Klot (noble family)
Klot , now mostly Klot adH Heydenfeldt or Klot-Trautvetter , is the name of a noble family to which the kingdom , in Sweden and in Prussia ennoblement were issued, located primarily in Western Pomerania and Livonia , but also in Poland , Mecklenburg and Russia spread could and its individual lines persist to the present day.
The family is not with the Westphalian family Klot of Nateln nor with the Westphalian also Klot of Kobbenrode not with the Baltic Clodt of Jürgensburg cognate to distinguish, but of these.
history
The Low German origin of the sex is generally undisputed. Bagmihl is rather skeptical about ancestry of the family from the Pomeranian Klot zu Nepzin , which appeared in documents between 1418 and 1570, as suggested by Hupel in the Nordic Miscellanees , due to the difference in coats of arms.
The secured family line of the Klot begins with Claus Kloth († after 1541), 1501 documentary witness in Seßwegen , 1504 feudal lord on Heydenfeldt. On July 6, 1527, he received a letter of arms from Emperor Charles V in Esslingen . In 1557 his sons received the imperial confirmation of nobility. In the third generation, the Swedish colonel Tönnies von Klot († after 1616) continued the tribe permanently. His grandchildren, the Swedish major Otto Wilhelm von Klot († 1702) and the Swedish captain Wilhelm Johann von Klot († around 1742) were founders of the older and younger line of the family, while his younger brother Engelbrecht von Klot († after 1599) one Polish line donated. The Klot adH Heydenfeldt registered in the Ritterbank under no.15 in 1742 , but received no.16 in the registers of 1745 and 1747.
From the older line, the nephew and heir of the Swedish Lieutenant General Johan Reinhold von Trautvetter († 1741), Ernst Johann von Klot († 1771), Fideikommißherr on Hohendorf at the name and coat of arms association of Klot called Trautvetter in Stockholm on April 20, 1752 in lifted the Swedish baron . The ennoblement was tied to the ownership of Hohendorf. On 29 April 1846 was issued in Potsdam by extraordinary cabinet order the authorization to continue the Baron title to the possession of fideicommissum Hohendorf, on the principle of primogeniture . On April 15, 1871, the Prussian count was given to Baron Ernst von Klot-Trautvetter in Berlin under identical conditions , with unlimited expansion of the Swedish baron.
From 1737 to 1945 the Klein Mohrdorf estate in Groß Mohrdorf belonged to the family.
There is a family association.
Historical property
- Livonia
- in the Estonian district: Kersel and Immofer
- in the Latvian district: Heydenfeldt, Helffreichshof, Selsau, Kronenhof, Duhrenhof, Eichenangern, Grotthusenhof, Meselau, Lauternsee, Hohenheyde, Weißensee and Strömbergshof. The goods Puikel (since 1758), Odsen (since 1852) and Zehrten (since 1886) were family-owned until the Latvian land reform in 1920.
- Western Pomerania
- Hohendorf was the manor of the majorate of the same name with seven estates and around 2,500 hectares of land. The manor house in Hohendorf was built between 1840 and 1859.
- Groß Mohrdorf with Klein Mohrdorf and Batevitz was an estate of the Counts Klot-Trautvetter from 1737 to 1945. The family burial chapel is located in the churchyard of the Groß Mohrdorf village church . Another grave monument was erected in 1853 in the old cemetery in Greifswald for Baron Wilhelm von Klot-Trautvetter (* 1788; † 1857).
- Groß Kedingshagen also belonged to the Klot-Trautvetter after Ledebur in 1836.
- In 1902 a Baron von Klot-Trautvetter bought the Sundische Wiesen from the city of Stralsund for 310,000 marks in order to build a hunting lodge there, but a few years later sold the property to a Count von Eulenburg for 1,100,000 marks at a profit .
- Gut Neu Lüdershagen had been owned by the Counts of Klot-Trautvetter on Hohendorf since at least 1892.
- Mecklenburg
- Poppentin and Wendhof from 1853 to 1859
coat of arms
- The ancestral Arms (1527) is of gold over black divided , above a black ball , single below. On the helmet with black and gold covers , the ball between a gold and a black buffalo horn .
- The baronial coat of arms (1752) is divided diagonally to the left over a golden shield base, in which there are two diagonal bars (coat of arms v. Trautvetter). Right divided by gold over black, above a blue ball, below single (family coat of arms). On the left, in silver, the trunk of a red bull leaping to the right between two red stars . Two helmets, on the right helmet, with blue and gold covers on the right and black and gold covers on the left, the ball between two blue buffalo horns (based on the family coat of arms), on the left helmet, with red and silver covers on the right and black and gold covers on the left red star between two red buffalo horns, the mouths of which are each equipped with four ostrich feathers (gold, black, gold, silver). As a shield holder two armor with red sashes , the crowned helmets each equipped with four silver ostrich feathers, in the outer hand each holding a standard divided by red and silver on a golden tournament lance .
- The count's coat of arms (1871) is quartered and covered with a heart shield showing the family coat of arms. 1 and 4 in silver the rump of a red bull leaping to the right between two red stars. 2 and 3 in gold two black diagonal bars. Two helmets, on the right helmet with blue and gold covers the ball between a gold and a black buffalo horn (helmet of the family coat of arms), on the left helmet with black and gold covers a red star between two red buffalo horns, each of which has four ostrich feathers (gold, black, gold, silver) are equipped (helmet as in 1752). Sign holder as in 1752. Motto “Recte et ultra”.
Relatives
- Gustav Reinhold von Klot (1780–1855), general superintendent of Livonia
- Woldemar von Klot (1827–1888), Russian lieutenant general and wing adjutant, commander of the entire Russian cavalry across the Balkans in the Russo-Turkish War
- Nicolai Wilhelm von Klot (1852–1932), Livonian industrialist, lawyer and local politician
- Marion von Klot (1897–1919), singer and evangelical martyr
- Harro von Klot (1911–1940), German lieutenant captain and submarine commander
literature
- Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelslexikon Volume VI, Volume 91 of the complete series, CA Starke Verlag , Limburg (Lahn) 1887, pp. 297–298; Vol. XXVII, Volume 144 of the complete series, 2008, p. 373 ISSN 0435-2408
- Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , (GA) B 1, Volume 6 of the complete series, 1953, pp. 233-234; (GA) B 11, volume 82 of the complete series, 1983, pp 146-150; B 19, volume 99 of the complete series, 1990, pp. 195-238 u. Pp. 479–492 (Ancestry)
- Genealogical manual of the Baltic knighthoods part 1.1, Livland, Görlitz 1929 pp. 89-102
- Axel von Gernet: The origin of the Polish branch of Klot von Heydenfeld. In: Yearbook for Genealogy, Heraldry and Sphragistics 1898, pp. 94–96
- Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Adligen Häuser (FA), Justus Perthes , Gotha 1875, 1876–1878 (continuations); (GB), 1872, 1875-1879, 1941
- Burchard v. Klot-Heydenfeldt: Klot's family book (1527-2006). Berlin 2006
- Ernst Heinrich Kneschke : New general German nobility lexicon . Volume V, Leipzig 1864, pp. 144-145
- Leopold von Ledebur : Nobility Lexicon of the Prussian Monarchy . Volume I, Berlin 1855, p. 443 ; Volume III, 1858, pp. 288-289
Web links
- Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry on Klot, v., Ad H. Heydenfeldt. In: BBLD - Baltic Biographical Lexicon digital
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Genealogical Handbook of the Baltic Knighthoods Part 1.1, Livonia, 1929 p. 89ff
- ^ Julius Theodor Bagmihl : Pommersches Wappenbuch . Volume V, Stettin 55, pp. 32-33
- ↑ Adelslexikon Volume VI, 1887, pp. 297–298
- ↑ Hohendorff ( Memento of the original from June 12, 2007 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. ( PDF ; 194 kB) in the Duncker Collection
- ^ Gustav von Lehsten: The nobility of Mecklenburg since the land constitutional hereditary comparisons (1755). Rostock 1864, p. 128