Seulingen (noble family)

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Coat of arms of those of Sulingen

The Lords of Seulingen (originally Sulingen ) were an old noble family from Lower Saxony in Seulingen near Duderstadt .

history

A Caspar von Seulingen was first mentioned in 1130. Whether he later called himself von Mützschefahl and founded the same noble family is not documented, but it is suspected that the two noble families were related. They were wealthy in Seulingen, Duderstadt, Westerode and other places in Eichsfeld. A Hartmann von Sulingen was in 1342 Burgmann zu Gieboldehausen. The family is believed to have died out in the 15th century.

Representative of the noble family

When Johann Georg Leuckfeld following members of the family Seulingen are listed by generations:

  • Brothers Gottfried and Dietrich von Seulingen (1230)
  • Heinrich (1251), son of Dietrich
  • Gottfried's sons:
    • Hartmann (1241, 1258)
    • Reiner (1259, 1283), knight
    • Werner (1278), lived in Duderstadt with his sons Johann and Jakob
  • Reinecke, Hermann (1329) and Albrecht (1329), sons of Hartmann
  • Herwig, Ernst and Lippold (1361), sons of Hermann
  • Hermann and Heinrich (1361), sons of Herwig, sell their tithes in Westerode and Anna (1367) and Antonia (1416) in the Katlenburg monastery

As further representatives of the noble family are proven:

  • Heinrich von Seulingen (1181)
  • Albert of Sulingen (1310)
  • Hartmann (probably Hermann) von Sulingen (1391), provost in Pöhlde monastery
  • Hartmann von Sulingen (1342), Burgmann zu Gieboldehausen
  • Jutta von Sulingen (1436), Heinrich's widow, transfers the justice of the Marsfeld advance to Archbishop Dietrich

coat of arms

In the coat of arms the von Seulingen lead three erected columns. Seulingen's coat of arms is derived from it.

literature

  • Johann Georg Leuckfeld : Antiqvitates Poeldenses. Or historical description of the previous Stifft Voelde, Premonstratensian Order, what names of this Closter, time of the foundation, country area ... Compiled from rare archives and writings and ... explained. Wolfenbüttel 1707; (About the noble families Sulingen, Rieme, Bockelnhagen, Esplingerode pp. 124–130) Bavarian State Library, Munich .
  • Th. Petersen: From the noble family of the Lords of Seulingen. in: Goldene Mark - Verlag Mecke Duderstadt, 10th year (1959) pp. 6-13

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Newspaper for the German nobility. Nordhausen and Leipzig, third year 1842, first semester, page 463
  2. RIplus Regg. EB Mainz 1,2 n.4799, in: Regesta Imperii Online, URI: http://www.regesta-imperii.de/id/f02bed6a-47c3-484c-beca-46ee4d3424a5 Retrieved on August 11, 2017.
  3. ^ Johann Wolf: Political History of the Eichsfeldes. Göttingen 1805, page 103 (LXXVII)
  4. ^ Johann Wolf: Political History of the Eichsfeldes. Göttingen 1805, page 56
  5. ^ Johann Wolf: Eichsfeldisches Urkundenbuch together with the treatise of the Eichsfeldischen nobility. Göttingen 1819 ( Treatise on the Eichsfeld nobility, as a contribution to their history. Page 53)
  6. RIplus Regg. EB Mainz 1,2 n. 4799, in: Regesta Imperii Online, URI: [1] accessed on August 22, 2017
  7. Gerhard Rexhausen: The stately Electoral Mainz Rhumemühle in Gieboldehausen. In: Eichsfelder Heimatzeitschrift. 55th year 2011, page 402

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