Elverfeldt (noble family)
The barons of Elverfeldt (also Elverfeld, Elberfeld ) are an old Rhenish - Westphalian noble family .
history
The line of tribe begins with Hermann von Heppendorf , who is named 1139–1159 as the nobleman of Cologne . The Lords of Heppendorf sat from around 1243 (until around 1430?) As Electoral Cologne or Bergische Ministerials or Burgmannen at Elberfeld Castle in today's Wuppertal and named themselves after her. With Arnold, Ritter and Vogt von Elvervelde , the family first appeared under this name in 1257. The "Lords of Elvervelde" were vassals of the Archbishop of Cologne and the "Knights Craften von Elvervelde" received farms in Haan and Hilden with the righteous as a fief.
From 1311 the lords of Elverfeldt were also Burgmannen at the Herbede house in Herbede , which can be considered the actual headquarters. From 1311 to 1809 they held the manor and court lordship there. For centuries the Herbeder property also included Haus Villigst , Haus Blumenau , from the beginning of the 18th century Haus Berghofen , from 1869 Haus Ruhr and from 1882 Haus Kotten . This extensive property belonged to the Protestant Herbeder Line until it was extinguished in 1889, when it passed through inheritance to the baronial families von Rheinbaben and von Gemmingen . The Gemmingen still manage the Kotten house, while the Villigst house is leased and the Herbede and Ruhr houses have been sold; the houses in Blumenau and Berghofen have since been torn down.
Herbede house , owned from 1311 to 1889
From 1732 to 1851 Steinhausen Castle in Witten an der Ruhr belonged to a branch of the family, plus the Eleanor mine . In the 19th century, Haus Martfeld was also owned by the family.
Canstein Castle has been owned by the Barons von Elverfeldt since 1853 . In the 20th century, Heimbach Castle in Teningen in Baden , Kalbeck Castle in the Lower Rhine and the Westphalian goods Klingenburg and Niesen Castle came to family branches that also still inhabit them to this day.
Steinhausen Castle (1732-1851)
Canstein Castle , owned since 1853
One line took on the name Elverfeldt called von Beverfoerde zu Werries when they inherited the von Beverförde zu Werries family through adoption in the 18th century . This legacy included Oberwerries Castle (sold in 1942), Loburg Castle since 1785 and others (for more details, see separate article) .
coat of arms
The family coat of arms shows five red bars in gold. On the helmet with red-gold blankets, a red-clad man's torso with a gold-turned cap and three (red-gold-red) ostrich feathers between two buffalo horns labeled as the shield.
Derived from the family crest, the crest of the place of origin of the family, Heppendorf , their centuries-old headquarters Herbede and considering the beaver Bever funding to Werries the crest of Elverfeldt called Beverfoerde to Werries and the community Ostbevern .
Coat of arms of the municipality of Heppendorf
Coat of arms of the former city of Rheydt
Coat of arms of the municipality of Alpen (Niederrhein)
Herbede parish (former castle mansion of the family)
Coat of arms of the Ostbevern municipality
Name bearer
- Franz Sigismund Freiherr von Elverfeldt (* December 23, 1640 - January 19, 1712), General of the Prince-Bishops of Münster
- Friedrich-Christian Freiherr von Elverfeldt (born November 29, 1699 - April 14, 1784), Lieutenant General of the Munster, Lord of Dahlhausen and active in mining (General Union, 1774)
- Clemens August Freiherr von Elverfeldt (born January 25, 1732 Munster; † April 13, 1783), Royal Chamberlain, in the Ruhr mining hired conducted various lock construction for Ruhr shipping by
- Maximilian Friedrich von Elverfeldt (1763–1831), until 1804 Paderborn Cathedral Capitular , Royal Prussian District Administrator and Royal Westphalian Sub-Prefect
- Werner August von Elverfeldt (1740–1818), heir to Steinhausen Castle
- Carl Friedrich von Elverfeldt ∞ Franziska Christina von Vittinghoff called Schell
-
Friedrich Clemens von Elverfeldt called Beverförde zu Werries (1767-1835), founded the family Elverfeldt called von Beverfoerde zu Werries
- Friedrich August von Elverfeld called Beverförde zu Werries (1796–1864), Prussian major general
- Maximilian Friedrich von Elverfeldt (1768–1851), canon in Münster, Osnabrück and Paderborn
-
Friedrich Clemens von Elverfeldt called Beverförde zu Werries (1767-1835), founded the family Elverfeldt called von Beverfoerde zu Werries
- Clemens August Freiherr von Elverfeldt (born January 25, 1732 Munster; † April 13, 1783), Royal Chamberlain, in the Ruhr mining hired conducted various lock construction for Ruhr shipping by
- Friedrich-Christian Freiherr von Elverfeldt (born November 29, 1699 - April 14, 1784), Lieutenant General of the Munster, Lord of Dahlhausen and active in mining (General Union, 1774)
- Ludwig Freiherr von Elverfeldt (1793-1873), built around 1819, the castle Villigst new
- Harald Freiherr von Elverfeldt (1900–1945), German lieutenant general, commander of the 9th Panzer Division in World War II
-
Hubertus Freiherr von Elverfeldt (1902–1977), German politician (CDU), member of the North Rhine-Westphalian state parliament
- Alexander Josef Freiherr von Elverfeldt (1929–2018), farmer and forest manager, association official and author
literature
- Eduard Aander-Heyden: History of the family of the barons of Elverfeldt. Bädeker, Elberfeld ( digitized version )
- Alexander Josef von Elverfeldt : Canstein in the Sauerland in the Electorate of Cologne. History and stories . AJ von Elverfeldt / Libri Books on Demand, Marsberg and Norderstedt 2000, 198 pages, ISBN 3-8311-1173-1 .
- Oliver Schulz: Between a revolutionary challenge, entrepreneurial interest and loyalty to Prussia. Approaching the nobility in Grafschaft Mark around 1800 using the example of the von Elverfeldt family . In: Zeitblicke 9 . No. 1, [10. June 2010] ( online ).
- Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Adelslexikon Volume III, Volume 61 of the complete series, pp. 137-138, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1975, ISSN 0435-2408
Web links
- Elverfeldt family association
- Coat of arms of the Elverfeldt in the coat of arms book of the Westphalian nobility
- Vögte von Köln (Heppendorf) in A. Fahne: History of the Cologne, Jülich and Bergisch families in family tables, 1848, p. 437
- Detailed history of the family of the Barons von Elverfeldt
- Documents from the archive of the Elverfeldt family named by Beverfoerde zu Werries, Loburg Castle / Digital Westphalian Document Database (DWUD)