3–19.
^Corina Hopârtean, "Written Sources Regarding Pauline Monasteries in Medieval Transylvania," Bulletin of the Transilvania University of Brașov – Special Issue, Series VII, 10 (59), 1 (2017): 17–22.
^Veronika Csikos, "Styling the Dead: Tradition(s) of Making the Pontifical Tombstone in Angevin Hungary," Ikon4 (2011): 303–312.
doi:
10.1484/j.ikon.5.100705
Further reading
Firea, Ciprian (2011). "The Parish Priests of the Saxons as Patrons of the Arts". Transylvanian Review. 20 (Supplement 3): 511–532.