Keuschburg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Keuschburg (also Kuzburc, Kuschburg, Kushburg, Kuschberg, Keuschberg, Keyschberg, Kewschberg, Keuschberg ) was a Silesian - Bohemian noble family from Liegnitz , which is mentioned from 1301 to 1538.

history

Nothing is known about the origins of this family. For the first time a Guntherus de Kuesberg and 1309 a Johannes and Johannes junior and his brother Peter were mentioned. Until 1335 Otto von Kuschburg was hereditary bailiff of Lüben in the Duchy of Liegnitz . In 1343 Hans and Heynco von Keuschberg on Gut Becke near Breslau are documented, in 1391 the brothers Günzel and Heinrich von Keuschburg in Heinrichau and in 1405 a Frenczil Kuschberg in Leipzig . Peter von Keuschberg was a member of the Teutonic Order in 1410 . Heinrich Kuscheberg appears in a Laucha document in 1421 , together with Dittrich Schatt ( Schart ) and Lutold von Glyna ( Gleina ). A Stephan von Kuschburg was Vogt at Frauenstein Castle in the Ore Mountains . Nikol / Nickel / Niclas / Nicolaus von Keuschberg at Grafenstein Castle in Bohemia (* 1395, ⚭ 1425 NN von Dohna ) was a notorious Hussite leader from 1431 to 1435 and committed devastating attacks in the area there. With feudal pieces for church divisions , which are not specified, Duke Wilhelm III enfeoffed. von Sachsen 1450 the Ilse von Kuschpurg ( Keuschberg ), Stephans von Kuschberg's sister, with three patches of vineyards at Lösendorf (desert near Dorndorf ) and at Schidingen . Peter Keuschburg was a Teutonic Knight in the Thirteen Years' War in the Teutonic Order . In 1469 Jane Keuschberg was a cavalier with Duke Friedrich I of Silesia zu Liegnitz and Goldberg . In 1490 the brothers Hans Keuschburg, Johanniter-Ritter and Peter Keuschburg are mentioned. The last time was in 1517 the brothers Georg and Hans von Kewschberg zu Rüstern near Liegnitz and in 1524 Hans von Keyschberg. In 1538 Margaretha von Keuschberg died as abbess of the monastery of St. Corpse in Wahlstatt near Liegnitz.

literature

  • Johann Sinapius : Schlesische Curiositäten , Volume 1, Leipzig 1720, p. 510
  • Jakob Christoph Beck , Jakob Christoph Iselin , August Johann Burtorff: Neu- Vermehrtes Historisch- und Geographisches Allgemeine Lexicon , Brandmüller 1743, pp. 497–498 digitized
  • Johann Friedrich Gauhe : Of salvation. Rom. Reichs genealogical-historical Adels-Lexicon , Vol. 2, 1747, p. 527 digitized
  • Johann Christian von Hellbach : Adels-Lexikon, or, Handbook about the historical, genealogical and diplomatic, partly also heraldic, genealogical and diplomatic, partly also heraldic news from the high and low nobility: especially in the German federal states, as well as from the Austrian, Bohemian, Moravian, Prussian, Silesian and Lusatian nobility , Bd. 1, BF Voigt, 1825, p. 651 digitized
  • Gustav Adolf Harald Stenzel : Scriptores rerum Silesiacarum; or, Collection of Silesian historians, in the name of the Silesian Society for Patriotic Culture , published by the Association for the History and Antiquity of Silesia , 1839 ( online )
  • Ernst Heinrich Kneschke : New General German Adelslexicon Vol. 5, 1864, p. 87
  • Friedrich Wilhelm Schirrmacher: Document book of the city of Liegnitz and its soft picture up to the year 1455 , digitized in 1866
  • Codex diplomaticus Silesiae , Volumes 23-24, 28, J. Max & Komp., 1915
  • Sven Ekdahl: The pay book of the Teutonic Order 1410/1411 Part II: Indices with personal-historical comments , Böhlau Verlag Köln Weimar, 1988, pp. 130-131 digitized

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Friedrich-Albert Zimmermann: Additions to the Description of Silesia , 1785 p. 440 [1]
  2. ^ Rüdiger Bier: 1500 years of history and stories of the manorial seats for church divisions and castle divisions , self-published by Rittergut Kirchscheidungen 2009, pp. 179, 180 and 190