Naso (noble family)

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Coat of arms of those of Naso

The von Naso family (nose, noses) was a Saxon-Thuringian noble family.

history

The family with Bernhard von Naso was first mentioned on Altengottern in 1550. The family had estates on the eastern edge of the Hainich - in the places Altengottern and Flarchheim as well as in the places Gleina , Guttsmannshausen and Osterhausen .

Well-known namesake

  • Heinrich Christoph Naso (1614–1666), constable sergeant and Saxon governor of Freyburg
  • Hans Christoph - son of Heinrich Christoph von Naso and Marie Katharine von Osterhausen, became a canon of Naumburg .
  • Friedrich Wilhelm von Naso - the last bearer of the name, he died on November 3rd, 1843, with that the family died out.

However, through adoption , the family still lives with the changed coat of arms. Christian Friedrich Wilhelm von Naso, the last of the old line of Naso, had adopted his foster son Karl Gustav Hartwig, who was raised to the hereditary Prussian nobility by Naso on October 29, 1828 with the official spelling Hartwig .

coat of arms

The oldest representations of the coat of arms can be described as follows: In the silver shield a black helmet with two red ostrich feathers ; on the helmet above the shield, with red and silver blankets , the two ostrich feathers (other colors also occur).

The later family coat of arms of those of Naso shows a shield divided by silver, black and red; covered with a helmet that is tipped with two ostrich feathers, black on the right and red on the left. On the helmet with black and silver blankets on the right and red and silver blankets on the left, the two ostrich feathers.

The GHdA gives a slightly different description , according to which the coat of arms shows a shield divided by silver and red by a black bar , which is covered with a silver helmet with two (black, red) ostrich feathers in the upper, silver, part the shield protrudes, is equipped; on the helmet with red-black-silver covers the two ostrich feathers.

See also

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ernst Heinrich Kneschke : New General German Adels Lexicon. Volume 6, Leipzig 1865, p. 445, or Genealogical Handbook of the Adels , Adelslexikon , CA Starke Verlag , Limburg / Lahn, p. 328.
  2. JA / Konrad Tyroff (ed.), Book of Arms of the Prussian Monarchy , Volume IV, Nuremberg 1846, plate 10