Haslang

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Coat of arms of the Haslang family

The Counts of Haslang on Hohenkammer and Haslangkreit belonged to the Bavarian nobility . The sex produced numerous important officers and civil servants in the service of the Bavarian rulers.

history

Haslangkreit Castle in the 16th century.
Hohenkammer Castle 2006
Georg Christoph Freiherr von Haslang (1602–1684)

Wiguleus dog thought of Hanns and Wolf of Haslang, both at the 10th tournament to Zurich 1165. Even before 1327 seems Rudolf von Haslang († 1327), the former ducal Vitztum (Vicedom) first Duke Rudolf , then Duke Ludwig in Upper Bavaria to To have sat around. He donated the Haslangerkapelle to the Barfüßern in Munich and was buried there with his wife Adelheid de Küllental († 1337). Another documentary mention of the family comes from 1350. Here, Hannbrani (Haimeran) de Haslang, domini de Gereutt, Richter zu Aichach (1348) and his brother Hildprant are mentioned as the owners of the parish village Haslrangkreit .

Jorg von Haslang zu Haslangkreit († 1565 in Ingolstadt ) was a nurse in Neustadt an der Donau in 1544 , his wife Barbara was born von Rechberg. They had three sons, Heinrich, Rudolf, and Heimeronn. He was an experienced and eloquent man, which is one of the reasons why he became the royal councilor and governor of Ingolstadt. He bought Haslangkreit from his cousin and then, in 1550, the castle and the Hohenkammer court .

His son Heinrich (II.) Von Haslang († July 1, 1607) studied law in Orléans (1583), Bourges (1585) and Siena (1588), was a member of the knight's bench of the Bavarian court councilor from 1590, was court counselor and curator at Vilshofen , from 1601 court president. He married Barbara von Closen.

In the 17th century, the Hofmark Giebing belonged as an electoral fiefdom to the sons of Heinrich: Elector Maximilian I granted Georg Christoph Freiherr von Haslang (1602–1684) in Munich on December 11, 1638 for his share in the seat of Giebing after his brother Francis from Haslang zu Hohenkammer death a fiefdom. The ruler gave him and his descendants the office of hereditary landlord in 1618, appointed him in 1621 as a curb-Bavarian head coach and councilor and in 1622 raised him to the curb-Bavarian baron, then in 1635 he was appointed chamberlain. The baron rose in 1643 to court marshal ( hereditary steward ), officiated 1639–1662 as a nurse to Pfaffenhofen . Because he had proven himself as the Bavarian envoy to the Regensburg Reichstag 1641–1642 and in Vienna in 1642 and 1644, he was appointed Privy Councilor in 1645 and the Bavarian principal envoy in Münster . On his return, the envoy found his Hofmark Hohenkammer again badly damaged by the enemy incursion of 1646. After the elector died, said Georg Christoph von Haslang also received a fiefdom from Elector Ferdinand Maria in 1652 , namely about the Sitz-Burg-Stall and the Taferne zu Giebing. By acquiring the Hofmark Deutenhofen, a Bavarian state estate, he finally received the Reich Baron Diploma on April 11, 1653. The baron rose to the rank of chamberlain and in 1662 to the secret council director and from 1662–1679 was a nurse to Friedberg . Georg Christoph married Anna Katharina, daughter of Wolf Dietrich von Dalberg and widow of Johann Dietrich Echter von Mespelbrunn, his second marriage in Cologne on February 11, 1635 (marriage contract) to Maria Catharina (1611–1679), sister of Prince-Bishop of Münster and Paderborn Ferdinand II von Fürstenfeld zu Herdringen. The first marriage has three children, the second five sons and a daughter.

In addition to Georg Christoph, the Haslangs zu Haslangkreit and zu Hohenkammer provided at least four regiment owners or generals and commanders during the Thirty Years' War from 1635: Alexander, Johann Heinrich, said Georg Christoph and Georg Rudolf and thus served to finance the Bavarian war.

Georg Christoph's grandson Maximilian Friedrich and Ferdinand Johann Joseph were raised to the rank of count in 1739, but without making use of the title. Only after the renewal of the count's diploma by Elector Maximilian III. Joseph on September 10, 1745, the title of count was used.

Coat of arms of Count Franz Sigmund von Haslang with Grand Cross of the Order of St. George

Franz Xaver Graf von Haslang owned Giebing in 1772, meanwhile a patrimonial 2nd class and parish village in the district court of Dachau, Großhausen , Haslangkreit and Hohenkammer, his brother Franz Sigmund, treasurer and councilor, Asbach , Leuthen and Pürath, Rospach, Schacha, Tüßling , Ursprung and Waasen .

With the death of Count Franz Xaver on January 5, 1804, who had been a Bavarian chamberlain, councilor and knight of the Order of St. George, the male family died out.

Personalities

coat of arms

1745: A shield split down with three stakes in the so-called monkshood cut (cymbal cut), red on the left, gold on the right. On the crowned helmet is a gold-turned, crowned hat with the iron hat cut of the shield, with four black plumes. The ceilings are red and gold.

In the Georgi Order, the coat of arms is sworn in 1786 with a somewhat different gem, in a blue and silver ducal coat.

The Hasslang zu Hasslangkreit and Hohenkammer, whose coat of arms remained unchanged when the rank was increased, were ancestors and co-arms of those of Kemnat.

Riegerting Castle 1721

Property of the Counts of Haslang

Picture gallery

Today's coats of arms of former possessions of those von Haslang:

literature

  • Historical Association of Upper Bavaria: Upper Bavarian Archive for Patriotic History. Volume 1, Munich 1910
  • Johann Siebmacher: The coat of arms of the nobility in Upper Austria. Volume 27, Verlag Bauer & Raspe, Nuremberg 1984

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Johann Siebmacher: The arms of the nobility in Upper Austria. Volume 27, Verlag Bauer & Raspe, Nuremberg 1984, p. 106 f.
  2. Haslangkreit. In: vg-kuehbach.de. Retrieved January 4, 2015 .
  3. ^ Wolf-Armin Freiherr von Reitzenstein: Lexicon of Swabian place names. CH Beck, 2013, ISBN 978-3-406-65209-7 , p. 161. Restricted preview in the Google book search
  4. ^ Anton Baumgartner: Description of the city and the court of Neustadt an der Donau. Verlag Johann Baptist Strobel., Munich 1784, p. 48 f.
  5. Albrecht Cordes, Society for Reich Chamber Court Research (ed.): Legal argumentation, arguments of the jurists. Böhlau Verlag GmbH & Cie; Cologne 2006 p. 206
  6. a b Haslang zu Hohenkammer and Giebing, Georg Christoph von. In: lwl.org. Retrieved January 4, 2015 .
  7. ^ Johann Nepomuk Buchinger : Historical news about the former county and the district court Dachau (until 1800). Printed by Georg Franz, Munich 1844, p. 92
  8. ^ Gerhard Hetzer: 1648, 1748, 1848, 1948: Stations of Bavarian and German history: an exhibition in the Bavarian Main State Archives. Munich, October 22nd-20th December 1998, issue 38 of exhibition catalogs of the Bavarian State Archives, publishing house of the General Directorate of the Bavarian State Archives, Munich 1998, p. 68
  9. ^ Wilhelm Kohl: The diocese of Münster: the diocese. Volume 3, Verlag Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin 2003, p. 643
  10. Cordula Kapser: The Bavarian War Financing in the Second Half of the Thirty Years War 1635-1648 / 49. Aschendorff Verlag, 1997, p. 84
  11. ^ Historical Association of Upper Bavaria: Upper Bavarian Archive for Patriotic History - Volume 1, Munich 1910, p. 768
  12. Jump up Johann Nepomuk Felix von Zech: Indication of them in the Electorate of Baiern, Duchy of the Upper Palatinate, etc .. Printed by Maria Magdalena Mayrin, Munich 1772, without page indication
  13. Lwl.org Westphalian history: Haslang zu Hohenkammer and Giebing, Georg Christoph von
  14. ^ Johann Siebmacher: Siebmacher'sche Wappenbücher. Volume VI, 1st section: Dead Bavarian nobility, Verlag Bauer & Raspe, Nuremberg 1882, p. 15