Pogwish
Pogwisch was the name of an influential knight family in the duchies of Schleswig and Holstein that belonged to the Equites Originarii . The name is derived from the Low German pog "frog" and wisch "meadow". The family formed different lines and became extinct in the male tribe in 1845.
It was related to the von Wulf and von der Wisch family in tribal and coat of arms .
history
The family first appears in a document in 1283 with the brothers Marquard and Alhed , sons of Thetlev de Pokkevisk , with whom the line of tribe begins. Marquard Pogwisch is mentioned in the oldest Kiel city book in 1322 and 1325. Knight Otto Pogwisch from Bistenkesse (Bissee, later Bothkamp ), founded the Bordesholm monastery in 1327 as an Augustinian canons monastery , where the Pogwisch and Wisch had their burial place.
Henning von Pogwisch (* around 1420) is the first family member mentioned in a document on Gut Farve . It is possible that his father Benedikt, who died in Sweden in 1432, founded the estate. Farve belonged to the Pogwisch family until 1662, when it was inherited by the von Blome family. From 1475 to 1625 the Dobersdorf estate was owned by the Pogwisch and from 1534 to 1646 the Hagen Castle (Probsteierhagen) , as well as the Maasleben estate .
Wulf Pogwisch (around 1485–1554) was ducal and royal councilor to Frederick I and had great political influence in the Kingdom of Denmark. His brother Bertram von Pogwisch († around 1600 in Kassel) was strictly Catholic and claimed ownership of the Bordesholm monastery, which was secularized in 1566.
Several abbesses of the Itzehoe monastery emerged from the Pogwisch family .
Goethe's son August von Goethe (1789–1830) married Ottilie von Pogwisch (1796–1872) in 1817 . She lived with her three children (and at times her sister Ulrike von Pogwisch) for 15 years with her father-in-law in his house on Frauenplan in Weimar, where she later died.
coat of arms
The coat of arms shows a jumping, red-tongued silver wolf in blue . On the helmet with blue-silver blankets, the wolf growing out of a brown entrenchment .
Known family members
- Detlef von Pogwisch , Bishop of Schleswig 1502–1507
- Wulf Pogwisch (around 1485–1554), Councilor of Friedrich I.
- Catharina von Ahlefeldt b. von Pogwisch († 1562), mistress of Haseldorf , Haselau , Gut Seestermühe and Gut Seegaard near Kliplev
- Sievert von Pogwisch (1587–1626), nobleman and provost of the monastery of Uetersen
- Anna Pogwisch (1634–1722), patron
- Baron Wilhelm Julius von Pogwisch (* July 30, 1760; † December 7, 1836), son of Carl Benedict von Pogwisch (* approx. 1720; † February 20, 1778) in Domnau / Bartenstein district in East Prussia, was the father of Ottilie von Goethe born Freiin von Pogwisch (daughter-in-law of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe) and Ulrike Freiin von Pogwisch (* 1798, † 1875), the latter since 1864 prioress of the St. Johannis monastery before Schleswig ; with her death in 1875 the family died out in Schleswig-Holstein.
- Georg Ernst Friedrich von Pogwisch (* 1765, † April 19, 1845), son of Christian Friedrich von Pogwisch († after 1765), colonel of the Mecklenburg-Schwerin Grand Duke; with him the last of the noble family to be able to live died.
- Henriette Ulrike Ottilie von Pogwisch (1776–1851), née Countess Henckel von Donnersmarck
- Ottilie von Goethe , née Freiin von Pogwisch (1796–1872), daughter-in-law of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- Ulrike von Pogwisch (1798–1875), prioress in Schleswig
- Christiane Louise Amalie von Pogwisch (1790–1881), daughter of the Danish lieutenant colonel Christian Ludvig Frederik von Pogwisch († 1806), resident in the women's monastery Thaarupgaard near Viborg ; with her death in 1881 the sex died out completely.
See also
- Pogwisch House Weimar
- Clement von der Wisch (* around 1480–1545), lord of Hanerau and monastery provost of Uetersen.
- Johann von der Wisch (* around 1455, † around 1527), hereditary journeyman of Olpenitz, canon of Schleswig and monastery provost of Uetersen
literature
- Genealogical manual of the nobility , Adelslexikon. Volume X, Volume 119 of the complete series, pp. 455-456, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 1999, ISSN 0435-2408 .
Web links
- http://www.geschichtsverein-bordesholm.de/Veroeffnahmungen/jahrbuecher/J05_1_Steffen_Pogwisch.pdf ( PDF ; 497 kB)
- http://www.schloss-hagen.de/pogwisch.html
- http://www.vogel-soya.de/Adel/Pogwisch.htm
Individual evidence
- ↑ Kiel's oldest city book