Moser from Filseck
The Moser von Filseck (also Moser von Filsseckh and Weilerberg ) are an aristocratic family from Württemberg who were accepted into the Imperial Knighthood and Swabian Imperial Knighthood on February 2, 1573 . On December 10, 1769, the brothers Friedrich Karl and Christian Benjamin Moser von Filseck were raised to the baron status by Emperor Joseph II . However, this branch died out in the next generation in the male line.
history
The family goes back to the Württemberg stable master and war counselor Balthasar Moser called Marstaller (around 1400). His grandson Balthasar (1487–1552) is one of the first modern administrative officials in Württemberg. He was Vogt in Herrenberg in 1520 , Chamber Master of the Württemberg countryside from 1525, Vogt in Schorndorf in 1546 , then Chamber Councilor in Stuttgart. In 1549 he was involved in the implementation of the Police Ordinance and in 1550 in the reorganization of the Rentkammer. He based the land registers and stock books on the Austrian government's form. His sons Valentin (1520–76), Vogt in Herrenberg, and Balthasar (1525–95), Württemberg rent chamber councilor, were raised to the imperial nobility on March 4, 1573 with the right to move to the castles Filseck and Weilerberg (near Göppingen) call.
Personalities
- Balthasar Moser von Filseck und Weilerberg (1525–1595), businessman, mayor of Göppingen, ducal chamberlain
- Johann Jacob Moser (1701–1785), constitutional law teacher
- Friedrich Karl von Moser (1723–1798), political scientist, imperial journalist and politician
coat of arms
On a red shield there is a silver-colored ibex rising to the right with a red tongue and brown horns, an open helmet with a golden crown, on it half an ibex (as in the coat of arms), the helmet covers are red-silver.
literature
- Johann Jacob Moser: Genealogical news, from his own… families… . 2nd edition, Tübingen 1756
- Franz Menges: Moser von Filseck. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 18, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-428-00199-0 , p. 175 ( digitized version ).
Web links
See also
- Moser von Ebreichsdorf , a Lower Austrian noble family
- Moser von Eggendorf , also Moser am (zum) Weyer, Upper Austrian nobility