Sachsenheim (noble family)

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Coat of arms of those of Sachsenheim

Sachsenheim is the name of an old knight family from Sachsenheim . The gender first mentioned in 958 died out in the male line in 1561.

The most famous Sachsenheimers were:

history

After Gabriel Bucelin, the Sachsenheimers were a very old and famous knight family. Bucelin is the first Sachsenheimer to name Heinrich von Sachsenheim, who is said to have taken part in a tournament in Constance in 948.

The first written mention in 1090 refers to a Diemo von Sachsenheim. The name Sachsenheim only reappears in documents from 1240. The first to be mentioned are the knight Hermann von Sachsenheim and his brother Konrad von Sachsenheim, whose sons Hermann, Bernold and Friedrich founded the 3 lines of the Lords of Sachsenheim.

The 4 most important of the Lords of Sachsenheim were the minne poet Hermann , his two sons, the lawyer Jörg and the Landhofmeister Hermann , and his son-in-law Reinhard , the builder of Großsachsenheim Castle . Two people from Sachsenheim, who died in the battle of Reutlingen in 1377, became known literarily. Ludwig Uhland commemorated them in his ballad “The Battle of Reutlingen” with the stanza “From Sachsenheim two knights, the father and the son, they lie quietly together in lilies and poppies…”.

The last legitimate male descendant of the Sachsenheimers was Bernhard von Sachsenheim, who was Obervogt zu Neuenbürg and died in 1561. Gall von Sachsenheim (1521–1596), a forester in Leonberg who had been dismissed because of poor administration , was the illegitimate son of a Wilhelm von Sachsenheim. After his father married his mother, he was declared legitimate, so that the name Sachsenheim was propagated through his descendants at least until the end of the 17th century.

coat of arms

The coat of arms shows two red buffalo horns in silver on a red grind (piece of the skull). Be the buffalo horns on the helmet with the red and silver helmet covers . By the end of the 14th century, the crescent-shaped horns were curved inward. Later the horns were turned outwards in an S-shape, the horn ends were pointed or cut off.

The coat of arms frieze above the main portal of Großsachsenheim Castle shows on the left side the coat of arms as it was used from the 15th century, on the right side the old version of the coat of arms. Helmet covers made of lush acanthus leaves surround the coat of arms and helmet.

The buffalo horn motif can be found in some of the local coats of arms:

  • Coat of arms of the city of Sachsenheim , supplemented by the lying stag stick of the Württemberg people.
  • Coat of arms of the Sachsenheim district of Kleinsachsenheim, supplemented by a vertical Alemannic sax (single-edged cutting weapon).
  • Coat of arms of Sachsenheim's neighboring municipality Sersheim , supplemented by 3 spheres.

people

The first two documents from Sachsenheimer, Hermann von Sachsenheim (1) and Konrad von Sachsenheim called Harder, produced 3 lines of descendants. They are listed in Pleickhard von Helmstatt's "Family Trees of South German Noble families". The following list of important people from the Sachsenheimer family is limited to the straight line of the family tree of the minne poet Hermann von Sachsenheim . All information without a source is from #Helmstatt 1612 or #Bachteler 1962 .

Hermann von Sachsenheim (1) (mentioned 1240–1307), knight.

  • Wife: Hedwig Truchsess von Höfingen, daughter of Reinhardt Truchsess von Höfingen (mentioned 1290).

Hermann von Sachsenheim (2) , knight, son of the previous one.

Friedrich von Sachsenheim (? –1356), knight, Vogt in Pleidelsheim , son of the previous one.

  • Wife: Anna von Helmstatt.

Hermann von Sachsenheim (3) (? –1392), called Schwarzhermann, Vogt zu Ingersheim , son of the previous one.

  • Wife: Adelheid Nothaft von Hochberg (? –1431), daughter of Hans von Nothaft, 2nd husband: Albrecht von Dürrmenz (? –1428), marriage in 1392.

Hans von Sachsenheim (mentioned 1394–1433), knight of the Teutonic Order , governor of Rottenburg am Neckar , son of the previous one and brother of the poet Hermann von Sachsenheim (4).

Hermann von Sachsenheim (5), country steward.
Jörg von Sachsenheim.

Hermann von Sachsenheim (4) (around 1365–1458), minne poet, son of Hermann von Sachsenheim (3) and brother of the previous one.

  • 1st wife: Anna Mönch (? –1431), marriage no later than 1405, daughter of councilor Heinrich Mönch von Rosenberg in Strasbourg.
    • Sons:
      • Jörg von Sachsenheim , lawyer, see below.
      • Hermann von Sachsenheim (5), Württemberg State Court Master, see below.
  • 2nd wife: Anna von Straubenhardt (? –1459), married in 1431, daughter of a councilor from Stuttgart.
    • Son: Michael von Sachsenheim (mentioned 1460 to around 1482), 1460 – around 1482 monk in the Hirsau monastery .
  • Children of the 1st or 2nd wife.
    • Agnes von Sachsenheim, died in adolescence.
    • Margarethe von Sachsenheim, 1478–1490 prioress of a monastery in Lauffen am Neckar .

Hermann von Sachsenheim (5) (around 1428 / 1430–1508), Württemberg state steward, son of the poet Hermann von Sachsenheim (4).

  • Wife: Susanna Volland, marriage before 1489, daughter of Erhard Volland zu Vaihingen (? –1433).
  • Children:
    • Margaretha von Sachsenheim, see below.
    • Susanna von Sachsenheim, married to 1st Kaspar von Nippenburg, 2nd Hans von Liebenstein.

Jörg (Georg) von Sachsenheim (1427–1508), lawyer, son of the poet Hermann von Sachsenheim (4).

  • Wife: Elisabeth Moll, daughter of a councilor from Stuttgart.

Margaretha von Sachsenheim (? –1556), daughter of the Landhofmeister Hermann von Sachsenheim (5).

  • Husband: Reinhard von Sachsenheim (? –1560), knight, 1517 Obervogt zu Vaihingen, son of Reinhard von Sachsenheim (? –1491), heir to the Landhofmeister Hermann von Sachsenheim (5) in 1508, builder of Großsachsenheim Palace .
    • Son: Hans Melchior von Sachsenheim.

Hans Melchior von Sachsenheim (? –1559), son of Reinhard and Margaretha von Sachsenheim.

  • Wife: Margaretha von Venningen (? –1569), daughter of Conrad von Venningen and Maria von Hirschhorn.

family tree

The Sachsenheimer family was "so infinitely ramified" that neither Pleickhard von Helmstatt nor Gabriel Bucelin succeeded in submitting an exact family tree, " Karl Pfaff did not succeed either, who made a corresponding attempt in his regesta ".

The local history researcher Kurt Bachteler from Sachsenheim presented a shortened family tree of the minne poet Hermann von Sachsenheim and a partial transcription of the handwritten family tree of Pleickhard von Helmstatt.

Tombs

Tombs of members of the Sachsenheim family can be found in churches in Stuttgart and Sachsenheim.

Stuttgart

1. Tomb of the poet Hermann von Sachsenheim, collegiate church .
2. The praying knight, tomb of the court master Hermann von Sachsenheim, collegiate church .
3. Sachsenheim altar by Jörg von Sachsenheim, Hospital Church .

Sachsenheim

In Sachsenheim there are tombs of members of the Sachsenheim family in the church of St. Fabian and St. Sebastian.

4. Death shield from Jörg von Sachsenheim.
5. Tomb of Reinhard von Sachsenheim, the builder of Großsachsenheim Castle , and his wife Margaretha von Sachsenheim.
6. Tomb of the last Sachsenheimer Bernhard von Sachsenheim.
7. Tomb of his wife Magdalena von Adelmann von Adelmannsfelden.
8. Tomb of Hans Melchior von Sachsenheim and his wife Margaretha von Venningen.

literature

  • Kurt Bachteler: History of the City of Großsachsenheim. Großsachsenheim: Trade and Industry Association, 1962, pages 25–100.
  • Kurt Bachteler: Sachsenheim: Gate to the Stromberg. Sachsenheim: Stadt, 1975, pp. 42–80.
  • Gabriel Bucelin : Germania topo-chrono-stemmatographica sacra et profana, 1671.
  • Eberhard Emil von Georgii-Georgenau: Princely Württemberg servant book from IX. Until the XIX. Century. Stuttgart: Simon, 1877, online .
  • Pleickhard von Helmstatt: Family trees of southern German noble families , additions from the 17th and 18th centuries. Manuscript, around 1612, page “Sachsenheim A – C”, online .
  • Dietrich Huschenbett:  Hermann von Sachsenheim. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 8, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1969, ISBN 3-428-00189-3 , p. 650 f. ( Digitized version ).
  • Dietrich Huschenbett: Hermann von Sachsenheim - names and terms: Commentary on the list of all names and selected terms in the complete work. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann, 2007, pages 242–243.
  • Ernst Martin (editor): Hermann von Sachsenheim. Stuttgart: Litterarischer Verein, 1878, page 12, online .
  • GA Seyler: J. Siebmacher's large and general book of arms, VI. Volume, 2nd Division; Dead aristocracy from Württemberg. Nuremberg: Bauer & Raspe, 1911. page 14, plate 6, page 211, plate 116, online .

Web links

Commons : Sachsenheim (noble family)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Stemmatographica Sachsenheimiae Equestris vetustissimae, celeberrimaeque Familiae Genealogica Deductio" ( #Bucelin 1671 ).
  2. #Bucelin 1671 .
  3. #Bachteler 1962 , pp. 29-30.
  4. #Bachteler 1962 , pages 98-100, #Helmstatt 1612 , page "Sachsenheim A".
  5. #Bachteler 1962 , pp. 30–32.
  6. #Bachteler 1962 , page 31.
  7. #Helmstatt 1612 .
  8. time travel bb .
  9. # Georgii-Georgenau 1877 , page 347.
  10. #Huschenbett 1969 .
  11. #Huschenbett 1969 .
  12. #Wolf 1996 , page 35.
  13. ^ Children from 1st marriage, if born before 1431, otherwise from 2nd marriage.
  14. #Martin 1878 , #Helmstatt 1612 , page "Sachsenheim A".
  15. # Georgii-Georgenau 1877 , page 339, #Bachteler 1975 , page 36, 62.
  16. #Seyler 1911 , page 183rd
  17. #Martin 1878 , page 12, #Huschenbett 2007 , page 242, #Bachteler 1975 , page 61.
  18. #Helmstatt 1612 .
  19. #Bucelin 1671 .
  20. #Bachteler 1962 , page 32.
  21. #Bachteler 1962 , page 44.
  22. #Bachteler 1962 , pp. 33-34.
  23. #Helmstatt 1612 , page "Sachsenheim B". - page "Sachsenheim A" , page "Sachsenheim C" .
  24. Bibliographical information from #Bachteler 1962 , page 26. The specified copy of the four-volume work could not be determined.