Heuna

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Heuna , also known as the Heunen or von Heina , is a Meissen aristocratic family that can be traced back to 1530 at the latest as the owner of the Altbelgern manor and in the course of the 16th century on the Martinskirchen and Mühlberg manors in the Electorate of Saxony. The brothers Peter, Friedrich, Ottmar and Job, who are referred to as the Heunen 1564 as vassals of the Bishop of Meißen, come from this family.

Friedrich von Heuna bought no later than 1572 by the brothers Joachim and David Goetz in the care Liebenwerda villages Marxdorf , angle and Döllingen . In 1586 he left the first two villages to his brother-in-law Hans Runge zu Triestewitz , while his youngest son Noa von Heuna was to receive the village of Döllingen after his father's death. Due to debts, Friedrich von Heuna was forced to pledge Döllingen to von Köckeritz. His son and heir Noa von Heuna redeemed Döllingen in 1598 for 1850 guilders. In the same year he formed a farm out of five farms, which he expanded into a noble residence, which was given the status of writing by the Elector of Saxony in 1748 as the Döllingen manor.

Noa von Heuna died in 1622. He was followed by his two sons Augustus and Hans Rudolph von Heuna, who ran the Döllingen estate until at least 1631. He also had an older brother, Friedrich von Heuna the Elder. J., who, however, died early and left the underage sons George Friedrich and Esaias von Heuna as orphans, who in 1623 applied for a loan from Döllingen.

After the Thirty Years War, the trace of this noble family is lost.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Heinrich Kneschke: New general German nobility lexicon , Volume 4: Graffen - Kalau v. Kalheim. Voigt, Leipzig 1863, p. 351 ( digitized in the Google book search).
  2. http://www.global.hs-mittweida.de/~sgd/doellingen/orts-chronik.htm