Daniel von Arentsschild

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Daniel von Arentsschild (* 1611 ; † 1670 ) was a German civil servant in the so-called Swedish era . He was war and district administrator for the Swedes .

Life

Arentsschild was born in 1611 as the son of the archbishop of Bremen's stable master Georg Arentsen. From 1642 on he had his seat in Oldendorf and was rewarded with a farm in the nearby Sunde . As a colonel, he was ennobled by Christina of Sweden on July 19, 1651 . From then on he was called von Arentsen . On May 30, 1663 he received from Charles XI. awarded the name of Arentsschild . In the course of secularization, as provost of the Himmelpforten monastery, he was the first administrator of the Himmelpforten office . Most recently he had the rank of lieutenant general in the Swedish military .

family

In his first marriage Arentsschild was married to Susanne Grantzin (born January 1, 1611; † January 5, 1665) and in his second marriage with Hedwig Ilse von Kuhla (born August 15, 1642; † April 16, 1712); with her he had the sons Carl (* December 10, 1669; † April 16, 1712) and Christoph Daniel (* 1667; † October 14, 1721). The epitaph of Arentsschild and his second wife as well as the crypt slab of his first wife are in the 800-year-old field stone church of St. Martin zu Oldendorf, for which Arentsschild also donated the altar.

Further descendants are Wilhelm von Arentsschild (born January 7, 1761 in Bremen; † October 25, 1835 in Hildesheim) and Alexander von Arentsschild (born October 14, 1806 in Lüneburg; † May 14, 1881 in Hanover).

coat of arms

The eagle and the lion from Arentsschild's coat of arms are also in the coat of arms of Oldendorf.

Honors

Von-Arentsschild-Straße was named after him in Oldendorf .

literature

  • Ernst Heinrich Kneschke: New general German nobility lexicon , Georg Olms Verlag, 1859, page 103

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Heinrich Kneschke : New general German nobility lexicon. Georg Olms Verlag, 1859, page 103
  2. ^ Christoph Daniel von Arentschild - Family tree Christoph Graf von Polier - Geneanet
  3. ^ Christian Friedrich August von Meding: Messages from noble coats of arms. Volume 2, p. 20