Laineck (noble family)

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Family coat of arms based on Scheibler's book of arms
South wing of Plankenfels Castle

The von Laineck family was an old Frankish noble family .

history

The von Laineck family came from the Laineck town of the same name, which is now part of Bayreuth in Upper Franconia . You were initially Ministeriale of the Meranians .

The von Laineck family were involved in the reconstruction and later also in the reconstruction of Nemmersdorf Castle in 1507 . Today, due to massive renovations in modern times, the castle can hardly be recognized in its medieval features. In the parish church there is the epitaph of Dietrich von Laineck from 1628. A small monument is the Dreihirtenstein, a boundary stone on the Königsheide .

The castle Plankenfels came to the Lords of Rüssenbach 1573 as a fief to Hans Gilg of Laineck. Since 1629 the lords of Lüschwitz zu Glashütten owned the castle.

Georg Wolf von Laineck auf Nemmersdorf (1592–1644) had been married to Maria Veronica (1609–1644), daughter of Urban Caspar von Feilitzsch , since 1635 . The couple had the son Urban Jacob (1639–1670) and a daughter, Margaretha Barbara (1640–1671), who married 1659 Lorenz (1628–1684) a son of Caspar von Stein . Brother and sister were still children when their parents died in 1644. In 1650, as universal heirs of their grandfather, Chancellor Urban Caspar von Feilitzsch (1586–1649), they both inherited the Förbau , Schwarzenbach an der Saale , Isaar , Joditz , Weischlitz and Kürbitz estates .

Urban Jacob married Christiane Sophie von Rabenstein auf Trautenberg (1644–1685) in 1662 . Their son Christian Erdmann von Laineck was born on January 21, 1666. He was eighteen years old when he died on July 5, 1684 in Paris on a cavalier tour. With him the sex died out.

The Nemmersdorf estate fell under the rule of Bayreuth . The above-mentioned Lorenz von Stein and Margaretha Barbara von Laineck had a daughter, Erdmuthe von Stein (1662-1715), married since November 12, 1684 to their first cousin, Freiherr Erdmann von Stein (1662-1739). They could at least keep the Franconian estates of Förbau, Schwarzenbach, Isaar and Joditz from the Feilitz inheritance. A distant relative of the testator, who died in 1649, Urban Heinrich von Feilitzsch from Regensburg, had begun family research and successfully litigated the surrender of the Kürbitz manor .

coat of arms

Blazon : “The coat of arms is split. Forward eight times in red and silver riveted . In the back a gold-crowned, upright lion on a blue background . Over a gold-crowned helmet with red-silver and blue-gold helmet covers is a closed blue flight studded with gold hearts . "

See also

literature

Web links

Commons : Laineck  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Chronicle of the Kürbitz Manor [1]
  2. Chronicle of the Kürbitz Manor [2]