House Klarenbeck

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

House Klarenbeck was a knight's seat near the village of Nütterden in the municipality of Kranenburg , Kleve district .

Today's house Klarenbeck (formerly Elsenhof)

history

Haus Klarenbeck is mentioned for the first time in 1300 on the occasion of an altar donation by Johann von Klarenbeck, secretary of the Count of Kleve . After Johann's death, the property passed to the later Count Johann von Kleve , who enfeoffed the knight Dietrich von Bentheim with Klarenbeck in 1344. In the 15th century the complex came to the Klevian sideline of Blanckenstein.

In 1438, Duke Adolf I von Kleve gave his illegitimate son Johann von Cleve Blankenstein and Jutta von Apeltern the Clarenbeck estate as a dowry. The daughters Maria and Margarete inherited Clarenbeck and Maria ceded her share to Margarete in 1492. Margarete died childless and her property passed to Maria's daughter, Judith Smullinck, married to Johan von Selbach in 1535 . Their son Henrick von Selbach then receives the right of use, his daughter Judith von Selbach, married to Johann von Lützerath von Vorst , inherits the Clarenbeck estate in 1563. Then it was inherited to Reinart von Lutzerode von Vorst zu Clarenbeck, the son of Johann, to Johann Reinart von Lutzerode zu Clarenbeck (+1653), Otilia Margreta von Lützenrode (heiress to Clarenbeck and Vorst , + 1692; married 1680 with Franz Dietrich v . Brabeck zu Vogelsang), to Maximilian Anton v. Brabeck zu Vogelsang (enfeoffed with Clarenbeck in 1692), and Friedrich Christian Edmund Alexander v. Brabeck, Herr zu Clarenbeck (* 1691). They lived in Clarenbeck until the 18th century.

According to the Klevische cadastral map of 1734, Haus Klarenbeck was a four-wing complex with an inner courtyard, which was surrounded by a moat . The buildings must have been demolished around the middle of the 18th century.

The name Haus Klarenbeck was later transferred to the Elsenhof belonging to the property. Today it is inhabited by the artist Dieter von Levetzow .

literature

  • Otto Friedrichs: Nütterden. History (s) and pictures of a village on the Lower Rhine , Kleve 2000.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Archives in North Rhine-Westphalia, Dept. Westphalia, 1.4.1. Grafschaft Mark with Soest and Lippstadt, no.320 (1438).
  2. ^ NL, Archief Bylandt, II.IA2.21, Regest 67 (1492).
  3. NL Archief Bylandt, II.IA2.210, Regest 104 (1535).
  4. ^ Archives in North Rhine-Westphalia, Schoenstein Castle Archive, Certificate No. 1323 (1561).
  5. Jump up ↑ The knight-borne rural nobility of the Grand Duchy of Lower Rhine , Volume 1, p. 352 (1818); and an attempt at a Westphalian history, especially of the Grafschaft Mark , Volume 3, p. 1164 (1749).

Coordinates: 51 ° 47 ′ 45 "  N , 6 ° 3 ′ 59"  E