Lords of Pfirt

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The coat of arms of the von Pfirt family at the rear entrance of the house Zum Pilgerstab in Freiburg im Breisgau

The lords of Pfirt (also: lords of Pfirdt and lords of Ferrette ) are a Lower Austrian ministerial noble family of the Counts von Pfirt of the Scarponnois family , with whom it should not be confused. The noble von Pfirt are mentioned for the first time as early as 1135. They were among the most important ministerials of the first Counts of Pfirt, who died out in 1234, and went out in 1848.

history

Adelbero and Siegfried de Ferretis (von Pfirt) are first mentioned in a document in 1135. In a document dated December 20, 1187, Count Ludwig von Pfirt issued the monasteries of Bellevaux and La Charité with customs duties that Lufried Ritter von Pfirt had as a fief . Ritter does not seem to stand for a status, but for a family name. In 1213 his son Rudolf von Pfirt (Ferreto) is mentioned. A kuno is mentioned in 1225. " Ulrich von Phirret and Wer Bescheler sin bruder " are mentioned as witnesses to a document issued by Count Theobald von Pfirt on May 21, 1277.

Ulmann von Pfirt appears in 1342 as bailiff of Duke Albrecht II of Oestreich and the Countess Johanna von Pfirt in Sundgau . As captain and keeper of Alsace , Sundgau and Breisgau , he reached an alliance with the cities of Strasbourg , Basel and Freiburg for a period of five years in 1350 . Possibly Else von Pfirt, who was married to Hartmann von Tegerfelden , was his sister. In a warning letter from the Austrian bailiff in Sundgau, Ulrich (also Ulman), dated April 4, 1353, he informed about attacks by Johannes von Vy and Johannes von Valon. Among other things, a " Henmann von Pfirt, vogt ze Rinfelden, ritter " was named. A follow-up letter dated May 18 of the same year reveals the relationship between Ulrich and Henmann: In it Ulrich calls him " min vetter "

In 1365 he received the village of Carspach near Altkirch in Alsace from Duke Leopold von Habsburg to compensate for the damage suffered by Duke Rudolf . He played an important role in the peace treaty between the House of Habsburg and the Bishop of Basel in 1347 and 1350. At that time he was employed as a nurse " needlessly for Howenstein ". On January 17, 1366, " Ulmann von Pfirt lantvogt to Alsace, with the care Dadenried, Blumenberg, and what belongs in the care, and then with the pledge of the vesten Pfirt and what belongs to it ," the for Alsace and the Black Forest to maintain popular peace in the country . Ulmann von Pfirt was married to Else, the daughter of Wilhelm Atz (en) from a Freiburg family. In 1379 he granted the city ​​of Laufenburg a loan in the name of Rudolf IV von Habsburg-Laufenburg . He is probably also the Ulmann von Pfirt who was supposed to establish an eternal peace with the Confederates on behalf of Duke Leopold before the outbreak of the Sempach War , while Johann Ulrich von Pfirt (his son, probably born around 1360) is named among the many knights who had the confederates declare their feud on St. Johann Baptist Evening in 1386 . Johannes Schäfer, who was descended from the Freiburg noble family , and was related to the Lords of Pfirt through Clara, was in his service . This Johannes Schäfer and Johann Ulrich von Pfirt, grandsons of Clara (giving) mint master, were sentenced in 1399 to a fine of 13 pounds, 14 shillings and 6 pfennigs to the German order commander in Beuggen . On November 4, 1398 Johann Ulrich von Pfirt (Hans Ulrich voh Phirte) witnessed a bond of Duke Leopold of Austria for Rudolf Vitzhmer. In the course of the feud between the Lords of Schauenburg and Bernhard von Baden , Johann Ulrich was killed on May 29, 1402.

On December 14, 1389 Ulrich Diepold von Pfirt acted as surety for Count Conrad von Freiburg in place of Werner von Flachslanden, who died at the Battle of Sempach .

In Roether's work on the Barons von Pfirt family, he mentions a document dated July 17, 1411, in which Duke Friedrich von Oesterreich gave the Landgraviate for himself and his brothers and cousins ​​the brothers Peter and Claus the Zübeln (Zibollen - Basel family) for 300 Rhenish gold guilders Hornussen with the offices of Homberg, on the Melibach (Möhlinbach), in the Rhine Valley and on the Dinkelberg, all of which belong to his fortress Rheinfelden .

In 1484 Ludwig von Pfirt was the local lord of Biengen . An Ulrich von Pfirt held the office of mayor in Mülhausen in 1506 . Siegmund, Provost of the Cathedral of Basel , became a supporter of the Reformation , married and died in 1574.

Wolfgang Dietrich von Pfirt, imperial colonel, is mentioned as a messenger and in 1545 had to deliver a mission to the Elector of Saxony .

Maria Anna von Pfirt († 1758? In Freiburg) married Franz Ignaz Ludwig von Schönau-Zell. This was raised by Franz Fridolin Weber and was cupbearer of the Prince-Bishop of Basel and Mr. von S. (Alsace) and Zell im Wiesental. Their son, Anton Ignaz Johann Nepomuk von Schönau (* December 12, 1732 in Carspach; † June 12, 1808 in Freiburg im Breisgau), later married Maria Franziska von Kageneck, the daughter of Johann Friedrich von Kageneck .

Pfirt-Zillisheim branch

In a family book kept in the city archives of Mulhouse, which was started by Georg von Pfirt in 1475, there are information about the graves of the Lords of Pfirt: According to this, Hans Ulrich von Pfirt († March 8, 1518) and his wife Anastasia, née . von Bolsenheim († October 10, 1520) buried in Masmünster.

Died and were buried in oven in Hungary:

  • Simon von Pfirt († Sept. 30, 1521)
  • Georg von Pfirt († September 28, 1535)
  • Dorothea von Pfirt, b. Waldnerin, († February 23, 1528), married to Georg since November 27, 1515

In Ensisheim, where Simon von Pfirt († May 2, 1567) was councilor and governor of the governor, Dorothea von Pfirt († April 26, 1570) was buried next to him. She is described as a virgin who was already engaged to Hans Albrecht von Hagenbach († April 29, 1591). Theobald Walter already includes all of these people in the Pfirt-Zillisheim branch.

After the historians Johann Christian von Stramberg and Anton Joseph Weidenbach , however, this branch was not called von Zillisheim until 1620 . In the same year Johann Adam von Pfirt († December 12, 1651), Landvogt in Sundgau, took Zillisheim and built a castle with 365 windows there. He was probably buried in Zillisheim as well as his daughter Maria Katharina von Reinach, née. von Pfirt, († May 22, 1672), his son Phillipp Jakob von Pfirt († March 17, 1675) and his wife Maria Anna von Pfirt, b. von Schönau, († February 4, 1677).

The branch went out in 1746 with the death of Murbach monastery prior Bernard de Ferrette, the author of the Diarium de Murbach: 1671-1746 .

Sennheim-Blumenberg (Florimont) branch

Philipp Heinrich von Pfirt († January 22, 1606) zu Liebenstein, who had distinguished himself in the Turkish Wars, was the father of three sons. One of them was Jacob Christoph von Pfirt (1576–1637), who built a house in Blumenberg ( Florimont ) and called himself zu Blumberg . The descendants of a son of Jacob Christoph von Pfirt (1576–1637) formed a branch line to Sennheim in the 17th century , the third and last generation of which belonged to Johann Baptist von Pfirt zu Sennheim. He was a French brigadier general in the Northern Army.

Johann Jakob Leonhard Freiherr von Pfürdt zu Blumberg († 1820) descended from the line to Blumberg. He was the son of Johann Jacob zu Blumberg and Maria Anna Carolina von Pfirt-Carspach, a sister of Franz Anton Friedrich von Pfirt-Carspach, the president of the Breisgau knighthood . Johann Jacob Leonhard served from 1778 to 1783 in Rottweil and between 1784 and 1798 in Hohenrain and Reiden as Commander of the Order of St. John .

His sister Franziska Antonia von Pfirt-Blumberg († 1783) married Josef Fidel Anton Thurn-Valassina († 1799 in Friedingen ). The couple left behind their two daughters Caroline and Walburga, who moved to Freiburg im Breisgau, where their u. a. her aunt Franziska had been abbess in Günterstal since 1770 . At the beginning of the French Revolution , all of the branch's goods were sold or expropriated, except for the Fahy farm and the La Farine property. Now the rest of the family moved to Freiburg, where Franz Anton Friedrich von Pfirt-Carspach was able to obtain a residence permit from the government.

Alliance coat of arms on the house of the pilgrim's staff

Albert (1773–1845), the son of his brother Philipp Heinrich Anton, brought Johann Jakob Leonhard into the Bavarian military, where he rose to the rank of Royal Bavarian Chamberlain and Major and became a Knight of the Order of St. Ludwig . In 1810 he arranged the marriage with his niece Carolina Thurn-Valassina († 1836) and considered him in his will. The couple had no children and lived alternately in a house on Lorettoberg and in the house on the pilgrim's staff on Franziskanerstraße. According to his wife's will, he ordered the establishment of a foundation from her fortune of 373,000 gold guilders in his will in order to be able to set up a chapter for young women from the two relatives. This foundation was later merged with that of the former Breisgau knighthood. Shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War, the Albert-Carolinen-Stift was moved to Burgunderstr. 24 relocated. The alliance coat of arms of both families can be found at the old location.

Hubert, Albert's brother, received part of his fortune in his will and died on February 12, 1848 as the last descendant of the von Pfirt family in the Fahy farm in Florimont or in Freiburg im Breisgau.

Liebenstein-Carspach branch

Grave of Felix Anton Freiherr von Pfirdt at the Church of St. Leodegar in Bad Krozingen-Biengen
Grave of Freiherr Friedrich von Wangen at the Church of St. Leodegar in Bad Krozingen-Biengen

Franz Conrad († 1612), also the son of Philipp Heinrich von Pfirt († 1606), was Mr. von Liebenstein, Dürlensdorf and Carspach and thus the founder of the Carspach line. Johann Reinhard (* 1620; † around 1674), the grandson of Franz Conrad, was the bearer of the Austrian fiefdom of St. Trudpert in 1653 . He was raised to the baron status on August 22, 1660 in St. Johann in Tirol by Archduke Ferdinand Karl . Through his marriage to Maria Franziska von Sickingen -Hohenburg (1626–1693) he had Biengen in 1651 and a third of the manor over Steig and Fahrenberg (both now part of Breitnau ), Falkensteig (now part of Buchenbach ), Rainhof (now part of Kirchzarten ), Zastler , Weilersbach, Dietenbach and Mißwende (today all part of Oberried ). The divided manorial rule led to years of legal disputes with the Sickers. Biengen together with Krozingen, where he had also acquired the manor, became the center of the line's right-Rhine property.

One of his daughters, Franziska Friederike († 1710), married the Saxon-Polish Field Marshal Adam Heinrich von Steinau . Another, Maria Anna, became the wife of Franz Michael Neveu von Windschläg , the Austrian ambassador to Switzerland , in 1679 . A third daughter named Maria Eva († 1691) was an abbess in the Ottmarsheim monastery . His son Conrad Carl Anton († 1735) was from 1665 commander in several committees of the Teutonic Order in the Alsace-Burgundy Ballei . His brother, Johann Baptist Adam († 1714), married Maria Anna Rosina von Reinach († 1758).

As mentioned above, Maria Anna Carolina, a daughter of Johann Baptist Adam and Maria Anna Rosina, married Johann Jakob von Pfirt zu Blumenberg. Maria Susanna Xaveria (1735–1826), another daughter, was the last abbess of the Masmünster monastery from 1760 before she moved to Freiburg and died there. The son Franz Anton Friedrich Karl Felix (1713–1793), also mentioned above, married through his wife Maria Anna Franziska von Reinach-Steinbrunn († 1783) into the family von Reinach, as did his father and sister Maria Anna Josepha Ursula ( † 1788). It was on July 24, 1741 Porrentruy by Jacob Sigismund von Reinach-Steinbrunn appointed, the brother of his father to squire and chief forester. In 1758 Louis XV appointed him . in Versailles as captain of a company of the Swiss regiment of Colonel von Eptingen . On January 20, 1764 he was accepted into the free direct knighthood in the lower Alsace. After moving from Alsace, he became president of the Breisgau knighthood. His tombstone is behind the church of St. Leodegar in Biengen.

Figure on a sandstone fountain column with the coat of arms of the Lords of Pfirt in the courtyard of the Freiburg Technical School for Social Education

Johann Nepomuk Franz Octav Maximilian von Pfirt zu Carspach (1750-1818), one of the sons of Franz Anton Friedrich, was married to Maria Franziska von Venningen (1753-1817). In 1813 he was chief steward, imperial Austrian and grand-ducal Frankfurt secret council and lieutenant general and chancellor of the Order of Concord . In the same year he was registered as a resident in Freiburg. His wife († 1817) exercised together with Sophie von Coudenhoven (1747-1825) political influence on the Mainz Elector and Archbishop Friedrich Karl Joseph von Erthal (1719-1802).

After the death of the couple, both of whom were buried in the old cemetery , the house passed to the Andlau family . The reason for this was that Nepomuk's sister, Maria Karoline Salome Walburga von Pfirt zu Carspach (1743–1808), had married Friedrich Anton von Andlau -Homburg. It was henceforth called Palais Andlaw and destroyed in 1944. A fountain column with their coat of arms indicates the previous ownership of the von Pfirt family. It comes from a well at Andlauschen Haus, but is now in the courtyard of the technical school for social education of the archdiocese on Handelstrasse in Herdern .

Johann Baptist Nepomuk (born February 22, 1749 in Carspach, † 1831 in Paris), another son of Franz Anton Friedrich and with Maria Franziska, entered the Order of Malta, whose Grand Cross he wore. He was Komtur to Lage and Herford . As early as 1767 he was Bailly and ambassador of the order in Paris. At the beginning of the 19th century he served in Paris as Ministre plénipotentiaire of the order. He was friends with the French Foreign Minister Charles-Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord . Johann Baptist von Pfirt zu Carspach was the designated successor to the Heitersheim Grand Prior Ringg von Baldenstein , whose rule, however, fell to the Grand Duchy of Baden in 1806 . As a result of these events, the Bailly came to Paris as ambassador to the Grand Duke of Baden , in whose office he remained until his death in 1831. He was the last male descendant of his line.

His sister Anna Maria Caroline (1745-1825) had married the Austrian general tenant Konrad Beat von Wangen zu Geroldseck († 1790) in 1764, who had received most of the Pfirt's property, including Biengen. The tombstone of their son Friedrich Anton Franz (1767-1851) is in Biengen next to that of his grandfather Franz Anton Friedrich Karl Felix von Pfirt zu Carspach.

Family table

This family table from Julius Kindler von Knobloch is not entirely free of errors, but nevertheless offers an overview of the Pfirtschen lines.

  • Ulrich von Pfirt (1315 dead)
    • Ulrich 1300 ⚭ Greda von Blauenstein and ⚭ Clara Muenzmeister
      • Ulmann, Landvogt / Unterlandvogt in Alsace, carer in Sundgau, 1362 Castle Liebenstein received as an Austrian fiefdom († 1385) ⚭ Lorata von Wasselnheim and Clara Vitzhum
        • Hans Ulrich († 1408) ⚭ Adelheid von Hohenfels
        • Friedrich († 1407) ⚭ Margaretha Brenner of Neuchâtel
        • Susanna ⚭ Friedrich von Hattstatt zu Herrlisheim
        • John the Young, Canon in St. Amarin
        • Ulrich the boy
        • Greda ⚭ Günther von Eptingen
        • Dietrich Diebold ⚭ Greda von Hattstatt
          • Ulrich
          • Anton ⚭ Margaretha Burgrave
            • Adam ⚭ Margaretha von Blumeneck
              • Philippa, nun
              • Elsbeth ⚭ Anton Schnewlin von Landeck
              • Ludwig zu Biengen, co-lord of Riegel ⚭ 1510 Eva von Neuenfels
                • Alexis to Biengen
                • Jacob, Canon
                • Florence
                • Johann, marriage agreement with Anastasia von Reischach
                  • Johann Job zu Biengen
                  • Ludwig
              • Philipp ⚭ Margaretha Truchseß von Wolhusen
                • Blasius zu Liebenstein ⚭ Kungold Offenburg
                  • Philip
          • Pantaleon ⚭ Mardalena Marshal of Zimmer
            • Diebold ⚭ 1462 Agnes Wetzel of Marsilien
              • George
              • Beat († 1536) ⚭ Barbara von Uttenheim
                • Ulrich Diebold
                • Wilhelm († 1555)
                • Catharina
                • Mang († 1565) ⚭ Clementia von Reichenstein
                  • Susanna ⚭ Johann Georg Kempf von Angreth / Angreit
                  • Mang
                    • Wolf Sebastian ⚭ Barbara von Hagenbach
                      • Franz Melchior
                      • Johann Georg Mang Edmund zu Carspach († 1610)
                      • Wolf Wilhelm
                        • Friedrich
                        • Jakob Melchior
                        • Franz Diebold ⚭ Maria Sibylla Kunigunde Franziska Blarer from Wartensee
                          • Maria Anna Franziska Elisabeth Ursula († 1758?) ⚭ Ludwig von Schönau-Zell
            • Ulrich († 1501) ⚭ Katharina von Dattenried († 1523)
              • Christoph
              • Conrad, Vogt in Sennheim
                • Catharina
              • Friedrich († 1513) ⚭ Christina von Anweil
                • Walter
                • Peter
                • Thief
                  • Philipp Jacob
                  • Georg Morand (Meinrad), Vogt of Pfastatt († 1612)
                    • Johann Jakob
                    • Johann Diebold
                    • Johann Georg
                      • Johann Adam, archducal Austrian governor of the county of Pfirt
                • Ludwig
              • Valentin († 1548) ⚭ Catharina von Masmünster († 1530) and Margaretha Vay († 1562)
                • Nicolaus
                • Hans Ulrich
                • Anastasia ⚭ Matthias Jakob von Landenberg († 1564)
                • Philipp Heinrich von Pfirt zu Liebenstein († 1606) ⚭ 1557 Barbara Pfaffenlapp from Still zu Scheelodemspach
                  • Valentin († 1593)
                    • Philipp Heinrich
                    • Franz Conrad zu Liebenstein and Dürlensdorf and Carspach († 1612) ⚭ Anastasia von Reinach
                    • Jacob Christoph von Pfirt zu Blumberg (Florimont) ⚭ Esther von Hohenfürst
                • Georg Gangolf
                • Johann Jacob
                • Sigimund ⚭ Afra Vay
                • Thief
                • Claus
    • Greda 1361 ⚭ Reinbold Stubenweg
    • Diebold von Pfirt-Zillisheim (* around 1290; † 1335) ⚭ 1330 Hedewigis Zobel
      • Matthew († around 1400)
        • Heinrich
      • Mechtild (Metze; † around 1361) ⚭ 1338 Hanemann von Neuenstein
      • Johann (Hennemann, † around 1395) ⚭ 1371 Elsa von Roppach
        • Ulrich († around 1422)
          • Simon (* around 1460; † 1521)
          • Lockpick
            • Wolf Dietrich
          • Johann Ode (Hans Ott) († around 1486)
            • Friedrich († 1529)
            • Johann Ulrich (* around 1460; † 1518) ⚭ 1475 Anastasia von Bolsenheim († 1520)
              • Margaretha
              • Barbara
              • Johann Eckard / Hans Erhard (* around 1481)
              • Georg (1479–1535) ⚭ 1515 Dorothea von Waldnerin († 1528)
                • Johann Ode / Johann Otto (* 1516)
                • Appolonia (* 1518)
                • Johann Jakob (1521–1522)
                • Anastasia (* 1524)
                • Dayla (* 1525)
                • Johann Ulrich (* 1520)
                • Simon (1522–1567), councilor in Ensisheim and governor of the bailiff ⚭ around 1550 Jacobea von Ampringen
                  • Friedrich
                  • Philip (around 1554; † around 1556)
                  • Johann Georg (* around 1515; † around 1595) ⚭ Margarethe von Reinach († around 1595)
                    • Catharina
                    • Marie
                    • Johann Adam (* around 1583; † 1651) ⚭ 1609 Beatrice von Landsperg († around 1612) and Anastasia von Sickingen († 1636), daughter of Franz Conrad († 1617) and Apollonia von Sickingen (born von Ampringen, † 1626)
                      • Anna Catharina (* around 1611; † 1613)
                      • Franz Georg (1613–1636)
                      • Hans Christoph (* 1615)
                      • Maria Catharina (1616–1672)
                      • Friedrich (* 1617)
                      • Susanna (* 1620)
                      • Appolonia (* 1622; † around 1665)
                      • Philipp Jacob (1624–1675) ⚭ Maria Anna von Schönau († 1677)
                        • Johann Conrad Rudolf (1659–1709), Provost of the Cathedral in Basel 1707
                        • Maria Salome Lucille (1652–1721) ⚭ Jacob Sigmund von Reinach zu Obersteinbrunn
                        • Maria Ursula Clara Anastasia (1662-1725)
                        • Maria (1670–1698)
                        • several offspring died in the first two years of life
                        • Johann Caspar (1668–1716), Commander of the German Order in Rufach and Gebweiler
                        • Johann Franz Joseph (1656–1711), Lord of Zillisheim, Lieutenant Colonel under Montjoye , Colonel of the Milice d'Alsace († 1711) ⚭ Maria Antonia Apollonia von Wessenberg (1659–1711)
                          • Franz Anton Conrad Bernhard (1680–1746), prior in Murbach , 1702 secretarius capituli
                          • Philipp Jacob Sebastian (1684–1741), Canon of Basel
                          • Franz Joseph Rudolf zu Zillisheim, Captain of the Swiss Guard (* 1682 - † October 16, 1708 in front of Lille Fortress )
                          • Johann Karl Ignatius (1685–1694)
                          • Marie Helene (1687–1749)
                          • Maria Franziska Reine Elisabeth (* 1689)
                          • Maria Scholatique Louise (1692–1708)

Former possessions

The Habsburg feudal contract of 1362 gives an insight into the extensive possessions of the Lords of Pfirt. The lords of Pfirt received these fiefs at the express request of Katharina von Burgund , which is expressly pointed out in the feudal contract: "... Ulrich von Phirt enphang this in sinon namon and to stat siner zweyger brothers Antheinen and Penthelin from miner gnedigin fröwen ze lehen ..." One can therefore assume that these fiefs were already in the hands of the Lords of Pfirt. This fiefdom included the village of Carspach with “qwin und banne, mit aller siner gehörde”, Liebenstein Castle (near Liebsdorf in Alsace), the “öber hof ze Senhin”, the “taferne ze Reiningen”, customs and the market court Pfirt and the village of Bendorf. In addition, there was various income in Ammerzwiller, Tagolsheim, Wittersdorf, Durmenach, Ungershain (?) And Tanne (Thann?). At that time, the properties were all in Alsace in the former county of Pfirt. The baron family also owned properties in Breisgau. The places Biengen and Krozingen were property of the barons von Pfirt. However, the barons of Pfirt owned extensive fiefs, especially in Alsace.

At the latest after the Count von Pfirt died out, they sat at Hohenpfirt Castle ( French Château de Ferrette ). Liebenstein Castle, which was first mentioned in a document in 1218, was probably never the seat of the barons. This castle fell victim to the earthquake of 1356 and has been in ruins ever since.

In addition to the house she built there, in the place of which the village church has been located since 1863, the Linie zu Blumenberg owned two further houses and the St. André estate, a hamlet with a chapel and an important farm. After the death of his father-in-law Gaspard Nicolas de Barbaud de Florimont in 1783, Francois Nicolas de Salomon sold his entire property in Blumenberg to the von Pfirt family. These included the castle ruins, the town mansion, the mill, the foundry, the sheep farm and an orchard.

The Lords of Pfirt also had serfs in Liebensdorf as well as in Altenach, St. Ulrich, Hindlingen, Friesen, Largitzen, Niedersept, Pfefferhausen, Ottendorf, Riespach, Hirsingen, Hirzbach, Lümschweiler, Grenzingen, according to a list of serfs from the middle of the 16th century , Altkirch, Heimsbrunn and Mühlhausen.

coat of arms

Coat of arms of the Lords of Pfirt
See coat of arms of the lords of blades

The coat of arms of the Barons von Pfirt shows a gold crowned, silver lion in black . A red-clad, bearded man's torso with a white forehead band and flying ends or black clad as a helmet ornament ; or a naked virgin body with a white forehead band. on a crowned helmet a golden crowned naked man's torso with a white forehead band; the crowned lion growing on a crowned helmet. The helmet cover is black and silver. The coat of arms is very similar to the coat of arms of the Barons von Klingen . Whether it is related to the fact that Katharina von Klingen (* around 1255, † 1290) was married to Count Diebold (Theobald) von Pfirt, († 1310/1311), cannot be said.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Document book of the city of Basel, volume 3, document 3 supplement, p. 350.
  2. Joseph Trouillat, Louis Vautrey : Monuments de l'histoire de l'ancien évêché de Basel, Volume 1, document 302, preview in Google Book Search
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  4. ^ Document book of the city of Freiburg, Volume 1, 1828, p. 397.
  5. Julius Kindler von Knobloch: Upper Baden gender book. Volume 1, p. 206.
  6. ^ Document book of the city of Freiburg, Volume 1, 1828, p. 425.
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  8. ^ Copial book fol. 119-120. Sheet 220-220 'of the so-called "Black Book" of the German Order Coming Beuggen, signature 242 of inventory 67 (copy books). Document 336, In: Journal for the history of the Upper Rhine. Volume 30, p. 240.
  9. Journal for the History of the Upper Rhine Volume 20, p. 336.
  10. Julius Kindler von Knobloch: Upper Baden gender book . Volume 1, Winter, Heidelberg 1898, pp. 79ff.
  11. ^ Journal for the History of the Upper Rhine Volume 18, p. 198.
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  13. ^ The Weber family in the history of the city of Zell , zell-im-wiesental.de, accessed on February 16, 2014.
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  15. a b c d e f g h i Paul Stintzi: Blumenberg and Tattenried. In: Alemannisches Institut Freiburg / Breisgau (ed.): Alemannisches Jahrbuch 1964/65 , Konkordia, Bühl (Baden) 1966, p. 164 f.
  16. a b c d e f g h i j k l m Theobald Walter: The grave inscriptions of the district of Upper Alsace from the oldest times to 1820. Verlag der J. Boltzeschen Buchhandlung, Gebweiler 1904, pp. 140 f., Archive.org
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  18. a b c d e f g Julius Kindler von Knobloch, p. 83.
  19. a b c d e f g h i j k Alfred von Kageneck: Das Haus Franziskanerstr. 9 (Collegium Battmannicum - Albert-Carolinen-Stift). In: Schau-ins-Land 104, Freiburg im Breisgau 1985, ISSN  1434-2766 , pp. 263-268.
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  21. ^ Referred to as "Rosa Gabriele Antoinette" by Kindler von Knobloch
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  23. a b Roether, p. 1.
  24. a b c d e f Roether, p. 22.
  25. ^ Rüdiger Hitz, Hillard von Thiesen: Family, Work and Everyday Life in Hinterzarten 1600 to 1900. Stadler, Konstanz 1998, ISBN 3-7977-0396-1 , p. 39.
  26. Edmund von der Becke-Klüchtzner: Stamm-Tafeln of the nobility of the Grand Duchy of Baden: a newly edited nobility book . von Hagen, Baden-Baden 1886, p. 303 (digitized version)
  27. ^ Theobald Walter: The grave inscriptions of the district of Upper Alsace from the oldest times to 1820. Verlag der J. Boltzeschen Buchhandlung, Gebweiler 1904, p. 196, archive.org
  28. ^ A b Theobald Walter: The grave inscriptions of the district of Upper Alsace from the oldest times to 1820. Verlag der J. Boltzeschen Buchhandlung, Gebweiler 1904, p. 195, archive.org
  29. Roether, p. 38.
  30. Roether, p. 18.
  31. Roether, p. 19.
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