Ernst Friedrich von Schlomach

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Ernst Friedrich von Schlomach (* 1632 , † 1705 ) was a magdeburgischer, then princely Saxon Amtshauptmann to Jüterbog , Dahme and castle and estate owners .

Life

He came from the Schlomach family from the small town of Mehlsdorf near Dahme, who had been raised to the German imperial nobility in 1651 . Melchior Schlomach received the title of nobility from for his services as governor of Jüterbog, Dahme, Burg, Dobrilugk and Finsterwalde . At that time, this court office remained in the von Schlomach family for two generations and so Ernst Friedrich von Schlomach was appointed governor of Mehlsdorf in 1677 like his ancestor and remained so until his death in 1705.

Before Schlomach took office, however, he had previously undertaken a study trip to Belgium, Gaul and other countries with his stepbrother Daniel Friedrich von Raschkau to gain further education.

In 1679 he bought half of the village of Knippelsdorf in the Schweinitz office from Colonel Christian von Schweinitz for 4,000 guilders .

His main heir was the son Johann George von Schlomach. He died without sons as a chamberlain in 1736. The almighty imperial count Heinrich von Brühl had only waited for this moment, because he took over the Knippelsdorf estate that he had bequeathed to him because August the Strong was grateful to him for his services to the Electorate of Saxony and the Kingdom of Poland had been elected. Shortly afterwards, Count Heinrich von Brühl sold the Knippelsdorf estate to the widow of the previous owner. Brühl had enough other goods of its own that it could make money from.

The Prussian Colonel Karl Wilhelm von Kleist , who came from Pomerania, married the daughter of Johann George von Schlomach, Eva Luise Eleonore, in 1745 and with her founded a new branch of the family on her property. Her sons included the Prussian Rittmeister Friedrich von Kleist and the Saxon Colonel Leopold von Kleist .

coat of arms

His coat of arms was emblazoned as follows: shield quartered with silver central shields and in the same a five-petalled red rose with golden clusters and green leaves.

literature

  • Kneschke: New general German nobility lexicon , Volume 1, p. 222.
  • Johann Siebmacher, Otto Titan von Hefner: J. Siebmacher's great and general Wappenbuch: in a new, fully ordered and richly increased edition with heraldic and historical-genealogical explanations , Volume 6, 1880, p. 82.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Johann Carl Brandt: Brief history of the district town Jüterbog , 1840, p. 95