Linstow (noble family)
Linstow is the name of a native Mecklenburg family with the parent company of the same name in Linstow .
history
The family first appeared in a document on July 22, 1281 in Rostock with the knight Gherardus de Linstowe . The family line begins with the knight Heinrich von Linstow , who is mentioned in a document from 1301 to 1318 . The family still exists today in Germany and in some lines with a large number of members in Denmark . There she was granted the Danish nobility naturalization on January 28, 1777.
Anna von Linstow, b. von Levetzow entered the Dobbertin monastery as a widow in 1500 and bequeathed 100 guilders to the monastery for her daughters Dorothea and Anna who lived there. From 1682 to 1704 Ilsabe Lucie von Linstow was a conventual in the Dobbertin Monastery.
In the registration book of the Dobbertin monastery there are eight entries by the daughters of the Linstow families from Bellin , Diestelow and Vietschow from the years 1736–1814 for inclusion in the local aristocratic women's monastery . Around 1880 the Linstow family had their Linstow manor , which was probably built during the Thirty Years' War , rebuilt.
The estate in Klocksin belonged to the family until the 14th century.
Castle and Gut Damerow and Neu Damerow were family owned from 1605 to 1784.
coat of arms
The coat of arms is divided by silver and black (oldest seal from March 3, 1325). On the helmet with black and silver blankets two virgins growing forwards, one white, the other black, each holding a green wreath and one in the middle in their outstretched outer hands.
Well-known namesake
- Conrad (von) Linstow, 1317 provost of the Dobbertin monastery
- Hans (Ernst Johann) von Linstow (1523–1592), heir to Bellin, from 1569 to 1583 provisional in the Dobbertin monastery, 1571 as a visitor involved in the elimination of the Catholic faith and the dissolution of the Dobbertiner nunnery.
- Georg von Linstow (1593–1650), from 1622 to 1628 monastery captain in Dobbertin, 1630 Wallenstein's appellate judge in Güstrow.
- Heinrich Wilhelm von Linstow (January 2, 1709 to April 29, 1759), Colonel of the Electorate of Hanover from Inf.-Reg. Linstow, wounded and captured in the Battle of Bergen , died in Frankfurt
- August von Linstow (1775–1848), Danish district administrator in the Sønderborg district
- Hans Ditlev Franciscus von Linstow ( Hans Ditlev Frants von Linstow ; 1787–1851), Norwegian architect
- Hans Otfried von Linstow (1899–1944), German colonel and resistance fighter
- Hartwig von Linstow (1810–1884), Danish-German administrative lawyer, acting president of the government of the Duchy of Lauenburg in Ratzeburg
- Hugo von Linstow (1821–1899), Prussian officer, co-founder and chairman of the HEROLD in 1869 . Association for Heraldry, Genealogy and Related Sciences in Berlin.
- Adolf von Linstow (1832–1902), Prussian lieutenant general
- Waldemar von Linstow (1859–1925), Prussian major general
- Otto von Linstow (medic) (1842–1916), German military doctor and zoologist
- Otto von Linstow (geologist) (1872–1929), German geologist
literature
- Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Adelslexikon Volume VII, Volume 97 of the complete series, pp. 404-405, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1989, ISSN 0435-2408
- Leopold von Zedlitz-Neukirch , New Prussian Adelslexicon , Volume 3, p.269f
- Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the baronial houses 1877. Seventh and twentieth year, p.508f
- Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of noble houses, 1901. Second year, S.557ff
swell
- Mecklenburg record book (MUB)
- Mecklenburg Yearbooks (MJB)
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Mecklenburgisches Urkundenbuch, No. 1583
- ↑ a b Genealogical manual of the nobility . Volume A IX, CA Starke, Limburg 1969, p. 201
- ^ Friedrich von Meyenn: An account book of the Dobbertin monastery. Schwerin 1894, pp. 181, 208
- ^ Otto Ferdinand von Linstow: News about the noble family von Linstow. Lübeck 1886
- ^ Otto Ferdinand von Linstow: News about the noble family von Linstow. 1886.
- ^ Otto Ferdinand von Linstow: News about the noble family von Linstow. 1886.
- ↑ Andreas Georg Wähner: Diary from the Seven Years' War edit. by Sigrid Dahmen, Göttingen 2012, p. 264. Digitized at GoogleBooks