Spiegel (Westphalian noble family)
The barons and counts von Spiegel are an East Westphalian nobility from the Principality of Paderborn . In 1338 they split into two lines, the Spiegel zum Desenberg and the Spiegel zu Peckelsheim .
They are not related to the Spiegel (Saxon noble family) .
history
The family probably provided Witukind , previously provost of the Gröningen monastery , from 1189 to 1205, an abbot of Corvey . He built the first Lichtenfels Castle in 1189 . With Hermannus Spechel , first documented in 1224, the name appears and the family line begins . The original seat was the Daseburg on the Desenberg (or this mountain) near Warburg in Westphalia , a striking volcanic cone, which is proven in the possession of the mirror from 1256 and belongs to them until today.
In 1338 the family split into two lines, the Spiegel zum Desenberg , which became hereditary taverns of the Principality of Paderborn , and the Spiegel zu Peckelsheim , who acquired Peckelsheim Castle in 1378 and became Paderborn Hereditary Marshals in 1408.
The Spiegel zum Desenberg (more rarely: this mountain) provided Heinrich 1361-1380, a prince-bishop of Paderborn , who was also prince-abbot of Corvey. They left Desenberg around the middle of the 16th century and moved into knight seats on the nearby plain, e.g. B. Bühne , Ober- and Nieder- Klingenburg, Rothenburg and Übelngönne , according to which their branches were also distinguished. Dalheim also came to the family in the first half of the 17th century. These properties were all sold in the first half of the 20th century. In 1450, a share in Canstein Castle was acquired, but it was lost again in the 16th century. The Klingenburg branch went to Austria and in 1836 acquired the Wischenau dominion in Moravia, which was owned by the Counts of Spiegel zum habenberg-Hanxleden until it was expropriated in 1945 .
The Spiegel zu Peckelsheim (more rarely: Pickelsheim) succeeded in acquiring extensive possessions in Helmern , as well as in Lichtenau and Kleinenberg , starting from Schloss Schweckhausen and Peckelsheim, where rights were acquired in the 14th century . During this time, properties in the County of Ravensberg were also inherited from the Thodrank family. Two out of three branches of the Peckelsheim line became Protestant. At the end of the 16th century, the goods were divided, with the lines to Borlinghausen , to Helmern with Peckelsheim and to Schweckhausen with Bielefeld. The line is still located in Helmern , Groß-Engershausen and Schloss Rheder today .
Both lines used the title of baron in the 18th century. From the Desenberg line (House Canstein), the brothers Ferdinand August (1764-1835), Archbishop of Cologne, and Caspar Philipp (1776-1837), Austrian envoy, received the Prussian count in 1816. In 1847 the Prussian recognition of the barons' status for the houses Bühne, Übelngönne and Rothenburg took place.
Possessions
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Desenberg Castle (1256 until today) and the surrounding area:
- Stage Castle (1270–2012, Spiegel zum Desenberg ), some of the land still today
- Ober- and Nieder- Klingenburg (approx. 1270 to 1927, Spiegel zum Desenberg )
- Gut Rothenburg (approx. 1270 to 1895, Spiegel zum Desenberg , from 1877 Spiegel zu Peckelsheim )
- Gut Übelngönne (approx. 1270 to 1929, Spiegel zum Desenberg )
- Gut Dalheim (after 1600 to 1928, Spiegel zum Desenberg )
- Gut Rothehaus in Daseburg below the Desenberg, built in the 16th century, new building from the 19th century.
- Borlinghausen Castle (1338 to 1839, Spiegel zu Peckelsheim )
- Peckelsheim Castle (from 1378 to approx. 1900) and Rittergut Helmern (14th century until today, Spiegel zu Peckelsheim )
- Schweckhausen Palace (mid / late 14th century to 1845, Spiegel zu Peckelsheim )
- Spiegelhof in Warburg- Germete (14th / 15th century)
- Altena Manor (1629–1892, Spiegel zum Desenberg )
- Canstein Castle (part of the "upper house" from 1450, "lower house" from 1719, both until 1837, Spiegel zum Desenberg ), with Hanxleden
- Gut Werna , Thuringia (from around 1550?, Spiegel zum Desenberg )
- Gut Seggerde (1618 to 1768 Spiegel zu Peckelsheim , then to 1892 Spiegel zum Desenberg )
- Spiegelsberge with the Spiegelsberge hunting lodge (1761 to 1904, landscape park of Ernst Ludwig Christoph von Spiegel zum Desenberg )
- Gut Groß-Engershausen (acquired in 1838 by Spiegel zum Desenberg-Rothenburg , later in Erbweg the Spiegel zu Peckelsheim from Spiegelsberge, until today)
- Wischenau rule in Moravia (1836 to 1945 Spiegel zum Desenberg )
- Rheder Castle (since 1873 owned by Spiegel zu Peckelsheim as heir to von Mengersen )
coat of arms
The family coat of arms shows three (2: 1) round gold-framed silver mirrors in red. On the crowned helmet with red and silver covers there is an open red flight, covered on both sides with the three mirrors. The slogan is: "With God and with honor".
Heraldic saga
In connection with the Desenberg, the legend is often brought about the mirror knight, in which a brave Saxon can frighten and kill a dragon living on the mountain through the reflection in his shield. The name of the noble family "von Spiegel (zum Desenberg)" (e.g. Witukind von Spiegel zum Desenberg or Heinrich III. Von Spiegel zum Desenberg), whose coat of arms shows three mirrors in reference to the heroic deed, is said to go back to this.
Important namesake (chronological)
Line Spiegel zum Desenberg
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Ludolf von Spiegel zum Desenberg (* around 1300; † before 1352); Children:
- Hille (Hilla) (* around 1338)
- Konrad II von Spiegel zum Desenberg († 1399), Landvogt of Mainz. Around 1390 he founded the Benglerbund with Rabe von Canstein and Friedrich vom Alten Haus Padberg to support the Mainz feud against Landgrave Hermann II of Hesse.
- Heinrich von Spiegel zum Desenberg († 1380), Prince-Bishop of Paderborn and Prince Abbot of Corvey
- Hermann V. von Spiegel zum Desenberg
- Hermann Ludwig von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1629 -?) ∞ Elisabeth Hedwig von Spiegel (1630 -?)
- Hermann Wilhelm von Spiegel (1653 - 1714) ∞ Claire Anna Helena von Hornberg
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Carl Ludwig von Spiegel zum Desenberg (* around 1680–1742), Hessen-Kasseler , later Russian and Prussian officer and chief of a dragoon regiment ( D IV ). ∞ Eberhardine Dorothea von Neipperg
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Ernst Ludwig Christoph von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1711–1785), from 1731 canon , from 1753 ruling cathedral dean of Halberstadt , laid out the Spiegelsberge landscape park in 1771 and founded the first Prussian teacher training college in Halberstadt in 1778, ∞ Johanna Spiegel von Peckelsheim auf Seggerde
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Werner Adolf Heinrich von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1754–1828), on Seggerde and Spiegelbergs
- Werner Friedrich († after 1870), expanded Seggerde Castle and created the landscape park
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Werner Adolf Heinrich von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1754–1828), on Seggerde and Spiegelbergs
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Ernst Ludwig Christoph von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1711–1785), from 1731 canon , from 1753 ruling cathedral dean of Halberstadt , laid out the Spiegelsberge landscape park in 1771 and founded the first Prussian teacher training college in Halberstadt in 1778, ∞ Johanna Spiegel von Peckelsheim auf Seggerde
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Carl Ludwig von Spiegel zum Desenberg (* around 1680–1742), Hessen-Kasseler , later Russian and Prussian officer and chief of a dragoon regiment ( D IV ). ∞ Eberhardine Dorothea von Neipperg
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Johann Eberhard von Spiegel ∞ Josina Maria Antoinette von Schade
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Theodor Hermann von Spiegel zum Desenberg and Canstein (1712–1779), Landdrost of the Duchy of Westphalia ∞ 1. Maria Theresia von Niederklingenburg, 2. Adolphine Franziska von Landsberg zu Erwitte
- Franz Wilhelm von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1753–1815), Canon in Hildesheim and Münster, Landdrost of the Duchy of Westphalia and Minister of the Electoral Cologne State
- Ferdinand August von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1764–1835), Archbishop of Cologne , 1816 Count of Prussia
- Maria Anna (1767–1808), provess of the Borghorst monastery
- Friedrich Ernst von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1770–1817), Commander of the Teutonic Order
- Alexandrine von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1771–1839), provess of the Borghorst monastery
- Friedrich Wilhelm von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1775–1807), mining captain in the Duchy of Westphalia
- Caspar Philipp Graf von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1776–1837), Austrian envoy and plenipotentiary minister in Munich, Imperial and Royal Councilor, 1816 Prussian count, ⚭ Maria Christiane Freiin v. Bartenstein
- NN
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Karl Franz Theodor von Spiegel ∞ Maria Franziska von Westphalen zu Heidelbeck.
- Adolph von Spiegel-Borlinghausen (1792–1852), Westphalian and Prussian officer, district president in Düsseldorf, ⚭ Franziska von Vagedes
- Werner Adolf Heinrich von Spiegel on Rothenburg and Übelngönne
- Werner Friedrich Julius Stephan von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1802–1877), Canon of Halberstadt, shaped the mirror lust in Marburg , ⚭ Thekla Freiin von Schaumburg , in the 1820s
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Karl Franz Theodor von Spiegel ∞ Maria Franziska von Westphalen zu Heidelbeck.
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Theodor Hermann von Spiegel zum Desenberg and Canstein (1712–1779), Landdrost of the Duchy of Westphalia ∞ 1. Maria Theresia von Niederklingenburg, 2. Adolphine Franziska von Landsberg zu Erwitte
- Hermann Wilhelm von Spiegel (1653 - 1714) ∞ Claire Anna Helena von Hornberg
Line to Peckelsheim
- NN
- NN
- Ernst Ludwig Christoph Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim (1745-1826, Landmarschall) ∞ Charlotte Henriette Clementine von der Malsburg
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Adolf von Spiegel zu Peckelsheim (1809–1872), Prussian district administrator of the Warburg district from 1847–1868, father of Raban
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Raban Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim (1841–1906), Westphalian manor owner, administrative officer and member of parliament
- Joseph von Spiegel zu Peckelsheim (1878–1949), District Administrator of the Warburg District (1933–1943)
- Elisabeth (monastery name: Maria Anna Benedicta) Freiin Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim OSB (1874–1950), abbess of St. Walburg Monastery in Eichstätt / Bavaria
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Raban Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim (1841–1906), Westphalian manor owner, administrative officer and member of parliament
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Adolf von Spiegel zu Peckelsheim (1809–1872), Prussian district administrator of the Warburg district from 1847–1868, father of Raban
- NN
- Carl Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim (1808–1886), administrative officer, manor owner and member of parliament
- Ernst Ludwig Christoph Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim (1745-1826, Landmarschall) ∞ Charlotte Henriette Clementine von der Malsburg
- NN
- Hermann Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim (1850–1923), Prussian lieutenant general
- Edgar von Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim (1885–1965), German submarine commander in World War I , author of the U 202 war diary published in 1916 (edition: 360,000 copies)
- Elmar von Spiegel von und zu Peckelsheim (1940–2014), German entrepreneur
Abbots of Corvey
- Witukind von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1189–1205)
- Heinrich IV. Von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1359-1360), then as Heinrich III. Prince-Bishop of Paderborn
- Philipp von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1758–1776)
Prince-Bishop of Paderborn
- Henry III. von Spiegel zum Desenberg (1361-1380); previously as Henry IV Abbot of Corvey
See also
literature
- Spiegel, a noble family in Westphalia. In: Johann Heinrich Zedler : Large complete universal lexicon of all sciences and arts . Volume 38, Leipzig 1743, column 1588-1590.
- Ernst Heinrich Kneschke: New general German nobility lexicon. 1868.
- Genealogical manual of the nobility . Volume 30, 1963.
- Genealogical manual of the nobility. Volume 128, 2002, Adelslexikon
- Anton Fahne: The Lords and Barons v. Hövel, along with genealogy of the families from which they took their wives. Volume I, p. 168 (Stammtafeln Spiegel books.google.de ).
- Leopold von Zedlitz-Neukirch , New Prussian Adels Lexicon , Volume 1, p. 226 f. ( books.google.de ).
- Genealogical pocket book of the German count's houses for the year 1837 p. 455 f. ( books.google.dehabenberg -Hansleben).
- Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the baronial houses to the year 1856 p. 645 f. ( uni-duesseldorf.de ), 1867 p. 719 ff. ( uni-duesseldorf.de ), 1877 p. 829 ff. ( uni-duesseldorf.de ).
Web links
- Document registers from the Spiegel family archive in Peckelsheim in Helmern and Desenberg at Gut Spiegelsberge / digital Westphalian document database (DWUD)
- The mirrors to this mountain. in: Wildenfels Castle Archive.
- Pedigree of Ferdinand August Graf von Spiegel to this mountain - Hanxleden, 1890 and Friedrich Wilhelm Raban Ernst Freiherr Spiegel zu Pickelsheim, 1804 on monasterium.net
Individual evidence
- ↑ Harz-Zeitschrift 2008. Volume 60
- ↑ Hans-Werner Peine, Cornelia Kneppe: The Desenberg near Warburg, Höxter district
- ↑ Herrenhaus Werna on alleburgen.de
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↑ Friedrich Küch: Spiegel zum Desenberge, Konrad . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 35, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1893, p. 158 f.
Karl E. Demandt: The personal state of the Landgraviate of Hesse in the Middle Ages. Marburg 1981, p. 832 f. - ^ Heinrich Pröhle: Spiegel zum Desenberge, Karl Ludwig von . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 35, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1893, p. 158.