Hare (noble family)

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Coat of arms of the von Hase

Von Hase is the name of an originally Thuringian family that was raised to the nobility in 1883 and produced important theologians, scholars, civil servants, high officers and politicians in the 19th and 20th centuries.

The gender should not be confused with the old Silesian noble family of the same name and coat of arms, which died out in the 18th century, but which had five ostrich feathers as a crest .

history

The line of the family begins with Nickel Hase (also "Haße" or "Haze"), who was councilor to Auma in Thuringia from 1445 to 1454 .

Nobilitations : Saxon Coburg and Gotha hereditary nobility by awarding the Grand Cross of the Ducal Saxon Ernestine House Order on September 18, 1883 for Dr. phil., Dr. hc, Dr. jur. hc Karl Hase, Grand Ducal Saxon real privy councilor and professor of theology at the University of Jena. Prussian recognition, Ems June 28, 1886 for the aforementioned sons Dr. med. Paul von Hase, Prussian medical officer and D. Dr. phil Karl von Hase, Prussian consistorial councilor and military pastor. Royal Saxon nobility recognition, Dresden May 31, 1912 and entry in the Saxon nobility book on October 3, 1912 for her brother Dr. phil. Oscar Hase, publisher and bookseller in Leipzig and Privy Councilor of the Saxon Grand Ducal.

coat of arms

The coat of arms shows a jumping golden hare in blue . On the helmet with the blue and gold covers the hare growing between two blue horns .

Known family members

  1. Karl von Hase (1800–1890), German theologian and university professor; from 1883 with title of nobility
    1. Victor Hase (1834–1860), German lawyer
    2. Paul Erwin von Hase (born August 11, 1840 in Jena, † March 27, 1918 in Berlin), Prussian senior medical officer
      1. Karl Paul Rudolf Günther von Hase (born October 2, 1881 in Hanover, † March 6, 1948 in Berlin), Colonel of the State Police
        1. Karl-Günther von Hase (* 1917), German diplomat and journalist, government spokesman for the Adenauer, Erhard and Kiesinger cabinets
      2. Paul von Hase (1885–1944), German lieutenant general and resistance fighter from July 20, 1944
        1. Friedrich-Wilhelm von Hase (* 1937), classical archaeologist.
    3. Karl Alfred von Hase (1842–1914), Protestant clergyman, practical theologian, consistorial councilor and author
      1. Hans Karl Paul Stanislaus (born July 19, 1873 in Hanover; † May 25, 1958 in Marburg), superintendent and pastor
        1. Hans Christoph von Hase (1907–2005), German theologian
    4. Oskar von Hase (1846–1921), German publisher and bookseller
      1. Georg von Hase (1878–1971), German publisher, frigate captain and consul
      2. Hellmuth von Hase (1891–1979), German publisher
      3. Martin von Hase (1901–1971), German publisher and bookseller
Grave site of the von Hase family in Leipzig's southern cemetery

literature

  • Genealogical handbook of the nobility , CA Starke Verlag Limburg (Lahn), ISSN  0435-2408
    • Noble houses B , Volume VII, Volume 36 of the complete series, 1965, pp. 133-134
    • Adelslexikon , Volume I, Volume 53 of the complete series, 1972, p. 1
  • Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Briefadeligen Häuser, 3rd year, 1909, pp. 294–296

Web links

Commons : Hase family  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. JC Blazek , Siebmacher's great and general Wappenbuch, VI. Volume, 8th section, 3rd part. The dead nobility of the Prussian Province of Silesia, Nuremberg, 1894, p. 84
  2. ^ GHdA , Adelslexikon Volume I, 1972