Husk grief

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The surname or surname Huskummer (meaning: house chamberlain) appeared for the first time in northern Germany in the 13th century.

First attested namesake

A Vredeber Huskummer lived from 1250 to 1310. A Hinricus Huskummer, born in Werle in 1280, died around 1350. His brother, called Vredeber Barsse, was also born in Werle in 1280 and died in 1340. Vredeber Huskummer is born as the son of Frethub Ketelhodt ( 1210-1270). Frethub was a brother of Matthias Ketelhodt, who sat on Wattmannshagen and Radum until 1272. The first name Vredeber in the husk numbers suggests belonging to the original Mecklenburg family of the Ketelhodts . Like them, the huskummer wore a coat of arms with three iron kettle hats.

The relationship with the Princes von Werle

The Ketelhodts were vassals of the princes of Werle. Gerhard Ketelhodt (1250–1308), the son of the aforementioned Matthias, was enfeoffed with the Kambs estate near Röbel . Pribislaw von Werle-Richenberg had a castle in Parchim in the 12th century . He had married the daughter of Heinrich the Lion and received the states of Mecklenburg, Rostock, Werle and Warnow / Parchim as a fief . From his grandchildren Nicolaus received the land Werle in 1232 and Pribislaw in 1238 the land Warnow / Parchim. From 1248 Pribislaw calls himself Herr von Richenberg. In a feud with the Bishop of Schwerin, Pribislaw was captured and his possessions were divided. In 1270 he renounced the Parchim-Richenberg land.

The ancestral seat of the princes of Werle was near Rostock . “The Ketelhodt emerged early on in the Meklenburg region with their huskummer of the same tribe. ... The same sex belonged to ... Fredebernus de Barsse, who in 1292 was a witness in Waren with Nicolaus von Werle alongside Gerardus (?) Huscumer and other Werleschen vassals. “ Barsse was - according to high school professor August Rudloff - Passee . "The first name Fredebernus also points to the Ketelhodt-Huskummer family, since the same family was limited to this family until the beginning of the 14th century."

The Huskummer in circles

In 1369 the Huskummer in connection with the place Kreien appear in a document. This shows that the widow Margarethe des Vredeber Huskummer and her sons donated their property in Kreien to the Marienfließ monastery in Stepenitz. Margarethe Huskummer probably received a place for her foundation in the Cistercian convent Marienfließ, which is not far from Kreien. The Huskummer will then have withdrawn from Kreien. The name does not appear in connection with the place later.

The Huskummer in Lübeck

The name Huskummer later appears repeatedly in Lübeck . A Nicolaus Huskummer is mentioned in 1377 as the owner of the house at Mühlenstraße 37. The medieval gabled house was demolished in 1893. Possibly the same Nicolaus Huskummer was councilor there, fled the city during unrest in 1408 and died in 1411. Today the family is extinct.

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.roskildehistorie.dk/stamtavler/adel/Kettelhut/Kettelhodt.htm
  2. Friedrich Crull : The coats of arms of the genders of the team that occurred up to 1360 in today's borders of Meklenburg . In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology, vol. 52 (1887), p. 94.
  3. ^ Wilhelm Gottlieb Beyer : Documented history of Prince Pribislav I. von Parchim-Richenberg and his descendants . In: Mecklenburgische Jahrbücher, vol. 11. (1846), pp. 36–96.
  4. August Rudloff: The Meklenburgische Vogtei Schwaan . In: Yearbooks of the Association for Mecklenburg History and Archeology, vol. 61 (1896), p. 296f.
  5. ^ Friedrich Schlie : The art and history monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin . The district court districts of Wismar, Grevesmühlen, Rehna, Gadebusch and Schwerin. II. Volume. Schwerin 1898, p. 416 ( digitized version in the Internet Archive [accessed on July 23, 2015]).
  6. ^ Friedrich Schlie : The art and history monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin . The district court districts Schwaan, Bützow, Sternberg, Güstrow, Krakow, Goldberg, Parchim Lübz and Plau. IV. Volume. Schwerin 1901, p. 565 ( digitized from the Internet Archive [accessed on July 23, 2015]).
  7. ^ Christian Wilhelm Spieker : Church and Reformation History of the Mark Brandenburg . First part. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1839.
  8. ^ Johann Rudolph Becker : Complicated history of the Kaiserl. and salvation. Roman Empire freyen city of Lübeck . Vol. 1. Lübeck 1782, p. 333.
  9. Jacob von Melle : Thorough message from the Kayserlichen, Freyen and the H. Roman. Imperial City of Lübeck . Lübeck 3rd edition 1787, p. 333.