Dannenberg (noble family)

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Coat of arms of those of Dannenberg

Dannenberg , formerly also Tannenberg , is the name of a noble family that belonged to the ancient nobility of Lüneburg . Branches of the sex persist to this day.

From the old Counts of Dannenberg as well as the barons of Tannberg or Tannenberg (Dannenberg) the sex is to be distinguished. These come from Tyrol and came to Upper Austria in 1729 . There is also no relationship to the Barons von Tannenberg in Swabia or to a Silesian family from Dannenberg.

history

Dannenberg an der Elbe, Merian - city view from 1645; on the right, Dannenberg Castle , of which only the Waldemarturm has been preserved

The name is derived from the town of Dannenberg on the Elbe . The family first appears in documents with Helingerus miles de Dannenberghe between 1190 and 1195. The documented line of trunks begins in 1237 with Ernestus de Dannenberghe . Knight Heinrich von Dannenberg sealed the chess bar coat of arms in 1282.

The historian Zedlitz-Neukirch traced the family back to the counts and lords of the County of Dannenberg , who died out in the count's line in the second half of the 14th century. The historians Jakob Christoph Beck and August Johann Buxtorf also traced the origin to the old Counts of Dannenberg.

Count Bernhard I. von Dannenberg (first documented mention 1227 to 1266) had five sons, including Guncelinus (first documented mention 1264). Gunzel von Dannenberg is said to have been Heinrich's father, who after the abdication of his agnates in 1303 stayed in the Lüneburg region , but because he lacked the count's fortune, he called himself noble Herr von Dannenberg.

Progenitor of the line that is flourishing today

Heinrich von Dannenberg's son Heinrich was a knight and still lived in 1375. His son of the same name recorded documents from 1350 to 1397 and was the father of Gebhard, Otto, Paridam and Segeband, of which Gebhard and Paridam donated two lines. Paridam's line, from which the Brunswick-Lüneburg colonel Georg von Dannenberg († 1576) came, who was married to Dorothea von Bülow († 1593), expired at the end of the 16th century. The line that is flourishing today goes back to Gebhard. From this came Bernhard von Dannenberg, heir to Lüchow and Breselenz, whose sons Heinrich and Christoph again established two lines.

Heinrich line

Heinrich ( enfeoffed 1560), son of Bernhard von Dannenberg, donated his own line. From this came Heinrich von Dannenberg (* 1583), heir to Lüchow and Breselenz , Braunschweig-Lüneburg secret council and court marshal , inspector of the offices of Dannenberg and Lüchow , captain of Isenhagen , land- Drost of the principality of Grubenhagen , and miner captain of the upper and lower -Harzischen mines. Georg Paridam von Dannenberg, heir to Breselenz and Lüchow, also came from this line. He was married twice, first to Magdalena Maria von Sporck . After her death he took Margaretha von Dageförde as his wife and when he died in 1668, he left three daughters and six sons. However, the line was already considered extinct in 1742.

Line Christoph

The other line, which still exists today, was founded by Christoph, the other son of Bernhard and brother of Heinrich. He was inherited on Breselenz and Lüchow (enfeoffed in 1560). He was also married twice, first to Margaretha von Estorff , then to Maria von Melzing. He was the father of ten children: six daughters and four sons. Son Otto died in France . Only son Christoph, the younger, continued the tribe.

Ducal Castle of Sønderborg ; Margaretha Catharina von Dannenberg lived here since 1626

Christoph von Dannenberg († 1626) was the heir to Breselenz and Lüchow . He was married to Anna von Plato from the Grabow family († 1626). The daughter Margaretha Catharina (1607–1651) came from the marriage. After the death of her father, she and her sister Hippolyta and mother had to flee from Gut Breselenz to Hamburg in 1626 , because the enemy imperial troops were moving through the Lower Saxony district and the Duchy of Lüneburg , and the brothers were in military service. In Hamburg, the mother, who had previously suffered from health problems, died after a short time. Now the Duchess Dorothea of ​​Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg (1579–1639) took both of Dannenberg's sisters to her court . Duchess Dorothea was the wife of Alexander of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg . Margaretha Catharina von Dannenberg held the position of maid of honor in Sonderburg for about a decade . When the princess fell ill and was bedridden, the young woman nursed her for a long time. In 1636 Margaretha married Catharina von Dannenberg at Sonderburg Castle, Otto von Wackerbarth , squire of Duke Johann Christian von Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Franzhagen and later ducal court marshal of Mecklenburg . She died in Schwerin in 1651 at the age of 44. Her sister Hippolyta was married to Hartwich von Bülow . Her brothers were George, supreme council of war and commander on the Lüneburg limestone , and Joachim Otto (* 1599), Lord of the Manor of Breselenz and Luechow, the next brother Ernst Franz 1628 investiture received. He was initially a colonel under the Swedish general Georg zu Braunschweig-Celle , then under the Swedish general Torstensson , and died in 1647 in the battle of Neuhaldensleben , Heinrich Jakob von Dannenberg, who died in Langstrassen in Holland at the age of 18 , and the lieutenant colonel Ernst Franz from Dannenberg.

Ernst Franz von Dannenberg, on Breselenz, Lüchow and Gnemer, Braunschweig-Lüneburg lieutenant colonel under the Oehmische Regiment, continued the line alone. Franz Oswald von Dannenberg was first lieutenant colonel under the Bothmer Dragoon Regiment in Celle and became colonel of the cavalry there in 1710 . In the same year he fell in Brabant . He was married to Maria Margaretha von Moltke († 1729). Son Heinrich Ludwig Georg (* 1699) served for some time in the Emperor Franz regiment .

In 1808 a Freiherr von Dannenberg was a lieutenant in the regiment of the Gardes du Corps , who retired as a major from the 7th cuirassier regiment in 1825 . Other members of the family were in the service of the Prussian Army . The tomb of Samuel Joh. Von Dannenberg (born June 24, 1784 in Wiburg , † December 18, 1838 in Tharandt ), Russ. Quays. General-Major in the General Staff, knight of many high orders , with German and Russian inscriptions, was formerly in the city park and is now in the cemetery in Tharandt.

The progenitor of today's flowering branches

Franz von Dannenberg (1756–1811) was a knight of the Order of St. John and landowner on Gut Wehningen in the Neuhaus office , then on Nees in the Grabow office and Vor Lüchow near Kolborn . In 1780 he married Karoline Wilhelmine von Geusau (1756–1823), a daughter of the electoral forestry and game master Karl von Geusau and Elisabeth Christine Countess zu Solms-Sonnenwalde . The three sons Franz, Ferdinand and Julius come from the marriage.

Branch Franz

Franz von Dannenberg (1784-1858) was royal legation councilor from Hanover and owned Vor-Lüchow and Breselenz in the Lüchow-Dannenberg district . He was married to Henriette von Kemnitz (1791-1856) since 1810 . The marriage came from Otto von Dannenberg (1812-1896), royal Hanover magistrate and owner of Vor-Lüchow, since 1855 husband of Friederike von Arentschildt (1831-1895), a daughter of the royal Hanoverian general Arnold Daniel von Arentsschildt . The marriage produced son Georg and daughters Sophie, Anna and Klara. Georg von Dannenberg (1858–1931) inherited Vor-Lüchow. He was a lawyer , member of the German Reichstag , the Prussian state parliament and the national assembly , as well as the first chairman of the mine board of the Dr. Wilhelm Sauer Kali group and editor . Married to Hildegard Freiin von Oldershausen (1884–1949) since 1913 , he had the two children Anna Elisabeth (* 1915) and Ernst August (* 1914), later owners of Vor-Lüchow and Sehlde near Alfeld an der Leine . Ernst August was married to Countess Otta zu Rantzau , born in 1917, and then to Countess Barbara Grote . Christoph, born in Lübeck , and Friederike von Dannenberg, born in Sehlde, come from their first marriage .

Ferdinand branch

Ferdinand von Dannenberg (1786–1867) was the owner of Leutesdorf in the Neuwied district and a Prussian lieutenant colonel a. D. He married Anna Maria Countess Beissel von Gymnich (1797–1875) in Frenz near Cologne in 1817 . Son Clemens (1819-1897) was a Prussian major general and worked with the introduction of the needle gun in the Prussian army. His younger brother Karl (1832-1919), a Prussian lieutenant a. D. , married Helen Louise Woods (1853–1932) in New York in 1873, transplanting a branch of the family to the United States . The firstborn son Richard (1875-1946) was a realtor in New York and was married there to Elinor Teackle (1880-1960) since 1905. The younger son, Otto von Dannenberg, was born in Hamburg in 1880 and became an engineer at JG White Engineering Company. In 1922 he married Frances Margaret Hodgson, born in 1900, in New York. In 1960 they lived in Jamshedpur , India .

A sister of Clemens and Karl was Mauritia von Dannenberg (1828–1912), who had been married to the former Minister of State of the Duchy of Nassau (1834–1842), Carl Wilderich Graf von Walderdorff , since 1853 .

Julius branch

Julius von Dannenberg (1789–1862) was a Prussian Rittmeister a. D. and owner of Gut Wessin . In 1818 he married Charlotte von Netz (1798-1857), daughter of the state elder Ernst Heinrich von Netz on Kosemitz, on Gut Kosemitz in the Frankenstein district . Son Ferdinand von Dannenberg (1818-1893) became a Prussian general of the infantry . In Berlin in 1844 he married Wilhelmine von Bastineller (1824-1900), daughter of the royal Westphalian general Karl von Bastineller , commander of the 1st Westphalian Cuirassier Regiment , and Wilhelmine von Winterfeldt . Son Arthur von Dannenberg (1847–1927) married Anna Falck (1847–1934), a daughter of the manufacturer Karl Falck, in Zwickau in 1882 . Walter von Dannenberg, born in Berlin in 1884, came from the marriage. He was a Prussian Rittmeister a. D. and Syndic . He died in Mannheim in 1956 . In 1924 he married Helene von der Wense, who was born in 1900 in Hanover . The marriage produced two sons, Ferdinand and Karl, and a daughter Martina. The first-born son Ferdinand von Dannenberg, born in Mannheim in 1925, died on January 1, 1945 at Lake Balaton in Hungary .

coat of arms

The family coat of arms (1282) shows two golden bars in a shield made of blue and silver. On the helmet with blue and gold covers, an open flight , as marked as the shield .

The shield of the Counts of Dannenberg showed one or two lions, and later also a Christmas tree.

Possessions

Manor :

Known family members

literature

  • Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Adelslexikon Volume II, Volume 58 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1974, p. 421.
  • Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelige Häuser A , Volume IV, Volume 22 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1960, pp. 243–246.
  • Deutsche Adelsgenossenschaft (Ed.): Yearbook of the German Adels , Volume 1, 1896, published by WT Bruer, p. 447ff. Digitized
  • Ernst Saß: On the genealogy of the Counts of Dannenberg, in: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology, Volume 43, ed. from the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology, 1878, pp. 33–164 digitized , digitized
  • Leopold von Zedlitz-Neukirch : New Prussian Nobility Lexicon , Gebrüder Reichenbach, Leipzig 1839, p. 119.
  • Jakob Christoph Beck and August Johann Buxtorf , Supplement to the Basel General Historical Lexicon , Volume 2, Verlag Johannes Brandmüller Aelter seel. Erben, Basel 1742, pp. 798–799 ⇒ digitized

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Friedrich Gauhe , Des Heiligen Römischen Reichs Genealogisch-Historisches Adels-Lexicon , Volume 2, Verlag Johann Friedrich Gleditsch, Leipzig 1747, Sp. 1135 f. ⇒ digitized
  2. a b c d e f g h i Jakob Christoph Beck and August Johann Buxtorf , Supplement to the Basel General Historical Lexicon , Volume 2, Verlag Johannes Brandmüller Aelter seel. Erben, Basel 1742, pp. 798–799 ⇒ digitized
  3. Mecklenburgisches Urkundenbuch , Volume I, p. 147.
  4. a b c Genealogical Handbook of the Adels , Adelslexikon Volume II, Volume 58 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1974, p. 421
  5. a b c d e f Genealogical Handbook of the Adels, Adelige Häuser A , Volume IV, Volume 22 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1960, pp. 243–246
  6. Lübeck document book , Volume I, p. 85 ⇒ digitized
  7. ^ Document in the State Archives Hanover , Oldenstadt Monastery
  8. a b c Leopold von Zedlitz-Neukirch : New Prussian Adels-Lexicon , Gebrüder Reichenbach, Leipzig 1839, p. 119 ⇒ digitized
  9. Stammtafel, in: ⇒ Ernst Saß, p. 139 ( Memento of the original from July 16, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / portal.hsb.hs-wismar.de
  10. Gerhard Köbler , Historical Lexicon of the German Lands: The German Territories from the Middle Ages to the Present , Verlag CH Beck, Munich 1st edition 1988 - 7th edition 2007, p. 397 (Lüneburg) ⇒ digitized
  11. a b Landesbibliothek Schwerin , Schmidt'sche Bibliothek, volume LXIX (14), as well as volume LXX (19)
  12. ^ Lupold von Lehsten, Emanuel Graf von Walderdorff: The women of the Walderdorff in the main trunk. Their families and their ancestors. , Molsberg 1999, ISBN 3-00-005502-9 , pp. 98-102.
  13. ^ Ernst Saß: On the Genealogy of the Counts of Dannenberg, in: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Antiquity, Volume 43, ed. from the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology, 1878, pp. 33–164 ⇒ digitized version ( memento of the original from July 16, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / portal.hsb.hs-wismar.de