Dorgelo

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Coat of arms of those of Dorgelo

Dorgelo (also Dorgeloh , Doringhelohe or Dörgeloh ) is the name of a noble family that used to have its headquarters in the Varrel district of Dörrieloh ( district of Diepholz ) in Lower Saxony . There are also the civil names Dorgelo, Dorgeloh, Dorgelo (h) e, Dörgelo, Dörgeloh, Dorgerloh and Doringelo that evidently emerged from this.

history

The first (1381) mentioned member of the noble family is Dethard von Doringelo (also called Dethard von Doringhelo or Dethardus Doringerlo). In 1381 he moved the Brockmannshaus to Nottenstede ( Natenstedt ) to Sankt Hülfe . An Otto von Doringelo, presumably Dethard's brother, was Vogt in Vörden in 1391 . As a Vogt in the Münsterland, he expanded an estate on the Lethe into a castle. The last noble male bearer of the line to Lethe died there in 1654.

The various branches of the noble family spread from their ancestral seat Dörrieloh in a north-westerly and south-westerly direction via Oldenburg and the dioceses of Osnabrück and Münster . Over the centuries representatives of the von Dorgelo family have been listed as Burgmanns of Vechta Castle , an outpost of the Monastery of Münster, who owned their own Burgmannshof near the castle . In the 16th century, the Dorgelos acquired several goods, including Gut Loxten , Gut Twistel and the Schleppenburg . Gut Bomhof and Gut Welpe were temporarily owned by the family.

In the course of the Reformation , the noble family divided into a Catholic and a Protestant line. The headquarters in Dörrieloh in the now Protestant county of Diepholz was sold in 1578 by the Catholic line of those von Dorgelo.

The Brettberg estate , acquired in 1511 and sold after the Dorgelo zu Brettberg line died out, became the ancestral seat of the family's Catholic line . A branch line lived in the Höven estate near Wardenburg . The last representative of the Dorgelo zu Höven line , August Wilhelm Anton von Dorgelo (born 1762), died childless in 1855. His great-nephew, the Prussian Colonel Ludwig Heinrich Freiherr von Lützow (1824–1899) inherited the estate under the condition that he should be called "von Dorgelo" in the future. In 1864 the Höven estate was sold. Bearers of the name "von Lützow called von Dorgelo" lived in the middle of the 20th century.

Due to the destruction of the church archives in Weyhe in 1776, it is difficult to reconstruct the history of the Dorgelos evangelical line. The fact is that the name Dorgeloh still occurs frequently in the area of ​​the former County of Hoya . Dorgelohs from the Bremen area also emigrated to the Netherlands in the 17th century.

Bearers of the name " von Dorgelo (h)" no longer exist today. However, aristocrats (e.g. the Daren branch of the von Frydag family ) and numerous commoners can trace their family tree back to female members of the von Dorgelo family. How today's bourgeois namesake descend from the noble family is not completely clear. Jan Derk Dorgelo suspects in his family chronicle (see under web links) that the Dorgelos, who still live in the district of Vechta today, could have emerged from the second marriage of Friedrich von Dorgelos (1641–1720) with his cook. Renouncing the “from” would therefore be the price that Friedrich's children would have had to pay for his “ mesalliance ”.

coat of arms

There are different interpretations of the origin of the family coat of arms of this family native to the Niederstift Münster. The coat of arms shows in gold two tree trunks that have been torn out in stakes, each with two or three stumped branches on its side. On the helmet with black and gold covers and bulge, the trunks are inclined outwards. Such a “talking” coat of arms probably means “withered forest”. Talking coats of arms emerged in the 11th to 13th centuries. Most of them paid tribute to a special achievement by the family. Apparently the family was ennobled (landed gentry) for something that had to do with forest in the broadest sense. They may have drained swamps / bog areas and planted forests or they cleared forests. The family got its name after the village Dörrieloh, where they owned the Engelken-Sattelhof until 1578. Some also say that the place has its place name after the family. The Sattelhof was a fiefdom of the diocese of Minden. It became a manor suitable for the Landtag. The family and place name Dörrieloh means "Forest of Dörrie" after Nutzhorn. Others interpret it as a "dry forest" (Dörrieloh was surrounded by large moorland and swamp areas), yet others think it is called "Thuringian Forest" (Rüthning) and the family with their coat of arms immigrated from the Thuringian Forest.

The coat of arms of the von Dorgelo family is above the entrance to the Gut Brettberg manor house in Lohne , which was rebuilt after a fire in 1895; it survived the fire in the previous building unharmed. Furthermore, the coat of arms is attached to the epitaph of Albrecht von dem Bussche zu Hünnefeld and Ippenburg in the Nikolauskirche Bad Essen .

The village of Höven has adopted the Dorgelo coat of arms as the village coat of arms.

Places of activity and memorials

Alfhausen : The Schleppenburg estate passed from the von Brawe family into the possession of the von Dorgelo family and was later assigned to Werner Jakob von Dorgelo, who, however, was disinherited on March 23, 1615 because of an “improper marriage”. Another owner of Schleppenburg was Caspar von Dorgelo. Foundations of the Schleppenburg estate can still be found.

Bad Essen : There are many epitaphs in the St. Nikolaikirche. Six coats of arms commemorate noble families who earned services in the community. One of these coats of arms is that of Dorgelo.

Bakum : The Daren estate is now owned by the von Frydag family. It used to be owned by the von Kobrinck family. Gertrud Elise von Kobrinck was married to Wulfert von Dorgelo zu Welpe.

Mountains : In the church of the Börsteler Damenstift there is a tombstone of Magdalena von Dorgelo, daughter of Johann von Dorgelo and Fredeke von Bernefuer . She was Abbess von Börstel and died at the age of 80. Her tombstone is in the choir of the church.

Cloppenburg : The office of several Droste of the Niederstift Münster in Cloppenburg was exercised by the Dorgelo family. The first Drost of theCloppenburg conqueredfrom the county of Tecklenburg was from March 21, 1394 Otto von Doringerloe. Another Otto von Dorgelo was in 1461, Herbord von Dorgelo zu Lethe from 1474 to 1507 Drost von Cloppenburg.

Dörrieloh : In Dörrieloh one finds the former today diet capable manor, the Engelken-Sattelhof, fief of the Bishopric of Minden . Diedrich or Otto von Dorgelo sold the family estate in 1580. Today the saddle farm No. 20 is owned by the Gödeker family. In August 1977, 40 old feudal letters were found in an old cupboard that stood in this homestead, in which the Bishop of Minden gave the saddle yard to the von Dorgelo family as a fief. These are kept in the Diepholz archive. The archive in the school of Dörrieloh begins with Dethard von Dörrieloh (1381). In 1991/1992 the Dörrieloh homeland and beautification association had the coat of arms of the descendants of Doringherloes attached to a boulder in the center of the village, which also serves as the local coat of arms.

Emstek : Lethe Castle was on the left bank of the Lethe . In 1393 Otto von Dorgelo is said to have built this protective and toll castle before he became Drost von Cloppenburg in order to secure the border to the northeast and the important Flemish Road . Lethe Castle was later expanded into an extensive estate and was inhabited by the Dorgelo (h) ’s for several generations. According to a map from 1564, the “Leedburg” comprised a two-storey house, a massive chapel and several stable buildings. The burial place was on the choir (Gospel side) of the old Emsteker church. In 1654 the Dorgelo (h) family died on Lethe with Caspar von Dorgelo. Close to the estate is an island in the Lethe river, where the former castle stood, on which the von Dorgeloh's lived from around the 14th to 17th centuries. Some of the foundations can still be seen. All finds that were made during excavations are archived in the Landesmuseum Oldenburg.

Freren : Elisabeth von Schade , daughter of Johann Heinrich von Schade and Elisabeth von Dorgelo (owner of the Ihorst estate) inherited the Hange estate, the former ancestral seat of the von Hange family (since 1303). In 1874 the estate was sold on. It later came to the Georgstift in Thuine in 1910. The Thuiner sisters added a chapel to it. The old estate is now used for charitable purposes. On the north side of the current entrance a tombstone is carved in with the coat of arms of those of Voss and von Dorgeloh with the marginal inscription: “ANNO 1658 DE MEI 29 IS THE HOCHEDELL GEBHORNER JOHANN ANDREAS VOSS SHONN FROM HEREN SELICH IN THE HEREN OF HIS AGE 13 (?) YEARS GOD GOD'S GRACE. "

Friesoythe : In 1439 Evert von Kobrinck owned a castle in Altenoythe . Today only the foundations of the castle exist. Wulfert von Dorgelo zu Welpe was married to Gertrud Elise von Kobrink. In Altenoythe church there is a splendid epitaph from the Kobrinck- Grothaus familyfrom 1675 with the family's coat of arms.

Hessisch Oldendorf : The Fischbeck women's monastery is located on the banks of the Weser. Here is an old tombstone of the nun Anna von Dorgelo, daughter of Wulfert von Dorgelo and Magdalena von Quernheim, who died in 1580. Thelegend of Fischbeck is embroideredon a tapestry . Various noble ladies have worked on this wallcovering, including Gisela von Dorgelo, Anna's sister, recognizable by the family crest of Dorgelo embroidered on the tapestry at the top right.

Holdorf : The Ihorst estate, which is owned by the von Spee family today, is located in the northeast of Holdorf. Heinrich von Schade, who was married to Elisabeth von Dorgelo, came from here; she was the daughter of Rötger von Dorgelo.

Lohne : The former 115 hectare estate Querlenburg emerged from a farm (1290: "Querlenborg") and is located in the south of Lohne in the Brockdorfer Mark. The estate came to Johann von Dorgelo auf Welpe through marriage in 1602, and later through marriage to Ewo van Jemigum (also Jemgum ) from the north . Today this castle no longer exists.

In the church of St. Gertrud in Lohne there is a tomb (tombstone) shared by Otto von Dorgelo († 1584) and Elske von Korff-Schmiesing († 1605), who married in 1542. The neighboring tomb commemorates Friedrich von Dorgelo and his wife Maria Catharina von Voss zu Enniger .

Around 1400 the first Brettberg Castle was built on part of a Meyerhof by Hermann von Elmendorpe . This part was called “De Brede Berg”. Around 1471 the estate was pledged to Diedrich von Dinklage , who had an Elmendorff daughter as wife. An Elske von Elmendorf married Otto von Dorgelo from Gut Lethe. Johann von Dorgelo, the son of Otto and Elskes, had inherited so much from his father that he was able to redeem the Brettberg estate from Rolf von Dinklage, Diedrich's brother. Johann's youngest son Rötger von Dorgelo later became the heir to Brettberg. His grandson Fritz von Dorgelo built the second class in Südlohne. His tomb is in Lohne in the tower of St. Gertrud. Last of Dorgelo on Brettberg was Anton Heinrich Bernhard von Dorgelo († 1776). Through various inheritances and marriages, the property finally came into other hands, heavily in debt. Today the estate is owned by the Gellhaus family. The family coat of arms of those of Dorgelo can be seen on the wall at the top left above the entrance portal (west side of the entrance). In the Füchtel estate archive near Vechta there is further material on the members of the von Dorgelo family on Brettberg.

St. Anna Klus Chapel in Südlohne

The Anna Klus is a pilgrimage chapel in honor of St. Anna . It is located in Südlohne on the northern edge of the former Dagersloh on Pickerweg , at the foot of the Hamberg near a ford near a spring that is valued as a source of grace. The first Klus, probably founded by a returning crusader before 1300, was destroyed in the Spanish-Dutch or in the Thirty Years' War. The second class was built in 1680 by Fritz von Dorgelo in the shape of an octagon. From 1684 to 1742 the Dorgelos had their own pastor at the Klus. In an episcopal visitation protocol from 1703 it is reported about the source that many sick people used to drink from it and were healed. According to oral reports by old people, various votive offerings were hanging in the clusters, including a. Glasses, crutches and silver hearts. In 1873 the remains of the Klus were broken off. The "Klausgarten" became arable land. On St. Anne's Day, June 26, 1949, the third class was inaugurated. Every year 5,000 to 10,000 believers come to St. Anne's Day.

Epitaph of the Provost Otto von Dorgelo in the St. Paulus Cathedral in Münster

Münster : The St. Paulus Cathedral contains the epitaph of the Provost Otto von Dorgelo (1565–1625), who came from Gut Brettberg, a "pillar of Catholicism" in the Niederstift Münster, who played a key role in the re-Catholicization of the Niederstift Münster, which had previously been Lutheran for70 years (since 1543). The massive 7.5 × 3.2 meter Dorgeloh epitaph on the south-west pillar of the cathedral is made of sandstone ; it was created by the sculptor Melchior Kribbe in 1625 in the style of the late Renaissance and has a rather complicated architectural structure with an overabundance of pictures and figures. Its inscription reads: "ADMODUM Reverendo AC PRAENOBILI EQUESTRISQUE ORDINIS VIRO DOMINO Ottoni A Dorgelo, Huius Cathedralis ECCLESIAE PRAEPOSITO, NEC NON Osnabrugensis Seniori CANONICO ANNO 1625 THE VIGESIMA SECUNDA martii DEFUNCTO ET SECUNDA Április HIC Iuxta ALTARE SS JOANNIS ET Pauli Sepulto CONSTITUTI EXECUTORES HOC EPITAPHIU. (M), IPSIUS IUSSU PONI CURARUNT. ”(Translation:“ To the venerable and noble knight of the order Mr. Otto von Dorgelo, provost of this cathedral church as well as senior of the cathedral chapter in Osnabrück, who died on March 22nd, 1625 and on April 2nd here at the altar who is buried St. John and Paul, the authorized testamentary representatives had this epitaph set at his behest ”).

The donor figure St. Lambertus , a stone figure, is also a foundation of the cathedral provost Otto von Dorgelo. it bears the inscription: "A ° 1600" and "OTTO DORGELO CATHED: MON: ET OSNAB: ECCLIARUM CANON:".

On the high altar , the cathedral provost donated one of the paintings on the outer wing in 1622 with the inscription: "OTTO A DORGELO DE BRETBERG HUIUS CATHED (RALIS) ECCLESIAE PRAEPOSITUS, HANC DE MIRACULIS VESTIUM S. PAULI HISTORIAM FIERI FECIT ANNO 1622".

Also in 1622 Otto von Dorgelo donated a silver figure of St. Mary Magdalene . The figure is 47 cm high, silver-chased, partially gold-plated and, according to an inscription on the base, was given to the cathedral by the provost Otto von Dorgelo in 1623. At the foot of the figure there is the inscription: “AD HONOREM DIVINAE MAIETATIS ET DEVOTIONIS GRATIA ERGA SANCTAM MARIAM MAGDALENAM SUMMAM AMICAM DEI REVERENDUS AC PROENOBILIS 1D.OTTO DORGELOH DE DE (!) BREDTBERGIUME CANEPIEDRALIS PROPERTIES: FERRY SORC 1623 ".

Neuenkirchen : Three generations of the von Dorgelo family lived on the Horst estate near Alfhausen: Wulfert, Ludwig and Adolf von Dorgelo as heads of the family.

Nieder-Girbigsdorf :According to the Prussian cabinet order of July 16, 1862,Adam Barthold Ludwig von Lützow-Hartmannsdorff from Cleve near Lübeck , owner of the Nieder-Girbigsdorf manor near Görlitz , received permission to continue the title of baron and to take up the name "von Dorgelo" as a result Will of his great-uncle, the Grand Ducal Oldenburg court marshal von Dorgeloh auf Höven,who died in 1828, as a universal heir and substitute for his son and next heir,August Wilhelm Anton von Dorgelo, who diedin 1855 without male descent . From then on, the line was called Freiherren von Lützow von Dorgelo and inherited Gut Höven, but sold it again in 1864.

Nortrup : In the south of Nortrup there is Loxten Castle, which has been owned by the von Hammerstein family since 1682. In 1593 it was still owned by Ilse von Dorgelo, daughter of Jürgen von Dorgelo zu Lethe and Anna von Brawe, and Johann von Dincklage, who married Ilse von Dorgelo on November 19, 1593.

Oldenburg : The rococo-style “Dorgeloh” oven in the royal palace , builtin the time of Duke Friedrich August ,and part of the wall paneling from Dorgeloh's Höven estate near Wardenburg (built around 1790) are said to be in the Oldenburg State Museum . Both pieces give an impression of the dignified furnishings of the country manors of that time. The family coat of arms of those of Dorgelo is depicted on the cast iron version.

Osnabrück : Jürgen (Georg) von Dorgeloh zu Lethe was the owner of the Kurienhof in Osnabrück.

The Aufschwörungstafel of Wulfert of Dorgeloh to puppy in chivalry archive to Osnabrück shows the coat of arms: Dorgeloh - Quernheim - Arensell - Bassen and Dorgeloh - Schmising - Weddesche - Hoberg.

Ostercappeln : In the cemetery in Ostercappeln there is a tombstone of the married couple Jobst Prenger and Anna von Dorgelo, daughter of Wulfert von Dorgelo zu Lethe and Apollonia von Sloen called Gehle.

Quakenbrück : There was a Burgmannshof here at Burgstrasse 7. When Johann von Dincklage married Ilse von Dorgelo zu Schleppenburg on November 19, 1593, he decided that his wife should get the Burgmannshof after his death. This then happened in 1625 when his wife was widowed on January 28th. This Ilse, also known as Elske, was the daughter of Jürgen (Georg) von Dorgelo zu Lethe and Anna von Brawe.

Paderborn : In the Paderborn Cathedral Chapter there is a tomb of Christoph Andreas Anton von Elmendorff († 1779), who was appointedto the Paderborn Cathedral Chapterby Emperor Franz on March 11, 1747and sworn to the Paderborn Cathedral Chapter on May 28. His tomb stands between the atrium and the entrance to the west wing of the Dompürting ( cloister ). According to the very detailed inscription, he died at the age of 60, was a priest for 25 years, cathedral dean for 4 years and provost at the Busdorfstift for 19 years. The tomb is framed by two columns on the left and right, on each of which 8 family coats of arms can be seen. a. the family coat of arms of Elisabeth von Dorgeloe zu Brettberg.

Ringstedt : The church of St. Fabian zu Ringstedt was used by the noble family von der Lieth from Alfstedt (see also grave slabs in Bederkesa). To the left of the chancel hangs a plaque on the wall on which Clawes van der Lidt (father) and Willem van Dorgelo (mother) together with their two grandmothers Anna von der Betten and Anna Brawe, all four people with their family crests, depict the death of theirsmourn his son Harmen Baltzer van der Lidt († 1639) who fellat Goldenstedt .

Vechta : Gut Bomhof in Langförden was the ancestral seat of the Lords of Spredowe and Langenforde in the 12th and 13th centuries. On June 25, 1467, Johann von Weddesche was enfeoffed with this estate. His son Dethard had a daughter Anna, who married Johann von Dorgelo zu Brettberg. In the will of 1599 Rötger von Dorgelo zu Brettberg became the heir of the Bomhof estate. In 1648 Rötger's son sold the Bomhof estate to a Drosten von Cloppenburg. At the back of the Bomhof you can still find the family coat of arms of the von Dorgelos next to that of the Korff-Schmysing family on a framed memorial plaque. In 1618 Otto von Dorgelo, Canon of Osnabrück and Provost of Münster, had 2 memorial plaques made in front of the Bomhof house with the inscription: "REVERENDUS AC NOBILIS DOMINUS OTTO DORGERLO, CATHEDRALIUM ECCLESIARUM MONASTERIENSIS PRAEPOSITUS ET OSNABRUGENSIS 1618". Today's owner of the estate is Baron von Fricken.

The von Merveldt family lived on the Füchtel estate today . In the hall of the estate you can see two coats of arms of the von Dorgelo and von Elmendorff families, who used to live on the estate.

The estate used to be a very large farm that was divided into Ober- and Niederwelpe in the 14th century. At the end of the 15th century, Wulfert von Dorgelo, son of Otto von Dorgelo, who died in 1607 zu Brettberg, owned a lower and upper puppy as well as a manorial house. In 1682, Jobst Falke, Drost von Wildeshausen , bought the estate. Today it is owned by the von Merveldt family. The coat of arms of the von Dorgeloh family can still be found on a building whose gable is decorated with rich flat ornamentation .

Sandstone slab in memory of Johann von Dorgelo on the outer wall of the provost church in Vechta

Next to the southern side entrance of the provost church of St. Georg in Vechta is the tomb (tombstone) of Johann von Dorgelo, the eldest son of Otto von Dorgelo and Elske Korff-Schmysing von Brettberg, who died in 1597 after two years of marriage. An epitaph shows the figure of a knight and the coats of arms of Dorgelo, Smysing, Weddesche and Hoberg.

Wardenburg : The earliest mention of Gut Höven goes back to a document from 1390, in which "a house ton Höven", then owned by the princes of the Porsenberge, was named. Formerly owned by the Junker von Raden, on October 14, 1678, the "highly honorable, highly virtuous virgin Auguste Anna Sophia von Rahden , heir to Höven", with the "high-born, strict, manly Mr. Johann Rötger von Dorgelo, Prince of Münster's well-appointed captain of Brettbergen", in Wardenburg in front of the altar. August Wilhelm Anton von Dorgelo († 1855) was the last male descendant of his tribe in Höven. Since he died in 1855 without any descendants, the property came to Baron von Lützow, known as von Dorgelo, who sold it in 1864. On the grave of AWA von Dorgelo in the Wardenburg churchyard, at least until 1912, there was an iron cross with the inscription: “AWA von Dorgelo. Major in the Prussian service and Knight of the Iron Cross. Born 1762 December 23rd and died 1855 October 20 at Gut Höven. I live and you should live too. Joh. 14, 19. “. The family crest of the Dorgelo family can still be found on the wall of the estate, which is now owned by the Addicks family. On the opposite side of the road there is a two meter high burial mound under which Adam Levin von Dorgelo (Dörgeloh) is buried.

In the church in Wardenburg hangs the coat of arms, which is supposed to remind of Otto Caspar Dietrich von Dorgelo (April 19, 1692 to March 30, 1719). The grave of August Wilhelm Anton von Dorgelo is located on the burial site of this church.

literature

  • Chapter The noble houses in the offices of Vechta and Cloppenburg . In: CL Niemann: The Oldenburg Münsterland in its historical development . Volume 2: Until the union with the Duchy of Oldenburg . Oldenburg: Schulzesche Hof-Buchhandlung and Hof-Buchdruckerei, 1891, pp. 108–123 ( online )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gustav Nutzhorn: On the history of the family von Dorgelo. In: Oldenburgische Familienkunde Vol. 11, Issue 2, June 1969
  2. Bernd Rothmann: Castles near Ahlhorn - Ruthenau and Lethe (PDF; 1.5 MB). Citizen Mail 12 . 2009. pp. 20-23
  3. Helmut Ottenjann : Two vedute pictures from the Niederstiftisches Gut Lethe . In: Yearbook for the Oldenburger Münsterland 2009 . Vechta 2008. pp. 117-133; here: p. 120
  4. ^ Institute for German Aristocracy Research: Officers of the Cuirassier Regiment Seydlitz. Register of 431 official officer histories from 1815 to 1918
  5. Max von Spießen, Book of Arms of the Westphalian Nobility, with drawings by Professor Ad. M. Hildebrandt, Volume 1, Görlitz 1901–1903. Pp. 41-42
  6. Otto Gruber: The coats of arms of the South Oldenburg nobility . In: Yearbook for the Oldenburger Münsterland 1971 . Vechta 1970, p. 19
  7. Ruth Irmgard Dalinghaus: Art and culture in the district of Vechta . Oldenburgische Landschaft / Landkreis Vechta 2004. P. 149. ISBN 3-00-014066-2
  8. Citizens' Association Höven: Our village Höven  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 4.8 MB). August 2009. p. 2@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.wardenburg.de  
  9. Contributions to the Chronicle of the Jacobsen Family ( Memento of the original from June 25, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was 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 / www.ahnenundfriesen.de