Leublfing

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Family coat of arms of those of Leublfing

Leublfing (also Leubelfing or Leiblfing ) was the name of an old Lower Bavarian noble family . Leiblfing , the ancestral home of the family, is today a municipality in the Lower Bavarian district of Straubing-Bogen . The Leublfing achieved the status of baron in 1605 and the status of imperial count of Leublfing zu Rhain in 1690 . The family is 1893 resp. extinct by adoption in 1985.

history

The family first appeared in a document in 1174 with Heinricus de Libolvingen as Ministrerialem of the Bishop of Regensburg. The family line begins in 1287 with Ulrich von Leiblfing, court marshal of the dukes of Lower Bavaria . His son Ulrich von Leibelfing became truchess of the Lower Bavarian dukes in 1311 . In 1341, Emperor Ludwig gave him market rights and permission to fortify the place with fences and trenches for his rule Eggmühl (today part of the market Schierling ) . From 1347 the lords of Leublfing belonged to the Lower Bavarian estates .

In the middle of the 14th century, the sex split into two lines. The branch Zeholfing went out in 1460. In the middle of the 17th century a branch was established in Franconia . Members of this line became members of the imperial knighthood in the knightly canton of Altmühl of the Franconian knight circle because of the ownership or partial ownership of Falbenthal and Untererlbach near Haundorf . Johann von Leublfing was Land Marshal in Pfalz-Neuburg in 1577 . His grandson Karl August von Leublfing, ducal Bavarian chamberlain and councilor , was Vitztum von Straubing from 1664 to 1666 .

Through the marriage of Paul von Leublfing to Ursula von Rain, the heiress of Rainer zu Rain , in 1573, Rain Castle came to the Leublfing. Through this inheritance, the Leublfingen family coat of arms with the sloping bars in silver and blue of the Carinthian lords of Graben zu Sommeregg, respectively. Baron von Rain zu Sommeregg increased.

In 1605 the lords of Leublfing obtained the title of baron . Franz Pankratius von Leublfing zu Rhain and Haidhausen was raised to the rank of imperial count in 1690 . Clemens Graf von Leublfing, royal Bavarian captain, was entered in the Bavarian nobility register in the count class in 1817 . Count Maximilian († 1893), foreseeing the extinction of his house, adopted his stepson Karl von Weling , who was raised to the Bavarian count status in 1872 under the name of Leublfing. A generation later, this line also died out in the male line . With Irene Helene, daughter of Karl Graf von Leublfing, the last representative of the family died in 1985.

Known family members

coat of arms

The family coat of arms shows two red bars in silver . On the helmet with red and silver blankets, a gold-comfy, red pillow on which a silver hound with a red collar sits.

Older coats of arms also show a shield divided three times by red and silver. Elements from the Leublfingen family coat of arms still appear today in some of the Lower Bavarian local coats of arms.

See also

literature

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karl Heinrich Ritter von Lang, Regesta boica 1, 1822, p. 286
  2. ^ Bavarian Main State Archives, Section III, Certificate 46
  3. ^ Germania topo-chrono-stemmato-graphica sacra et profana. Pars Altera, p. 202; by Gabriel Bucelin (Bucelinus)
  4. ^ Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelslexikon Volume VII, 1989, p. 305