List of German noble families / K
K
Surname | Period | Remarks | coat of arms |
---|---|---|---|
Kageneck | since 1230 | Alsatian nobility; 1671 imperial barons; 1771 Imperial Count | |
Bald | since 1250 | originally from the Rügen noble family, later in Prussia | |
Kahlenberg | until the beginning of the 19th century | extinct, Prussian noble family | |
Calve | since 1135 | Uradel from Stendal; former name de Calve / from Calven; later promotion to the Lübeck patrician nobility | |
Kalckreuth | since 1284 | Lower Silesian nobility; 1678 Bohemian barons (line Dolzig); 1786 Prussian counts (Klemzig line) | |
Limestone | since 1284 | Warmian nobility | |
Kaler to Lanzenheim | 1600 to | Tyrolean postal nobility; 1757 hereditary-Austrian nobility; | |
Kalff | 1433-1581 / 1586 | German-Baltic, Estonian noble family from Westphalia, agnates of the v. Surrender (†) | |
Kalitsch | since 1352 | Alhaltin noble family | |
Lime | since 1176 | Rhineland noble family | |
Kaltenbach | 1083-1159 | Swabian noble family | |
Kaltenborn-Stachau | since 1265 | Silesian-Meissen nobility | |
Kaltental | since 1125 | old Swabian noble family | |
Kameke | since 1298 | pomeranian nobility; 1740 Prussian counts | |
Comb | 1073-1375 | Bavarian noble family in the High Middle Ages | |
Chamberlain of Worms | since 11th century | Noble family from the Middle Rhine | |
Kamptz | since 1286 | mecklenburg nobility; In 1822 a relative received a Prussian nobility legitimation | |
Kanitz / Canitz | since 1185 | Meißnischer nobility with the tribes Canitz and Kanitz; Canitz: imperial baron status 1698; Canitz- u. Dallwitz: Bohemian baron 1664; Kanitz: 1798 Prussian count class | |
Kannewurff | since 1245 | Thuringian nobility | |
Kapeller | 12th to 14th century | Austrian noble family with center of life in Austria ob der Enns (Upper Austria) | |
Cape stallion | since 1321 | Medieval aristocratic family | |
Cape mr | ? | Hessian and Mecklenburg noble families | |
Kaplirz de Sulewicz | since about 1400 | Bohemian noble family | - |
Karajan | since 1792 | Originally a Greek family who moved to Austria via Saxony in the 18th century | |
Kardorff | since 1200 | Mecklenburg nobility | |
Carolingian | 639-1005 / 06 | Ruling family in the Franconian Empire | - |
carp | until 1663 | Swabian noble family | |
Karras | 1206 | Meissen nobility | |
Karstedt | since 1271 | Old Marks of the nobility | |
Kaskel | since 1742 | Saxon noble family, of Jewish descent; 1867 Austrian nobility; 1869 Austrian baron | |
Kastl | 11./12. century | noble family of the Middle Ages, rarely referred to as counts | City arms of Kastl |
Kastner | ? | different Bavarian genders: Kastner von Amberg, Kastner von Haisnbach, Kastner von Pilsting, Kastner von Nappurg, Kastner von Pechhofen, Castner von Mauheim, Kastner von Schnaittach | Kastner from Schnaittach |
Katte | since 1221 | old-market nobility; 1740 Prussian counts | |
Cat bite | since 1305 | Noble family who were wealthy in Schlüchtern and its surroundings | - |
Katzenelnbogen | 1095-1479 | Counts from the empire and the Middle Rhine | |
Katzmair | since 1318 | Munich patrician family | |
Kaufungen | since 1231 (†) | Meissen noble family | |
Kaunitz | 1284 | Bohemian gentlemen; 1664 imperial count for the Bohemian line; 1643 Bohemian count, 1683 imperial count for the Moravian line | |
Kaven | 1645 | Diepholz family, extinct in Germany since 2009, branch line exists in Argentina | - |
Kawer | since 15th century | Livonian nobility | |
Keffenbrinck | before 1580 to 1920 | extinct, originally Rhineland, later Pomeranian-Swedish-Prussian family, Swedish and Prussian barons and counts | |
Keglevich de Buzin | before 1300 | Uradliges, Croatian-Hungarian, then Austrian noble family | |
Ladle | since 961 | Thuringian noble family | - |
basement, cellar | since 1229 | Prussian, Thuringian, Baltic, Russian and Saxon noble families | |
Kemmaten | 1125-1600 | Franconian and Thuringian noble families | |
Kempenich | extinct, noble family with ancestral seat at Kempenich Castle in the Hocheifel | Isenburg-Kempenich | |
Kerberg | since 12th century | Mecklenburg noble family | |
Kerckerinck | since 1267 | primeval family in the Münsterland; 1710 imperial barons | |
from the Kere | 1520 to? | extinct, Thuringian-Franconian noble family | |
Kerkring | 1350-1736 | Originally from Westphalia, the noble family that rose in the Lübeck patriciate | |
Kerpen | 1065-1866 | Presumably originally the noble noble family who, as Reichsministeriale in Kerpen an der Erft, were enfeoffed with the burgrave office of the imperial fortress and were also based in Kerpen in the Eifel | |
Kerssenbrock | since 1265 | East Westphalian nobility | |
boiler | 1085-1305 | high medieval counts in the Maas, Mühl and Nievenheim districts; Headquarters in Kessel on the Maas | |
boiler | since 1388 | Thuringian nobility; 1747 Prussian counts; 1873 Prussian barons as von Kessel and Zeutsch | |
Cauldron of mountains | since 1355 | Noble family in the Westerwald | - |
Boiler room | since 1297 | hessian nobility; 1688 Imperial Barons; 1816 matriculation with the Bavarian count class | |
Kesteloot | 18th - 19th century | Prussian noble family of lords and barons von Kesteloot (t), originally from the Netherlands | |
Ketelhodt | since 1230 | Lower Saxon-Mecklenburg primitive nobility | |
Ketteler | since 1210 | Westphalian nobility; 1675 imperial barons |
Family coat of arms Neu-Assen line |
Chain castle | since 1344 | originally from the Lüneburg family, later especially wealthy in Mecklenburg | |
Keudell | since 1227 | hessian nobility; An aristocratic family of the same name traces its origins back to the Hessian nobility - it received a Prussian nobility confirmation in 1789 | |
Keuschburg | since 1301 | Silesian-Bohemian noble family | - |
Kevernburg | early Middle Ages to 1385 | Thuringian nobility in the Middle Ages | |
Keyserlingk | since 1300 | bourgeois sex from Westphalia; 1631 enrolled in the 1st class of the Courland knighthood; 1741 imperial count for House Blieden; 1844 Prussian approval for the continuation of the baron title for House Blankenau. | |
Khälß von Khälßberg | ? | Austrian noble family; Nobility rise between 1440 and 1493; 1612 imperial nobility | |
Khevenhüller | since 1330 | noble family of the high nobility based in Carinthia; 1566 baron class; In the 16th century division into two main lines Khevenhüller-Frankenburg (1593 Imperial Counts) and Khevenhüller-Hochosterwitz (1725 Imperial Counts and 1763 as Khevenhüller-Metsch Prince). | |
Khuen from Belasy | since 1111 | Aristocratic family from Tyrol, which also settled in Lower Austria and Bohemia in the 16th century | |
Quills | since 17th century | German-Baltic-Russian noble family | - |
Kielmansegg | ? | three noble families in Württemberg, Holstein / Hanover and Westphalia, who are not related to each other |
Württemberg Holstein / Hanover |
Kien | since 13th century | Swiss noble family | - |
Kienberg | 1173-1517 | Swiss noble family | |
Kieseritzky | since 1865 | German-Baltic noble family | |
Kieter | since 1791 | German-Baltic noble family; 1791 imperial nobility | |
Kinckel | since 1752 | South German noble family | - |
Kindler von Zackenstein | since 1573 | Brandenburg noble family | - |
Kinsky | since 1237 | Bohemian nobility; 1628 imperial count; 1746 Bohemian princes, 1746 imperial princes; the later born bear the title Graf Kinsky von Wchinitz and Tettau. | |
Kirchbach | since 1490 | Saxon noble family; 1663 nobility; 1720 and 1913 as a baron; 1918 Count estate | |
Kirchberg | from 1134 | Thuringian noble family | |
Kirchberg | 1149-1799 | German noble family in Thuringia, Reichsministeriale | |
Kirchberg (Swabia) | until 1510 | Swabian noble family | - |
Kittlitz | since 1160 | originally noble nobility from Upper Lusatia, since about 1560 the barons | |
Klebelsberg | ? | Bohemian noble family from Tyrol; 1669 Freiherrnstand; 1702 or 1733 count status | |
Minor worries | since 1464 | Prussian and Austrian noble families | |
Kleist | since 1263 | pomeranian nobility; Rath House : 1829 Prussian recognition of the baron class; House Redel : 1831 Prussian baron class; Haus Susten : 1861 Prussian permission to continue the title of baron; House Wendisch-Tychow : 1869 Prussian counts; Haus Zützen : Prussian counts; Kleist von Loß : 1823 name and coat of arms association with the Counts of Loß; Kleist v. Nollendorf : 1814 Prussian counts; Kleist-Retzow : 1814 Prussian name and coat of arms association with the expired von Retzow. | |
Klinckowström | since 15th century (possibly 1320) | The councilors' ancestors lived in the 15th – 17th centuries. Century under the name Klinkow or Klinckow in Stralsund and possibly came from the place of the same name near Prenzlau, where as early as 1320 a dynasty of the same name, who owned a castle and sat on the council, documented. Branches of the family settled in Sweden, East Prussia, and Austria. 1678 and 1690 under the name Klinkowström Swedish nobility, a branch (†) received the Swedish nobility in 1682 under the name Klinkow von Friedenschild . 1759 Swedish barons. 1798 Prussian counts. | |
Sound | 1169-early 15th century | extinct, medieval family | |
Klingenberg | 1200-1583 | extinct, southern German noble family | |
Klingfurth | since 13th century | Austrian noble family in Lower Austria, named after today's Walpersbach cadastral community of Klingfurth | - |
Klinggräff | since 1715 | Mecklenburg noble family | |
Klingsporn | around 1210 | Swedish, Prussian and Baltic noble families | |
Klinski von Rautenberg | since 1295 | also Rautenberg-Klinski, Pommerellischer Uradel, Lehnsadel of the Teutonic Order, a branch of the Rautenberg (Hildesheim) , a tribe with the Rautenberg-Garczynski | |
Klitzing | since 1265 | Mittelmark primal nobility | |
Kloeden | since 1162 | Old Markian nobility | |
Klot | since 1501 | Livonian family Klot adH Heydenfeldt , 1527 imperial coat of arms, 1557 imperial nobility confirmation, 1742 Livonian knighthood, 1752 Swedish baron Klot-Trautvetter , 1846 Prussian recognition of the baron, 1871 Prussian count | |
Log | since 1785 | originally the bourgeois family, who came from the Vogtland and settled in Hesse, Mecklenburg and Brandenburg; Saxon branch was raised to imperial nobility in 1785 | |
Klüchtzner | since (1487) 1638 | Saxon family, appears from 1638 in Courland (†) in the uncontested nobility, 1841 enrolled in the knighthood, 1834 and 1862 Russian baron, spread to Prussia (†) and Saxony | |
Boyhood | since 1147 | Silesian nobility, natural barons; appears from 1501 in Courland in the uncontested nobility, 1685 Polish approval to continue the title of baron, 1841 the indigenous knighthood of Courland, 1853/1862 Courland and Russian recognition of the use of the title baron | |
Knappitsch | since 1775 | Austrian noble family that originated in Carinthia | |
Knebel (Knebel Doeberitz) | 1495 | Middle Franconian nobility; 1581 letter of arms; 1756 Prussian nobility; 1759 imperial nobility; 1809 Prussian name and coat of arms association with von Doeberitz as von Knebel Doeberitz . | |
Gag from Katzenelnbogen | 1252 | Rhenish nobility; 1710 imperial baron status | |
Knesebeck | since 1207/1244 | Altmark (white tribe) and Lower Saxony (black tribe) primeval nobility; 1870 royal Prussian baron as von dem Knesebeck-Milendonck | |
Kniestedt | since 1221 | Noble family that arose from the Hildesheim ministerial family | |
Etiquette | since 1241 | Lower Saxon aristocratic family belonging to the Calenberg nobility, imperial baron status 1665 | |
Knobelsdorff | since 1203 | Meissen nobility; 1699 Bohemian barons, 1826 entry in the list of nobility of the Prussian province of Posen as barons; 1837 Dutch baronate | |
garlic | since 1316 | Havelland nobility | |
Garlic to Hatzbach | since 1292 | Hessian nobility | |
Knobloch | since 1292 | Meissen nobility | |
Knöringen | 1197 to? | extinct (?), Swabian nobility; 1669 imperial baron status | |
Knorr | until 1857 | baronial, now extinct noble family of the Habsburg monarchy | - |
Knorring | since 1123 | Eichsfeld, later German-Baltic noble family, spread to Sweden, Finland, Russia and Chiele, Swedish and Russian barons | |
Knuth | since 1230/34 | Mecklenburg, Pomeranian and Danish noble families | |
Knutons | 1140 to 17th century | old knightly family in Thuringia, Saxony, in the Kurkreis and Meißen | |
Kobrinck | since 1370 | Westphalian noble family | |
Kobstädt | since 1199 | Thuringian noble family | - |
Kochendorf | 1222-1450 | extinct, lower aristocratic family originating from the ministry in Kochendorf, today part of Bad Friedrichshall | - |
Kochtizky | since 1309 | Silesian nobility, baron class in 1610 | |
Koeckritz | since 1209 | Vogtland nobility, 1840 Prussian baron class | |
Koháry | since 1470 | Hungarian noble family, most recently prince. With the marriage of Ferdinand Georg von Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld with Princess Maria Antonie Gabriele von Koháry, the house of Sachsen-Coburg-Koháry opened up | |
Charcoal burner | 1103-1727 | extinct Saxon noble family | |
Charcoal burner | since 1545 | originally from Halberstadt of the patrician family, which later spread to Livonia, Sweden and Finland | |
Charcoal burner | since 1735 | Prussian noble family | |
Köller | since 1280 | Pomeranian nobility | |
king | since 1531 | Family of wholesalers and councilors belonging to the patriciate in Kempten im Allgäu | |
Koenigsberg | 12th century to 1653 | Knight family with possessions in Styria, Bucklige Welt and Burgenland | |
Koenigsdorff | 1705-2004 | extinct, Silesian postal nobility; 1705 Bohemian knighthood, 1788 Prussian counts, | |
Königsegg | since 1251 | Swabian nobility; 1613 barons for the Swabian line, 1629 imperial counts for the same; 1712 recognition of the baron status for the Prussian line | |
Koenigsfeld | 1261-1808 / 10 | Bavarian nobility | |
Königsegg | since 1251 | Swabian nobility; 1613 barons for the Swabian line, 1629 imperial counts for the same; 1712 recognition of the baron status for the Prussian line | |
Koenigsmarck | since 1247 | old-market nobility; 1651 Swedish counts; 1708 confirmation of imperial baron status; 1817 Prussian counts | |
Königswarter | since 1860 | Austro-Hungarian noble family of Jewish origin, whose name is derived from the Czech town of Königswart; 1860 Austrian knighthood; 1870 baronial status | |
Koenitz | since 1064 | originally Thuringian, later also Franconian nobility; 1818 matriculation in Bavaria with the baron class. | |
Könneritz | since 1348 | Thuringian nobility; 1609 hereditary-Austrian barons for the Austrian line; Belgian counts (royal Saxon recognition in 1864) for the Saxon line | |
Kolb von Wartenberg | since 1202 | Legal ministerial sex; named after the Wartenberg Castle in Kaiserslautern | |
Koler from Neunhof | 1246-1688 | Patrician family from Nuremberg | |
Rage | 1810 and 1883 | several unrelated Austrian mail nobility families: Koller (1783) - hereditary knighthood; Koller (1810) - Austrian barons; Koller (1883) - Austrian nobility 1883, Austrian baron class 1912. | |
Koller (Thuringia) | before 1486 | Thuringian nobility | |
Kollonitz of Kollograd | ? | old, originally Croatian, then Austrian and also Hungarian noble family | |
Kolmach | 1267-1573 | Thuringian noble family | |
Kolowrat | since 1347 | Primeval nobility from Bohemia and Moravia, imperial count status with improved coat of arms 1624, royal Bohemian award of the title "high and well-born" 1626, imperial count 1658, Bohemian confirmation of the count 1660 | |
Conradines | 832-1036 | Frankish counts | - |
Koppelow | since 1320 | Mecklenburg nobility | |
Koppenfels | since 1754 | Thuringian-Saxon postal nobility | - |
Koppenstein | since 14th century | Rhenish Franconian noble family | |
Korff | since 1241 | Westphalian nobility; Barons and counts for different houses | |
Kortzfleisch | since 1460 | Westphalian noble family | |
Koschembahr | since 1361 | Silesian nobility | |
Koseritz | since 1344 | Upper Lusatian noble family | |
Koskull | since 1302 | Baltic nobility; 1638 Swedish, 1742 Livonian, 1777 Estonian and 1841 Courland indigenous; 1719 and 1720 Swedish, 1834 Prussian, 1862 and 1879 Russian barons; 1803 imperial and 1898 Russian counts | |
Kospoth | since 1173 | Uradel from Thuringia; House of Zantoch: 1711 imperial count; Halbau House: 1751 imperial count; House Briese: 1776 Prussian counts; House Mühltroff: 1790 imperial count; | |
Kostka | since 1246 | Mazovian nobility, branch of the noble gentlemen v. Rostkowski , 16th century imperial count, in Pomerania Kostka v. Sternberg , 1759 Austrian nobility for the Moravian line v. Liebinsfeld | |
Kostka from Postupitz | (?) 14th century to mid-16th century | Bohemian noble family | |
Kötschau | ? | three different noble families that were based in the Merseburg area |
Kötschau at the hostage Kötschau to Kötzschau Kötschau on Dölzig |
Kottwitz | since 1216 | Lower Silesian nobility family with the parent company of the same name Kottwitz , today's Kotowice near Breslau . 1721/24 Bohemian barons. | Barons of Kottwitz |
Kottwitz from Aulenbach | since 1222 as codebuz | Franconian noble family, extinct in the male line in 1699 | |
Kotz von Dobrz | since 1377 | Bohemian nobility and an Austrian nobility | |
Kotzau | 1234-1640; 1738-1976 | extinct, Frankish noble family. –1738 re-establishment as imperial barons; extinguished in 1976. | |
Throw up | since 1234 | old, Upper Saxon-Magdeburg noble family | |
Kotzebue | since 1420 | German-Baltic and Russian postal nobility; 1785 Russian hereditary nobility; 1874 Russian count | |
Crash | since 13th century | Prussian noble family | |
Krafft from Festenberg | ? | Patrician family from Ulm | |
Krafft-Ebing | since 1770 | Bavarian noble family | |
Collar | ? | Thuringian noble family | |
Krahwinkel | 14th century until 1625/30 | old knightly family in the diocese of Merseburg and the electorate of Saxony. | |
Kraiger from Kraigk | 1091 to early 17th century | old ministerial family of Carinthia. Also in Bohemia and Moravia since the end of the 13th century | |
Krakewitz | since 1303 | rügenscher Uradel, 1797 Prussian nobility legitimation for natural son while retaining the paternal name and coat of arms | |
Kralik from Meyrswalden | since 1877 | originally a Bohemian family who were knighted in Austria in 1877 | |
Kramsta | since 1859 | Entrepreneurial family from Silesia, which was raised to hereditary nobility in 1859 | |
Cranes | since 1429 | old Westphalian postal nobility; 1878 Prussian approval to use the title of baron | |
Crane from Kirchheim | since 13th century | Palatine noble family | |
Crane field | 1143 to about 1380 | thuringian dynasty | - |
Kransberg (noble family) | first mentioned 1220/22 to approx. 1310 | Nobility in the Taunus | |
Krasov | since 1294 | rügen nobility; 1707 Swedish barons; 1840 Swedish count | |
Cravat | 1282 to 15th century | originally a branch of the Benešov family, (Czech z Benešova ) from Bechin (zz Bechyně), Mrácký z Dubé. | |
Scratch from Scharfenstein | ? | Rhenish-Moselle aristocratic family | |
Krauchthal | 1181-1425 | Zähringian ministerial family | |
Kraus | since 1864 | Austrian noble family; 1864 Elevation of the nobility | - |
Kregel from Sternbach | 1697-1789 | Saxon noble family that emerged from a Central German merchant family | - |
Kreisbach | 1110-1415 | Lower Austrian noble family, whose ancestral seat was Kreisbach Castle | - |
Krempelhuber | since 1602 | aristocratic mailing family from Bavaria; 1790 Imperial nobility | |
Krenkingen | since 1202 | Knight and noble family in the Landgraviate of Klettgau | |
Kress from Kressenstein | 1270 | one of the oldest patrician families in the Free Imperial City of Nuremberg; 1530 confirmation of imperial nobility; | |
Kries | 1595 | family from Thuringia; 1840 Prussian nobility | |
Krockow | since 1292 | Primeval noble family from Pomerellen, 1786 Prussian counts | |
Crook | since 1184 | First noble family from the Archdiocese of Magdeburg | |
Krogh | since the 16th century | Lower Saxon and Danish noble families | |
Kromsdorf | 1150 to the end of the 17th century | Upper Saxon-Thuringian noble family | - |
Kronberg | 1192-1704 | Imperial knight dynasty, extinguished in 1704; 1618 Freiherrnstand, 1630 Counts | |
Kronenfeldt | since 17th century | German-Bohemian noble family | - |
Krosigk | since 1143 | Upper Saxon nobility; 1656 imperial barons; | |
Kruedener | since 1289 | German-Baltic noble family, 1855 Russian baron, 1877 name association Krüdener-Struve | |
Jug from Nidda | since 1412 | Hessian noble family; 1648 imperial coat of arms letter, 1703 imperial nobility confirmation, later Hessian, Prussian and Saxon nobility confirmations as well as imperial nobility confirmations for individual members | |
Krumlov | 1213-1302 | extinct, Bohemian noble family | - |
Crumbs | 1355-1602 | Pomeranian nobility | - |
Krummendiek | since 1208 | Holstein and Danish noble families from Krummendiek in the Elbmarschen | |
Krummensee | 1375-1827 | old robber barons, courtiers and lords | |
Kruse | since 1266 | Mecklenburg noble family, 1679 Swedish baron class (line flourishes), 1812 Nassau recognition of the baron class (expired in 1848) | |
Kuchler | since 1160/70 | knightly family in the archbishopric of Salzburg and in Mattiggau in Upper Austria | |
Küchlin | since 1234 | noble family from southern Baden | |
Chef | 1274-1861 | extinct, Meissen nobility; since the 16th century also as master chef von Sternberg; 1840 Prussian counts (Primogeniture) | |
Küdorfer | 1236-1599 | one of the oldest patrician families in the Free Imperial City of Nuremberg; | |
Kügelgen | since 1802 | Family from Bremen in 1370, arrived in the Baltic States via the Rhineland in the 18th century in the 17th century; 1802 imperial nobility; 1910 Saxon indigenous community; 1933 enrolled in the Estonian knighthood | |
Kühbach | ? | high medieval, Bavarian counts | - |
Kuefstein | since 1407 | Austrian noble family - 1602 imperial and hereditary-Austrian barons; 1634 hereditary-Austrian counts; 1646 Renewal of the Imperial Count's status | |
Kuenburg | since 14th century | Austrian noble family | |
Kuenheim | since 1263 | originally Alsatian noble family; 1798 Prussian counts | |
Künigl | since 1018 | noble Tyrolean knight dynasty; 1563 barons and 1662 counts | |
Kuenringer | 1132-1594 | extinct Austrian ministerial family | |
Künsberg | since 1149 | Franconian nobility; 1691 imperial barons for the Thurnau family; 1813/14 Freiherrenstand for the houses Hain-Schmeilsdorf, Kürnsees, Almond, Nagel and Wernstein-Danndorf. | |
Kuffner | since 17th century | Jewish origin, from Lundenburg in Moravia originating from the brandy and brewing industry, in 1878 and 1900 elevation to the Austrian nobility as noble von , 1896 Hungarian nobility with "de Diószegh", Hungarian baronate 1904. | |
Art city | 1240 to the end of the 16th century | extinct, Moravian noble family | |
Kurnatowski | 1386 | Great Polish nobility; In 1902, a branch of the Poznan line was given the title of Count by papal edict. | |
Heading | 1442 | German-Baltic noble family, 1710 Silesian line † | |
Kurtz skirt | until 1921 | extinct, Thuringian noble family | |
Kurzbach | 1292 to? | old, German-Silesian noble family; 1493 Imperial Baroness | |
Küssenberg | since 1135 | Southern German counts with their seat on the Küssaburg in Klettgau | |
Küssow | 1336 to 1824 | Western Pomeranian, in the meantime also Mecklengurg, later also Neumark family; 1723 Imperial Count, 1752 Prussian recognition of the Count | |
Kutzleben | since 1120 | Thuringian-Schwarzburgisch-Hohnstein primal nobility | |
Kwilecki | since 1383 | Greater Poland, later Prussian nobility; 1816 Prussian counts | |
Kyaw | since 1396 | Upper Lusatian noble family | |
Kyburg | until 1263 | extinct noble family in northern and eastern Switzerland; Sideline of the Counts of Dillingen. Continued in the female line as Neu-Kyburg |