Nasackin (noble family)

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Coat of arms of the Nasackin family

Nasackin (also Nassokin and Nassakin ) is the family name of a Baltic- Russian noble family whose origins can be traced back to the Russian nobility boyars Natjokin. They lived in Estonia in 1580 and expanded to Finland and the Russian Empire .

history

During the expansion phase of the Swedes into the eastern Baltic states and parts of Russia, there was a joint victory with Poland-Lithuania over the Russian Empire near Wenden ( Latvia ) in 1578 . The Swedes had ventured into Ingermanland and stood before Greater Novgorod . During this time, numerous Russian boyars , merchants and servants as well as princes and voivods switched to the side of the Swedes. The noble families included the Baranoffs , the Naschtschokin (Nasackins), the Putiloffs, Romanowitzs and Rosladins. One of the Nasackins was Afanassi Nasackin († 1613), who in 1590 in Ingermanland, reconquered previously lost goods and later joined the victorious Swedes. He and his brother became a resident of Estonia . His brother Peter I. Leontinson Nasackin (1582 - 1636), who married Gertrude von Ungern (around 1588 - 1664), founded the family line in Reval . From this, Peter IV of Nassokin (1661-1730) branched out into the Russian line and Carl Fromhold Nasackin († 1682 in Sipoo) into the Finnish line. From the Finland line, Otto Heinrich Nasackin (* 1785) was accepted into the Finnish knight's house in 1818. The line that had become at home in Estonia, which was continued with Magnus Reinhold von Nasackin (1729 - 1792), Herr auf Werpel, was indigenous to Estonia in 1746 , and it was not until 1810 that Reinhold Wilhelm von Nasackin (Nasacken) bought the Sallentack estate. His sons Julius and Fromhold received indigenous status in Livonia in 1857 and were accepted into the Livonian knighthood (registration number 404). Likewise, Ivan was enrolled in the Estonian nobility register (registration number 420) in 1866 and Nikolai Nasackin in 1910 (registration number 420) .

Lineage

Feodor Ivanowitsch Nasackin (* around 1490 in Leniningrad Oblast ) Boyar ⚭ Maria Pultilov (* around 1518 in Estonia; † 1584 in Hapsal )

  • Leontij Fjodorowitsch Nasackin (* around 1540 in Novgorod, † around 1599 in Estonia) ⚭ Marfa Baranoff
    • Peter I. Leontinsson Nasackin (* 1582 in Estonia; buried 1636 in Reval), ancestor of the Baltic Nasackins, Bajor, Herr auf Keskfer and Patz (Estonia), Swedish major ⚭ Gertrud von Ungern (around 1588 - 1664)
      • Fromhold Johann († 1682) Lord on Rickby Finland, Swedish lieutenant ⚭ 1. Anna von Wolffeldt († 1650); 2. Christina Svärfelt (1622 - 1698) Line Finland
        • Magnus Johann von Nasackin (1644-1728) line Estonia
        • Peter IV Nassokin 1661-1730 line Russia

Line Estonia

Magnus Johann Nasackin (1644–1728), Lord of Werpel (Estonia) ⚭ Maria von Stackelberg ( 1655–1724 )

  • Adam Johann Nasackin (1681–1734 in Reval), Lord of Werpel, Estonian Rittmeister ⚭ Anna von der Pahlen († 1761)
    • Magnus Reinhold Nasackin (1729-1792), Mr. Werpel on, man Gerichtsassessor ⚭ Eva by Schulman (1744 -1778)
      • Carl Johann Nasackin (1761–1793), lieutenant , lord of the Waddemois ⚭ Johanna von Fischbach (1763 - 1807)
      • Magnus Reinhold Nasackin (1762–1842), Russian major , Herr auf Werpel, Sallentack and Wahenorm ⚭ Juliana von Wrangell (1778–1812)
      • Otto Friedrich Nasackin (1767–1848), Russian captain ⚭ Gertruda von Vietinghoff (1773–1804)
      • Adam Gustav Nasackin (1770–1855), Russian cavalry master, lord of Werpel ⚭ Anna von Tiesenhausen ( 1772–1841 )
        • Jakob Reinhold Gustav Nasackin (1801–1899 in Reval), Russian major general, Herr auf Neu-Werpel ⚭ Alexandrine Kereptsjevitij (1821–1898)
          • Ivan Nasackin (1838–1900), lord of Neu-Werpel, 1866 accepted into the Estonian knighthood
          • Nikolai (* 1845), accepted into the Estonian knighthood in 1910
        • Gustav Georg Nasackin (1803–1876), Russian major general, Herr auf Walküll and Neu-Werpel ⚭ 1. Elise Clossen († 1846); 2. Caroline von Strandmann (* 1809)

Possessions

Her temporary and permanent estates included Wildenau, Friedenthal and Arrohof in the Estonian and Schreibershof in the Latvian district. Since 1810 they were owned by Sallentack, Walküll and since 1819 they owned Wahenorm in Estonia.

Good Sallentack

The Sallentack estate was lent by King Gustav Adolph of Sweden to the rider Peter Groot in 1625, along with several properties in Pernaußen . This resulted in the Sallentack estate, whose ownership was confirmed in 1653 to the son of the first purchaser, Adam Grotenhielm . The Rittmeister Magnus Gustav von Grotenhielm sold the estate to Pernau's councilor Jacob von Dohren for 7157 rubles in 1749 , while his son, George Friedrich von Grotenhielm, redeemed it again. From 1785 the Grotenhielms were again owners of Sallentack, which was ultimately sold to Reinhold von Nasacken (Nasackin) in 1814 with the highest bidder.

Good choice norm

The Wahenorm estate was lent to the Hennigshausen family by the Swedish King Gustav Adolph in 1618. Then it was sold to the Heyde family in 1729, to the von Dohren family in 1742, to the von Ulrich family in 1780 and in 1816 Cornelius von Ulrich sold it to Reinhold Magnus von Nasacken (Nassackin).

Walküll manor

The manor with the Walküll manor was built in 1627. Its first owner was Herman Wrangel, who sold it to Hans von Fersen in 1652. In the following years the property changed hands several times. In 1839 Gustav von Nasackin acquired and the manor and bequeathed it to his daughter Sophie von Nasackin (1839–1904). In 1760 the two-storey mansion was built and extended several times with additional buildings. The manor house has been home to a nursing home since 1957.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ German Baltic nobility (3rd Russian noblewoman in Swedish service), lecture by Professor Dr. Christopher von Toll at the Goethe Institute in Stockholm on Thursday, April 18, 2002
  2. ^ Materials on a history of the Livonia estates, Volume 2, Heinrich von Hagemeister , Verlag Frantzen, 1837, original from Bayerische Staatsbibliothek , digitized July 28, 2011 [1] , page 155
  3. Baltic Historical Commission (Ed.): Entry on Nasackin, Magnus Reinhold v. (1729-1792). In: BBLD - Baltic Biographical Lexicon digital
  4. ^ Baltic Historical Commission (Ed.): Entry on Nasackin, Reinhold * Magnus (1762-1842). In: BBLD - Baltic Biographical Lexicon digital
  5. ^ Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry on Nasackin, Otto Friedrich v. (1767-1848). In: BBLD - Baltic Biographical Lexicon digital
  6. Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry on Nasakin / Nasackin, Friedrich v. (1797-1876). In: BBLD - Baltic Biographical Lexicon digital
  7. ^ Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry on Nasackin, Adam Gustav * v. (1770-1855). In: BBLD - Baltic Biographical Lexicon digital
  8. ^ Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry on Nasackin, Jakob * Reinhold Gustav (1801-1899). In: BBLD - Baltic Biographical Lexicon digital
  9. ^ Baltic Historical Commission (ed.): Entry on Nasackin, Gustav * Georg v. (1803-1876). In: BBLD - Baltic Biographical Lexicon digital
  10. a b Materials on a History of Livonia's Estates, Volume 2, Heinrich von Hagemeister, Verlag Frantzen, 1837, page 155
  11. Walküll = et: Valkla mõis