Hagenow (noble family)

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Coat of arms of the von Hagenow family

Hagenow is the name of a Vorpommern noble family, which with Blasius Hagenow , 1760 pledge to Mr. Lassentin, Franzburg , first appears.

history

The son of Blasius Hagenow, Friedrich Hagenow , landlord at Engelswacht , Grimmen district , received the imperial nobility on February 16, 1802 . His son, Dr. phil. Friedrich von Hagenow auf Nielitz , Grimmen district, received a Prussian name and coat of arms in Berlin on December 9, 1863 as von Hagenow-Nielitz .

Dobbertin Monastery

Two daughters of Achim von Hagenow zu Möderitz were nuns in the Dobbertin monastery . In 1531 Ingeburg was listed in the monastery's account book when Achim von Hagenow paid 25 gulden for his daughter. In 1535 he paid 100 guilders to the monastery for his daughter Elisabeth. In 1576 and 1578 Karin von Hagenow was named as the nun of Christoph von Hagenow, who was inherited from Kressin Krossyn .

During the Reformation in the Mecklenburg convents , the dukes and their visitors encountered stubborn resistance from 1556 to 1578, especially in the Dobbertin Benedictine convent . The first visit on March 24, 1557 in the reventer of the monastery was sobering, because only two of the thirty noble virgins, Margareta Wangelin and Elisabeth Hagenow, were ready to accept the Protestant teaching in full. Elisabeth was sub-prioress in 1562 and was elected prioress of the convent in 1569 because she was one of the better . She was also said to be a pious child, confess God's word. In 1579 she resigned from the office of prioress. Since the conversion of the nunnery into a noble women's monastery in 1572, the headwoman has been using the title Domina.

Ingeburg von Hagenow, who was a passionate leader and incitator in the probably unique nuns' war in Mecklenburg, said in 1557: Ingeborg Hagenow, the writer, is full of idolatry, is poisonous and bitter, damn our teaching with shameful words, also curses a lot dreadful. In 1562 it was said that she was the worst of all nuns . Then she left the monastery.

coat of arms

In blue a man in armor growing out of his knees, his right hand resting on a spear , the helmet of which with an open visor is equipped with three (blue, silver, blue) ostrich feathers. On the helmet with blue-silver covers , also 3 (blue, silver, blue) ostrich feathers.

people

Literature and Sources

literature

Printed sources

Unprinted sources

  • State Main Archive Schwerin
    • LHAS 2.12-3 / 2 Köster and Knight Order, Dobbertin. No. 248 List of the gender names and prioresses and nuns of the Dobbertin monastery 1591–1560 found in documents.
    • LHAS 3.2-3 / 2 Provincial Monastery / Monastery Office Dobbertin. No. 242 Directory of virgins from 1600.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Friedrich von Meyeen: An account book of the monastery Dobbertin. In: MJB 59 (1894) p. 187.
  2. Friedrich von Meyeen: An account book of the monastery Dobbertin. In: MJB 59 (1894) p. 188.
  3. ^ Johann Peter Wurm: The dull nuns Krich. 2012, pp. 26-27.
  4. ^ Friedrich Lisch : The Reformation of the Dobbertin Monastery. MJB 22 (1857) p. 125.
  5. LHAS 3.2-3 / 1 Landeskloster / Klosteramt Dobbertin. No. 242 Directory of virgins from 1600.
  6. ^ Friedrich Lisch: The Reformation of the Dobbertin Monastery. MJB 22 (1857) p. 125.
  7. ^ Horst Alsleben : Compilation of all personalities of the Dobbertin monastery. Schwerin 2010-2013.