Hoverbeck (noble family)

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Family coat of arms of those of Hoverbeck (d'Overbeke; van Overbeke (van der Walle))

Hoverbeck also Baron Hoverbeck called Schoenaich is the name of an originally from Brabant originating noble family , which in Prussia came to some renown.

history

Willem van Overbeke
(urk. 1474– † 1529)

The family borrows its name from the place Overbeke and begins its line with Seigneur Gautier d'Overbeke (Walter van Overbeke; 1435–1476). The son of Jean van Overbeke and Martine van den Steen, Jean van Overbeke, died in Termonde in 1458 . From Jean's marriage to Elisabeth de Zutter (Suttere) came Willem van Overbeke (Guillaume d'Overbeke; † February 13, 1529) who was secretary to Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy in 1474 and to his grandson Philip the Fair in 1496 . Willem van Overbeke, who also held the office of Secretary of the Grand Council of Mechelen , married on February 5, 1478 Johanna de Keysere (Jeanne de Keijsere; † July 5, 1517), daughter of Jean de Keijsere and Catherine Everaerts. The bride was the granddaughter of Jonkheer Josse de Keijser (Joos de Keijser (e); † August 13, 1443; documented in 1430 Lehnsmann zu Opwijk ) and the Avezoete van Nieuwenhove († before 1477 in Brussels ) from a family attested as early as 1310 in Opwijk . Willem van Overbeke († 1529) was, according to the inscription on the tomb of his grandson of the same name, also envoy of Charles the Bold to King Ferdinand of Aragon . The grandson Willem van Overbeke († 1581) also held the office of secretary of the Grand Council of Mechelen and was Seigneur von Damme.

Jean van Overbeke's son of the same name was procureur au conseil de Flandre . On March 12, 1502, he received a fief from Jean van den Walle to Astene near Peteghem.

Manor house to Barranowen (1938–45 the village of Baranowo was renamed Hoverbeck)

Johann von Hoverbeck is said to have immigrated from Flanders to Aleksandrowice near Krakow , which was a center of Protestantism , in 1570 for reasons of faith . His grandson John of Hoverbeck (1606-1682), which under Polish court service since 1631 in kurbrandenburgischen stood services received in 1640, having already in 1639 the Prussian Indigenat has received in recognition of his services, the 81 hooves riches of Barra Owen , in the Official Rhein located , initially as a fief . In 1658, Elector Wilhelm von Brandenburg transferred it as property. In 1663 he was raised to the hereditary imperial baron status by Emperor Leopold I , and he was last enfeoffed with the title of Hereditary Food of the Kurmark . His son Freiherr Johann Dietrich von Hoverbeck (1652–1714), in turn, took part as Kurbrandenburg diplomat in 1677/1778 in the peace negotiations in Nymwegen and later Kurbrandenburg ambassador in Denmark and Poland , and finally court judge in Königsberg .

The brothers Freiherr Reinhold Friedrich von Hoverbeck (1720–1770) and Freiherr Christoph Ernst von Hoverbeck (1725–1781) served as generals in the Prussian army .

The baronial von Hoverbeck family called von Schoenaich came into being through adoption at the beginning of the 19th century . For the nephew and adoptive son of the mistress who remained childless in three marriages and the last member of the branch of her family on Karnitte , widow Sophie Charlotte Freifrau Schoultz von Ascheraden, born von Schoenaich (1725–1807), Baron Samuel Johann Dietrich Baron von Hoverbeck called von Schoenaich (1762 -1809), landscape director of the landscape of Mohrungen , it came to the royal Prussian name and coat of arms association in Berlin in 1802. His son Baron Eduard von Hoverbeck-Schönaich (1799-1856) was councilor and majorate on Gut Klein-Tromnau in the Marienwerder administrative district in 1836 . The last-named grandchildren included u. a. the brothers Freiherr Alfred von Schoenaich (1860–1951), who was a member of the Prussian House of Representatives from 1903–1918 , Baron Andreas von Schoenaich (1863–1918), who was a royal Prussian colonel and published military history since 1907 , and Paul von Schoenaich (1866–1954 ), Major General out of service, was President of the German Peace Society.

Baron Samuel Johann Dietrich von Hoverbeck called von Schoenaich (1762–1809) was director of the landscape of Mohrungen and baron Leopold von Hoverbeck (1822–1875), also landscape director of Mohrungen, was a member of the Prussian House of Representatives from 1859–1870, from 1867 to 1870 a member in the Reichstag of the North German Confederation and 1871–1874 leader of the progress group in the Reichstag .

Relatives

coat of arms

Coat of arms of those von Hoverbeck (since around 1520: united from Overbeke and de Baenst)

The coat of arms of the van Overbeke (d'Overbeke, von Hoverbeck) shows a black chevron in silver accompanied by three (2: 1) black merlettes . On the helmet with its black and silver covers grow two turned away silver bears - or greyhound hulls (sometimes depicted as wolf hulls).

The coat of arms of the Barons von Hoverbeck called von Schoenaich shows a split shield in the diploma of 1802; the right half is quartered : in fields 1 and 4 in silver a black rafter, accompanied by three (2: 1) black merlettes (family coat of arms); in fields 2 and 3 a silver bar in black , accompanied at the top by three silver merlettes next to each other (de Baenst coat of arms); in the left half is up in the golden field of schönaichische oak wreath , below a red border crowned golden lion with sword in his right front paw (from the ( gemehrten ) beautiful Aichi rule Arms). The shield is covered by three helmets; From the helmet crown of the first with black and silver covers grows the heraldic helmet ornament ; the crown of the middle one with green and gold covers is adorned with the Schönaich oak wreath; From the crown of the third helmet with red and gold covers grows a curved sword arm with black splints.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Family Overbeeke ( Memento of the original from February 1, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. ( Flemish )  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.familieoverbeek.nl
  2. a b c d Sceaux armoríes des Pays-Bas et des pays avoisinants , p. 89
  3. Stamboom Van der Straeten ' Jonkheer Joos de Keijsere ; Voorouderlijst De Keijsere Daneel
  4. Kwartierstaat Lin, Sam en Gil Ingelaere » Joos de Keijser ( Memento of the original from February 19, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.genealogieonline.nl
  5. Towards the end of the 1480s, the couple commissioned an unknown artist to expand the picture of the Virgin by Hugo van der Goes in their possession from around 1479 into a small folding altar. The triptych is in the Städel Museum in Frankfurt .
  6. Stamboom Van der Straeten » Avezoete van den Nieuwenhove ; From Van der Straeten » Margriet van den Nieuwenhove
  7. The form of the name with "H" can already be found in the homeland, in the Carmelite Church in Ghent at the tomb of Marie van de Fonteyne, who died on October 3, 1562 , weduwe van [widow of] Adriaen van Hovebeke [resp. Adriaen van Overbeke]
  8. Baranowen in Heimatbrief Kreis Sensburg 54/2009
  9. Peter Bahl : The court of the great elector: studies for higher office holders. 2001, p. 174
  10. Otto zu Stolberg-Wernigerode, Neue Deutsche Biographie , Volume 23, Berlin 2007, p. 381 .
  11. ^ Rolf Straubel : Biographical manual of the Prussian administrative and judicial officials 1740–1806 / 15 . In: Historical Commission to Berlin (Ed.): Individual publications . 85. KG Saur Verlag, Munich 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-23229-9 , pp. 442 ( limited preview in Google Book search).
  12. Koninklijke Bibliotheek von Brussel, FH.II.6567: Armorial Lyncenich ( Book of Arms from approx. 1445), No. 2705 (Overbeke). There are also other historical Overbeke coats of arms: In the register of arms in the Rijksarchief van Gent , fonds d'Udekem-d'Acoz, no. 4500 (→ Francis Goole, Wapenboek van Brabant, Hassel 1971, p. 49) resp. Armorial Gorrevod "Codex 148" or CODEX CXLVIII (Cfr.Gorrevod, BR Ms. II 6563) is also a representation of the coat of arms of Overbeke Wespelaer: in blue a golden shield head, inside a striding, black lion. On the helmet with a tournament hat the lion between a golden flight ( same picture ( memento of the original from February 3, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link has been inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. ). The gender leading this coat of arms (to which Cole - in the seal inscription Claes (= Nicolaus) - belonged to van Overbeke) is evidently differentiated from the one dealt with here. → Sceaux armoríes des Pays-Bas et des pays avoisinants , p. 88 . Another coat of arms: a nested cross of silver and black in gold (for Matteis van Overbeke, in the Armorial Gorrevod , approx. 1450, Koninklijke Bibliotheek von Brussel, FH.II.6563 → Paul Adam, Frédéric Colon, Armoiries brabancones médiévales, d ' apres des sources inédites, in: Brabantica IV and V, Brussel, 1959, 1960, p. 117). @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.kbr.be