Chevallerie

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coat of arms of the de la / von La / von der Chevallerie

Chevallerie is the name of an originally French family that had belonged to the French nobility since 1547. The coat of arms represents a jumping silver horse against a red background under a crown of leaves .

history

The family originally came from Brittany . It appears for the first time with Guillaume Chevalerie, who in 1492 belonged to the Confrérie de Notre Dame with patron Martin von Tours in Vitré . Georges Chevalerie, born around 1500, was the landlord at L'Épine near Vitré. In 1545 he acquired L'Éperonnière Castle near Craon , which became the family headquarters. On July 10, 1547, Georges Chevalerie received confirmation of his nobility from the French crown for himself and his family.

Around 1660, his Huguenot great-grandson Simeon de la Chevallerie, born 1635, and the Huguenot widow of his relative Gilles de la Chevallerie, Baron de la Motte, fled to Germany with their three children. Of the branches that remained Catholic and died out in France, one line is still blooming in Belgium.

Three lines were established by the family members who came to Germany: One that descends from Gilles expired in the 19th century, while the two lines established by the grandchildren of Simeon still exist. Their membership in the aristocracy was not objected to in Prussia , in whose armies many of their members served. The family occurs in Germany under the name forms de la Chevallerie Baron de la Motte, de la Chevallerie, von der Chevallerie and von La Chevallerie.

Known family members

literature

  • Genealogical manual of the nobility. Nobility Lexicon. Volume II, CA Starke-Verlag, Limburg 1994.
  • Genealogical manual of the nobility. Volume B VI, CA Starke-Verlag, Limburg, 1964, p. 72 ff.
  • Genealogical paperback of the knights and Noble families. 1880. Fifth year, pp. 73 ff.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Genealogical handbook of the nobility. Nobility Lexicon. Volume II, CA Starke-Verlag, Limburg 1994, p. 278.