Reitzenstein (noble family)

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Coats of arms of those of Reitzenstein and of the tribal and related families of Berg , von Epprechtstein, von der Grün , von Münchberg, von Radeck , von Sparnberg, Sack , von Stein , von Thoßfell, von Töpen and von Wildenstein
Reitzenstein epitaph in the Regnitzlosau church

The Reitzenstein come from the Franconian nobility. They first appeared in a document in 1318 with “Konrad von der Grün”, to which the trunk series also goes back. Like the von Berg , von Epprechtstein, von der Grün , von Münchberg, von Radeck , von Sparnberg, von Stein , von Thoßfell, von Töpen and von Wildenstein families , they are considered to be a line of the Sack family of ministers named after their seat . All of these families are therefore related to the tribe and coat of arms.

history

Reitzenstein knights as altar donors in Sparnberg
Reitzenstein Castle

Konrad's son Chunrad von der Grün called himself "Reichzenstein" as early as 1325 after the Reitzenstein fortress that belonged to him and was built around 1130 . The place is now incorporated into Issigau in Upper Franconia .

Some branches of the family have died out or were displaced by the border drawing in the 20th century. This includes the family branch from the place Reitzenstein (Polish Kolpion ) in the Oststernberg district in Neumark .

Places called Reitzenstein

Places related to Reitzenstein

Middle Franconia

Hoheneck Castle , Bad Windsheim with the Reitzenstein family's burial place in the hospital church.

Upper Franconia

Feilitzsch with the municipality of Münchenreuth , Gattendorf , Konradsreuth , Leupoldsgrün with the district of Hartungs, Neudrossenfeld , Niederfüllbach , Röslau , Schnarchenreuth , Schwarzenbach am Wald with the district of Schwarzenstein , Schwesendorf

Upper Palatinate

Reuth near Erbendorf , Stefling

building

Reitzenstein in Upper Franconia with the castle of the barons of Reitzenstein

Today's seat of government in Baden-Württemberg , which was built between 1910 and 1913 for Baroness Helene von Reitzenstein , is the Villa Reitzenstein in Stuttgart .

In Bayreuth , on today's Luitpoldplatz, there was the three-storey Reitzenstein-Palais, which was built between 1761 and 1768 and was designed by the architect Carl von Gontard . In 1915 it became the property of the city and in 1916 a large part of the city offices were transferred there, so that it functioned as the town hall (then the New Town Hall). After severe damage in World War II , the building was demolished down to the ground floor after the war. The registry office and the tourist office were housed there for 20 years. The remains of the building were demolished in 1966 in order to build the present New Town Hall of Bayreuth there. A preserved portico column of the palace is set up in the courtyard of the Bayreuth Historical Museum .

The German armed forces gave the troop accommodation in Düsseldorf and Wesel the name Reitzenstein barracks:

Trunks, lines and branches

  • Konrad von der Grün , called the Reitzensteiner (around 1325); Progenitor of the barons of Reitzenstein; Son of Konrad von der Grün (~ 1250 to ~ 1324)

Tribe A (Blankenberg and Sparnberg)

  • is not enrolled in Bavaria

Tribe B (Schwarzenstein and Schwarzenbach am Wald)

Tribe C (Schönberg)

Schönberg Palace (Vogtland) , owned by the family from around 1490 to 1945
  • 1st line ( Konradsreuth ) - has gone out
  • 2nd line (Schönberg) - not enrolled in Bavaria
  • 3rd line (Regnitzlosau) (possibly)

Known family members

According to the records of Wilhelm Freiherr von Reitzenstein from 1929, 250 members of the family have served as officers since the introduction of standing armies; 25 of them achieved the rank of general. The following people could not yet be assigned to a line:

Sigismund von Reitzenstein

coat of arms

Coat of arms of those of Reitzenstein

The coat of arms shows a silver diagonal bar on a red background. On the helmet with the red and silver covers there is an open red flight , on the right with a silver diagonal bar, on the left with a silver diagonal left bar.

The sloping beam can be found as an element of today's municipal coat of arms of Konradsreuth , Regnitzlosau and Reuth near Erbendorf , the wings are part of the coat of arms of Issigau . The coat of arms of the former municipality of Marxgrün also reminds of the family.

See also

literature

Web links

Commons : Reitzenstein  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Arnold von Dobenck : The landlord families of the Vogt and Regnitzland in the Middle Ages. in: Archive for the history and archeology of Upper Franconia. Volume 29, 3 (1926), p. 32 f.
  2. ^ Franconian open air museum: Museum Church in Franconia. Retrieved October 3, 2019 .
  3. www.feilitzsch.de> History of the community of Feilitzsch (here Gut Münchenreuth) ( Memento from October 7, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
  4. a b www.chronik.leupoldsgruen.info
  5. www.schwarzenbach-wald.de> History
  6. Illustration of the Reitzenstein-Palais (1930s)
  7. Why Bayreuth looks the way it looks. Nordbayerischer Kurier , November 24, 2014, accessed on April 13, 2017 .
  8. ^ History of the old baroque town hall. Bayreuth Art Museum , 2014, accessed on April 13, 2017 .
  9. Axel Polnik: The Bayreuth fire brigades in the Third Reich . 2011, p. 544.
  10. Column reminiscent of Reitzenstein-Palais: In the courtyard of the Historical Museum. (No longer available online.) Bayreuth , September 5, 2008, archived from the original on April 14, 2017 ; accessed on April 13, 2017 .
  11. ^ Reitzenstein barracks: Düsseldorf's largest new building area. RP Online , December 26, 2009, accessed April 13, 2017 .
  12. Gartenstadt Reitzenstein project page. Gartenstadt Reitzenstein , December 26, 2009, accessed on April 13, 2017 .
  13. Wesel Reitzensteinkaserne 86 ETW's 2005. www.tecklenburg-bau.de, 2005, accessed on April 13, 2017 .
  14. Wesel Reitzensteinkaserne operator Caritas 2006. www.tecklenburg-bau.de, 2006, accessed on April 13, 2017 .
  15. www.marlesreuth.de - Frankenpost ( Memento from January 17, 2006 in the Internet Archive )
  16. Archive link ( Memento from September 28, 2007 in the Internet Archive )