Nimptsch (noble family)

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Coat of arms of those of Nimptsch

Nimptsch is the name of a Silesian nobility family .

Origin and history

The family is said to have got its name from a Gut Alt-Nimptsch near Nimptsch . It appears in a document for the first time on October 1, 1317 with Nycusco de Nymcz . Johann von Nimptsch was canon in Breslau in 1334 and in 1353 accompanied Princess Anna of Schweidnitz to Prague to marry King Charles IV.

The earliest documented property of the family was Stephanshayn in the Duchy of Schweidnitz-Jauer , which they owned from 1319 to 1626. Johann Friedrich von Nimptsch received the Bohemian baron status on March 10, 1660 with the title baron von Oelse or Ölse . Johann Heinrich and his brother Friedrich Leopold von Nimptsch, Barons von Oelse, were raised to the bohemian count on February 5, 1699. Finally, in 1732, Christoph Ferdinand Graf von Nimptsch received permission to combine his coat of arms with that of the extinct barons of Fürst and Kupferberg and to call himself Count von Nimptsch, Baron of Fürst and Oelse from then on.

Until the 15th century, the Nimptsch owned the Schmiedeberg and Warmbrunn lordships in the foothills of the Giant Mountains , which were later sold to the Schaffgotsch .

At the end of the 17th century Johann ( Hans ) Friedrich von Nimptsch was Governor of the Duchy of Schweidnitz-Jauer . He played a key role in the establishment of the Friedenskirche in Jauer , where a magnificent lodge commemorates the family. In 1660 the Nimptsch were raised to barons and in 1699 to counts.

In the 18th century the Nimptsch were the landlords of Hohenfriedeberg and after 1741 they belonged to the Catholic aristocratic opposition to Prussian rule.

The family moved to Moravia in the 19th century . It probably went out in 1877 with Karl von Nimptsch on Geiersberg in Eastern Bohemia. From 1775 the family owned the Palais Nimptsch in Vienna.

coat of arms

The family coat of arms shows a unicorn fish , a black unicorn with a silver fish tail curved to the right, the hooves of the unicorn are golden, the horn alternating red and silver. The unicorn growing on the helmet with the red and silver covers .

People (selection)

Weinbergschlösschen Jochhöh in Pesterwitz , in the background the Windberg

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ State Archives Wroclaw
  2. Entry about Palais Nimptsch on Burgen-Austria