Haslau (Vogtland noble family)

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Coat of arms of the Hazlov municipality

The noble family von Haslau ( Hazlov in Czech ), also Haslauer von Haslau , was resident in Bohemia , Franconia and Vogtland and became extinct in the male line in 1845.

origin

The von Haslau, also Haslauer von Haslau, were a noble family who came to Bohemia from the Austrian Mark Ostarrichi , which became extinct in the name-bearer tribe with kk Colonel Josef von Haslauer in Brno in Moravia in 1845. Family branches were resident in Bohemia, Franconia and Vogtland. Since their family coat of arms did not change from the 12th to the 19th century, it allows an approximate creation of their tribal history.

Haslau in the Bavarian Nordgau and Vogtland

One of their places of residence in the Nordgau was Haslau Castle, today preserved in the Hazlov municipality in the Czech Republic as the Hazlov Castle ruins . Their coat of arms is identical to that of Neuberg and Raitenbach . 1,311 members of the family laid a feud with the Waldsassen monastery at that erupted as subjects of the monastery the Bärnauer judges had killed Conrad of Hauslau.

As impoverished landed gentry in the 14th century in the Egerland , Ascher Ländchen and Hofer Land , some relatives worked as robber barons. Friedrich der Haslauer is one of Friedrich von Neuberg's helpers and took part in the Guttenberg feud in 1380 and then in a feud against Eger .

coat of arms

The coat of arms shows a curved tip , the coloring is divided into red and silver alternating with the other color. The crest is crowned and shows the golden bundle of an ear of corn. The helmet covers are red and silver.

family members

literature

  • Eckard Lullies: The feud of Guttenberg against the bailiffs and the feud against Eger . Kulmbach 1999. ISBN 3-925162-19-4 . Pp. 22f., 114.
  • Heinrich Gradl : The book of the afflictions at the Egerer jury court . In: Archive for the history and antiquity of Upper Franconia . Volume 15/2. Bayreuth 1882. pp. 223ff.

Individual evidence

  1. Johann Siebmacher's Grosses Wappenbuch, Volume 30, The arms of the Bohemian nobility, page 226 and Wappentafel 98, Neustadt an der Aisch 1979.
  2. ^ Roman von Procházka : Genealogical handbook of extinct Bohemian gentry families, page 49,64,226 and 365, Neustadt an der Aisch 1973. ISBN 3-7686-5002-2 .
  3. ^ Rudolf Langhammer : Waldsassen - monastery and town . Waldsassen 1936, p. 149.