Seiboldsdorf (noble family)

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Family coat of arms of those of Seiboldsdorf

The von Seiboldsdorf family (also Sei (y) bold (t) sd (t) orf (f)) is an old Bavarian noble family .
The family originated in Seyboldsdorf near Vilsbiburg . There is the estate of the Seiboldsdorf family, who also built a castle there. When the Seiboldsdorf family were raised to the rank of count, their headquarters was also renamed Freienseiboldsdorf .

history

In the documents of the St. Emmeram monastery of Regensburg in 740 a "Wolfhard de Seiboldsdorf" is mentioned. The Seyboldsdorfer are also named as participants in the Magdeburg tournament in 938. In the 10th and 11th centuries, the people of Seiboldsdorf are mentioned as witnesses in several deeds of donation from the Weihenstephan monastery and the St. Kastulus monastery in Moosburg an der Isar . At first they have the rank of a knight family and are later named in the higher tournament nobility. Their outstanding qualities of the nobility characterized the old tournament slogan: "Seiboltstorff the good, the pious, the good-natured". 1422 was the Hofmark Schenkenau (near Waidhofen ) by Duke Wilhelm III. Bought from Bavaria to Wernher von Seyboltstorf (1388 nurse at Neumarkt, 1407 nurse at Kuffstein) for 400 florins . In 1424, the Seiboldsdorfer divided into three lines: the Seyboltstorfer zu Niederpöring , the Seyboltstorfer zu Ritterswörth (near Geisenfeld ) and the main line of the Seyboltstorfer zu Schenkenau (near Waidhofen ). In 1608 the Schenkenau manor was sold to Moritz von Rorbach by the siblings Stephan, Johann Georg and Johann Albrecht. During the Thirty Years War , the knight family was by Emperor Ferdinand III. raised to the baron status. On June 2, 1692, the Seiboldsdorfer were raised to the rank of count by Emperor Leopold I. On May 28, 1711, Schenkenau Castle was bought back from Marquard Ignatius von Zell by Count Johann Franz Xaver von und zu Freien-Seyboltstorf (head caretaker of Moosburg ) and finally on November 23, 1729 by Count Joseph Anton zu Freien-Seyboltsdorf (carer for Moosburg) was sold to Baron Joseph Clemens Anton von Weichs . The noble family also owned Biedenbach Castle for a time . On July 26, 1951, Count Ludwig von Freyen-Seyboldsdorf sold the ancestral castle in Seiboldsdorf with the property of 15 hectares still belonging to it to the Magdalen nuns who were expelled during the Second World War . Trinity.

The members of the aristocratic family achieved important positions of honor in the Bavarian state and were, for example, keepers of the city of Schrobenhausen , other keepers and judges in Pfaffenhofen an der Ilm , Moosburg adIsar , Kranzberg , Neumarkt and Kuffstein, governors in Landshut or Burghausen , chambermen and court councilors of the dukes and Elector, cathedral canon and supreme hunter of Freising , councilor and district judge, feudal provost, arch trustee of Freising , knight of the Order of St. George , commander of the civil service order of the Bavarian crown, Sardinian envoy, Salzburg lieutenant, first director of the court of appeal and a bishop of Freising as well as two abbesses.

How moved the life of the members of the Seiboldsdorf family was, can be seen from a compilation between 1480 and 1575:

  • Lamprecht: fallen to death at Natternberg († 1480)
  • Wernher: drowned to winemaker on the Danube († 1525)
  • Hans: German knight, bled to death in Riedt († 1533)
  • Daniel: was slain as a captain by the Turks in Budapest († 1541)
  • Kaspar Melchior Balthasar (Cabame): died as a soldier in Italy
  • Hans Wernher: died in the Dutch War († 1570)
  • Christoph: was stabbed to death in a scuffle in Orleans

The von Seiboldsdorf were owned by the Hofmark Hörgertshausen from 1549 to 1818 and the Hofmark walls from 1692 to 1792 . Schloss Schönach near Mötzing is one of the possessions .

Members of the family took part in the Franconian War on the side of the Swabian Federation in 1523 . A Major Seyboltstorff was a member of the Bavarian delegation to the Congress of Vienna in 1815. Emanuel Graf von Freyen-Seyboltstorff (1777-1832) was a Bavarian diplomat and envoy in Karlsruhe (1810-1816), Hanover (1816-1817) and Turin (1818-1821) ).

Personalities

Johann Georg, Count of Seiboldsdorf
  • Sigmund von Seyboltsdorff, Further Grenzhauptmann, had the border visor drawn up in 1514 , the oldest cartographic border description in Bavaria - from Furth to Arber
  • Hieronymus von Seiboldsdorf, confidante of Sabina of Bavaria
  • Johann Christoph von Seiboldsdorf († around 1560), founder of the Leprosenhaus in Moosburg on the Isar and later Capuchin
  • Stephan von Seiboldsdorf , Bishop of Freising (1612–1618)
  • Victor Adam von Seiboldsdorf († 1658), councilor and court chief judge
  • Johann Georg Graf von Seiboldsdorf (* 1628 † 1699), privy councilor, treasurer and governor of Lower Bavaria
  • Ferdinand Alois von Seiboldsdorf (born January 17, 1761 † May 28, 1834 in Regensburg), cathedral chapter in Regensburg and historian
  • Ludwig Graf von Freyen-Seyboldsdorf (* December 2, 1870 in Freyen-Seyboldsdorf; † July 1, 1957 in Feldafing), last ancestral owner of the von Seiboldsdorf family

coat of arms

The Seiboldsdorf coat of arms changed its inclined serration to a right double step in silver and red. The three steps represent the three lines of the sex (Niederpöring, Ritterswörth and Schenkenau). The helmet covers are also in red and silver. The crest consists of an open flight , on the inner edges of the wings there are red spikes. Furthermore, the imperial earl dignity brought a knight and a count's crown on the helmet in the middle heart field of the coat of arms.

Trivia

See also

literature

  • Topo-geographical-statistical lexicon of the Kingdom of Bavaria by Joseph Anton Eisenmann and Carl Friedrich Hohn, 2nd volume, Erlangen 1832, p.660
  • Regest of the documents of the manorial archives zu Schenkenau, Landgericht Schrobenhausen by Michael Trost, Munich 1870, digitized
  • Negotiations of the historical association for Lower Bavaria Historical notes on the noble family of the Seiboltsdorfer von Freyen-Seiboltsdorf, 6th volume, Landshut 1858

Web links

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

Individual evidence

  1. Peter Käser: The nobles from and to Seyboldsdorf. December 1, 2013, accessed January 30, 2016 .
  2. Wiguleus Hund : Bayrisch Stammen-Buch II The princes, grays, lords, also other old aristocratic Bavarian families so visited the tournament and counted among them for the time in life . Ingolstadt 1586.
  3. a b Peter Käser: The rule of Seyboldsdorf and the "stone border column". (PDF) (No longer available online.) December 1, 2013, archived from the original on January 30, 2016 ; accessed on January 30, 2016 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.arlan.de
  4. ^ Alfons Wörner: Heimatbuch Hörgertshausen . Ed .: Municipality of Hörgertshausen. 1982.
  5. ^ Negotiations of the historical association for Lower Bavaria, Volume VI . Landshut 1858.
  6. Dr. Prechtl: Compilation of those from Seiboldsdorf, City Archives of Munich
  7. ^ House of Bavarian History - Bavaria's municipalities. In: hdbg.de. May 14, 1976, accessed December 30, 2014 .
  8. ^ A b Karl Bosl : Bosls Bayerische Biographie . Ed .: Karl Bosl. Regensburg 1983.
  9. ^ Wörner: Heimatbuch Hörgertshausen, 1982, p. 32ff