Baggehufwudt (noble family)
Baggehufwudt , also Baggo and Benton , Swedish Bagghufvud , Russian Багговут , is the name of a Swedish , Baltic and Russian noble family .
history
The Baggehufwudt are an originally Scandinavian noble family, whose line of tribe begins with Hans Persson Bagge († after 1602), who was presumably born in Norway and came to Stockholm in 1565, on Pungsund, Södermanland County . In 1617 and 1632 the family came to Estonia with the Swedes and was included in the register (No. 76) of the Estonian knighthood there in 1752 . As early as 1652, the nobility of the sex was renovated in Sweden and in 1668 it was introduced to the nobility class of the Swedish knighthood (No. 755). In 1669 the Swedish line became extinct, while the Estonian line was able to expand into Russia. Relative descendants now live in Australia , Canada , Germany, and the United States .
coat of arms
The coat of arms is quartered , fields 1 and 4 show in blue a natural, forward-looking ram's head with black horns, accompanied by three (1: 2) silver stars , fields 2 and 3 show in silver an upright iron battle ax pointing to the right calibrated beard, the stem surrounded by two red roses . On the helmet with blue-silver blankets over a blue-white-red helmet bulge a peacock mirror between eight double-sided alternating silver and blue flags on black spikes with golden tips.
Relatives
- Friedrich Wilhelm von Baggehufwudt (* 1726), Estonian judge
- Friedrich von Baggehufwudt († 1810), Russian premier major, customs director in Feodossija and court councilor in Libau
- Karl Gustav von Baggehufwudt (1761–1812), Russian lieutenant general
- Alexander Alexius Woldemar von Baggehufwudt (1801-1883), Russian general of the cavalry
- Alexander von Baggehufwudt (1806-1883), Russian general
- Hermann von Baggehufwudt (1808–1890), Russian lieutenant general
- Karl von Baggehufwudt (1810–1895), Russian general of the infantry
- Nikolai von Baggehufwudt (1853–1924), Russian lieutenant general
- Alexander von Baggehufwudt (* 1861), Russian statesman, governor of Poltava and Kursk
- Iwan von Baggehufwudt (1862–1933), Russian lieutenant general, commander of the 42nd Army Corps
Karl Gustav von Baggehufwudt (1761–1812)
Alexander von Baggehufwudt (1806-1883)
Ivan von Baggehufwudt (1862–1933)
literature
- Gabriel Anrep : Svenska adelns ättartaflor. Volume 1, Stockholm 1858, p. 108. (Swedish)
- Otto Magnus von Stackelberg (edit.): Genealogical Handbook of the Baltic Knights , Part 2, 1.2: Estonia, Görlitz 1930, pp. 1–15
- Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Adelslexikon Volume I, Volume 53 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, 1972, p. 185
Web links
- Bagghufvud on Adelsvapen-Wiki = Gustaf Elgenstierna : Den introducerade svenska adelns ättartavlor. Volume 1, Stockholm 1925 (Swedish)
- Bagghufvud in Riddarhuset (Swedish)
Individual evidence
- ^ A b Carl Arvid Klingspor : Baltisches Wappenbuch Wappen all the noble families belonging to the knights of Livonia, Estonia, Courland and Oesel , Stockholm 1882, p. 68 , Tfl. 5.
- ^ Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry to Baggehufwudt, Friedrich Wilhelm v .. In: BBLD - Baltic biographical lexicon digital
- ^ Baltic Historical Commission (Ed.): Entry to Baggehufwudt, Friedrich * Wilhelm v .. In: BBLD - Baltic biographical lexicon digital
- ↑ Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry to Baggehufwudt (Russian Baggovut), Alexander Alexius Woldemar v .. In: BBLD - Baltic biographical lexicon digital
- ^ Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry to Baggehufwudt, Hermann Nikolai v .. In: BBLD - Baltic biographical lexicon digital
- ^ Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry to Baggehufwudt, Karl Theodor v .. In: BBLD - Baltic biographical lexicon digital