Scheidingen (noble family)

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Coat of arms of those of Scheidingen
Renaissance wing of Divorce Castle

The von Scheidingen (often Schidingen , also Scitingen or Scheiding ) are an old Thuringian- Saxon ministerial family, which was based in the Merseburg and Naumburg monasteries , later in the Churkreis, and the Burgmann family at the castle Divorces on the Unstrut. It had its headquarters at the castle divorces and owned goods in church divorces .

The von Scheidingen were wealthy in the following places: 1340 Roitzsch , 1340–1621 Storckwitz, 1349 Markwerben , 1453 Herrenschwend, 1460–1756 Klein Wölkau, Ostrau , 1476–1694 Niemeck (Niemegk) im Churkreis, 1476–1488 Delitzsch , 1488–1600 Solgüter zu Halle , 1495 Zörbig , Bitterfeld , 1506–1560 Gödewitz, 1503–1603 Tammendorf, Dammendorf ad Saale, Waldau, 1608 Zscheppen, 1618 Sölben or Selben, 1625 Mühlberg and 1660 Joksdorf.

The nobleman Heinrich Balthasar von Scheidingen (Scheiding) is mentioned in 1629 and belonged to the fruitful society as "the lover". In 1653 raised to the status of Swedish baron.

In the 16th and 17th centuries in Sweden, the Baltic States, Livonia and Courland, in Russia, in Poland, as well as in Denmark and Holland, members of the von Scheiding family performed in Swedish services, some of whom are still there today civil descendants live. At the beginning of the 19th century, the male noble line in Germany and in 1797 in Sweden had expired.

Personalities

Epitaph of Otto von Scheidingen on the town church of St. Peter and Paul zu Delitzsch
  • Otto von Divorces on Schenkenberg († 1476), bailiff zu Delitzsch , Capitellherr von Magdeburg and the prince council of Saxony
  • Otto von Scheiding (* 1580; † 1651), lieutenant colonel, governor and governor of Kronsberg
  • Christoffer (Kristoffer) von Scheiding († 1617) in Sweden he was in 1570 chamberlain to Duke Carl v. Södermanland, 1584 court master of Duchess Anna and King Karl IX, 1604 court master of the Swedish Queen Christina von Holstein-Gottorp, 1620 governor and governor in the body regiment of the Swedish Queen Maria Eleonore
  • Philipp Christopherson von Scheiding († 1646) in Sweden: Chamberlain 1602, Court Marshal 1606 of King Karl IX., Court Master of Queen Christiana the Elder. Ä., General Commissioner and Colonel of the People of War in Livonia (1606), Governor of Narva (1606), Governor of Ingermanland, Russia (1607–1613) and Higher War Commissioner of the Swedish Army in Novgorod, Russia (1614), Imperial Council in Estonia (1620 ), Oberstatthalter von Reval u. Estonia (1628–1642), president of the Dorpater royal court (1634), envoy to Russia (1634), chancellor of Dorpat University (1635), governor general of Livonia (1642).
  • Johann Christoph von Scheidingen, Baron, 1658 Honorary Rector of the University of Giessen, 1658–1659 53. Rector Magnificentissimus
  • Otto von Scheiding, (1637–1714) baron, Swedish lieutenant colonel and district administrator of Reval (1678) in Livonia,
  • Wolmar von Scheiding († 1750), he was in Sweden 1670 ensign, 1687 lieutenant of the Swedish infantry in Holland (Netherlands), 1698 captain, 1709 major, 1711 lieutenant colonel of the guard of the Polish king Stanislav, 1712 royal senator, royal Swedish colonel and 1719 Commander of Pernau, 1728 Colonel in Livonia, 1732 holder of the Saxon-Weimar Order of Vigilance , 1748 holder of the Swedish Order of the Sword .
  • Johan Christoffer von Scheiding (1634–1685), Swedish governor in Estonia

coat of arms

Coat of arms: originally a gold shield with a red shield boss or fitting. Later, the hump became a blue mirror with a red frame. On the crowned helmet an open white flight, amidst it three red ostrich feathers (or tinctures exchanged). Helmet covers: gold and red

literature

  • Rüdiger Bier: 1500 years of history and stories of the manorial seats for church divisions and castle divisions , self-published by Rittergut Kirchscheidungen 2009

Web links