Ceumern

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Coat of arms of the Ceumern and Ceumern-Lindenstjerna

Ceumern , in the main line from the middle of the 18th century Ceumern-Lindenstjerna , is the family name of a German-Baltic noble family . It came from Langensalza in Thuringia and was first documented in 1662 in the Baltic States with the Livonian District Administrator Kaspar III. Zeumer (1613–1692) mentioned in Riga, who was raised to the Swedish nobility that year. Around 1750 the family split into a Russian branch and the Orgishof-Breslau and Tirsen houses, from which the two male heirs were ennobled to Russian barons in 1854 .

history

The family comes from Kilian Zeumer, who was mentioned in the floor register of Langensalza in Thuringia as a resident citizen in 1528 , had been a treasurer since 1567 and died as mayor of Langensalza in 1575 .

His great-grandson Kaspar III. Zeumer (1613–1692) studied law in Rostock , then went to Sweden and in 1652 became assessor of the Pernauza regional court ( Livonia ), 1657 secretary of the Livonian knighthood and subsequently district judge and court judge assessor . In 1667, 1674 and 1676 he acquired the Blumbergshof, Fianden and Grundsal estates in Livonia and was elected district administrator in 1686. Kaspar III was ennobled in Sweden on October 31, 1662. In 1684, King Charles XI confirmed . von Sweden (1655–1697) the nobility with the predicate "von Ceumern" and extended it to his nephews Christian (1671–1695) and Johann Kaspar (1615–1706).

Johann Kaspar von Ceumern was followed in the male line by Gustav († 1747) and his sons Adam Burchard (founder of the Orgishof-Breslau house, 1727–1789) and Karl Ernst (founder of the Tirsen house, 1734–1791). Johann Kaspar's second son Magnus Johann (* 1690) and his son Karl Magnus I (1730–1772) are the ancestors of the Russian line (фон Цеймерны).

After his marriage to Sophia Elisabeth von Lindenstjerna (1727–1795), Adam Burchhard von Ceumern had the name of his wife as an addition, so he and his descendants continued to use the name Ceumern-Lindenstjerna to this day. His brother Karl Ernst von Ceumern ran the Tirsen house, he was chamberlain to Tsar Peter III. (1728–1762), Russian brigadier and was raised to the Russian hereditary nobility as a baron on February 25, 1762 . The recognition of the Russian nobility title baron - for both houses - was made by Senatsukas on December 7, 1854.

Possessions

The family temporarily owned the following manors in Livonia:

  • In the Latvian district: Blumbergshof, Fianden, Grundsal, Schöneck, Nurmis (Segewold church game), Spurnal, Kl.-Wrangelshof (Dickeln church game), Kürbelshof, Alt-Salzenau and Mahlenhof.
  • In the Estonian district: Megel, Penniküll and Kerstenhof .

At the time of the confiscation of the manors' estates by the Latvians in 1920, the von Ceumern owned Orgishof (since 1757), Breslau (since 1780) and Tirsen (since 1784) in the Latvian district.

coat of arms

Municipal
coat of arms of Braslava vald

According to the diploma dated June 25, 1684, both houses have the following coat of arms : Two silver bars in the blue coat of arms , a five-pointed silver star each in the head and base of the shield . Crest two armored arms, holding a silver star. Blue-silver helmet cover . The first coat of arms after the Swedish diploma of October 31, 1662 for Caspar Ceumern shows different tinctures and three bars instead of two.

The coat of arms of the municipality of Braslava in Estonia shows clear similarities with the family coat of arms of the Ceumern-Lindenstjerna.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. "Floor registers were internal council documents ... which were kept as complete and accurate as possible. The fact that a new register was created for each floor appointment testified to the effort to have as precise documents as possible ... In this respect, the floor registers seem more trustworthy than the council report ”presented using the example of Dresden , in: Matthias Meinhardt , Dresden im Wandel: Raum und Population der Stadt in the residence formation process of the 15th and 16th centuries, Volume 4 of Hallische Contributions to the History of the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age , Oldenbourg Verlag, 2009, ISBN 3050049685 [1] , page 117, accessed on April 16, 2018.
  2. Carl Friedrich Göschel , Chronicle of the City of Langensalza in Thuringia , published 1842, original by Bayerische Staatsbibliothek , digitized Aug. 27, 2008 [2] , page 175, accessed on April 16, 2018.
  3. Bernhard Peter, Historische Heraldische Exlibris (12), Exlibris von Alexander v. Dachhausen: 1902 for Eric Freiherr von Ceumern-Lendenstjerna [3] , accessed April 16, 2018.