Stork (noble family)

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Coat of arms of those von Storch

Storch is the name of a family originally from Osnabrück , the line of which begins with Johann Storch († 1683). A Swedish ancestry that was still asserted in Gotha from 1920 is unproven. The sex subsequently gained a foothold in what is now the Rostock district in Mecklenburg and was wealthy there. Branches of the family persist to this day.

history

Historical alliance coat of arms of the von Storch and von Kettenburg families in the church of Westenbrügge

In the Roman-German Empire , the brothers Caspar Friedrich , court and regional court assessor , and Carl Ludwig Storch , court and domain councilor, who were descended from Johann Storch († 1683) at Osnabrück, who settled in Mecklenburg and were in the service of ducal Mecklenburg (-schwerin) , together with their cousins, the brothers Johann Joachim, Dr. phil. Christoph Theodosius , preacher to Lohmen with Dobbertin and Dr. jur. utr. Johann Detloff Storch , later ducal court advisor of Mecklenburg (Strelitz), raised to the imperial nobility on November 29, 1753 in Vienna; Mecklenburg-Schwerin's recognition by rescript followed on August 14, 1754 for the aforementioned brothers Caspar Friedrich and Carl Ludwig, and on October 27, 1768 for the aforementioned cousin Johann Joachim von Storch as Mecklenburg-Schwerin court councilor in Güstrow .

In Sweden, the family line of a Stårk family begins with Per Stårk . His son Jon Persson Stårk , Royal Swedish Rittmeister in the Westgöta cavalry , was raised to the Swedish nobility on August 12, 1632 (confirmed September 10, 1634). His descendants continued the name and were ennobled with a seat and vote in the Swedish knight's house ( Riddarhuset ) in Stockholm under the number 233.

On 28 June 1776, the aforementioned was Carl Ludwig von Storch from the Johann Stork descended to Osnabrück gender as Royal Swedish Government for an assumed descent from the Swedish, 1632 ennobled strong the Swedish nobility naturalization as "strong". The Mecklenburg-Schwerin name and coat of arms association as "Stårk von Storch" took place on January 14, 1802 in Schwerin for the aforementioned Hofrat Johann Joachim sons Gustav Friedrich , on Radegast , and Theodosius Christian von Storch , on Goldberg . Gustav Friedrich's sons August , on Diestelow , and Karl von Storch , on Rubow , were accepted into the Mecklenburg knighthood on November 12, 1840.

In the registration book of the Dobbertin monastery there are seven entries by daughters of the von Storch families from Rubow, Alt-Schlagsdorf, Madsow and Neu-Stuer from 1847–1898 for inclusion in the noble women's monastery .

coat of arms

(1753)

Split, on the right in red on green ground, two fertilized natural grapevines standing next to each other, on the left in a blue field a naturally colored stork on a silver hill. On the crowned helmet with red and silver covers on the right and blue and silver covers on the left, three (red, blue, red) ostrich feathers between two buffalo horns divided by gold and blue.

(1802)

The combined coat of arms of Stårk and that of Storch is split twice; on the right in gold on green ground a natural-colored stork, with its beak and raised right claw holding a blue snake (Stårk), in the middle and on the left as in 1753; Two helmets: on the right with green-gold-blue blankets on the right, blue-gold-green blankets on the left, the stork with the snake (Stårk), on the left as in 1753.

Former goods in Mecklenburg-Schwerin

Ruins of the Parchow manor house, 2010
  • Buchholz
  • Detershagen : Bernhard von Storch (1816–1890), Albert von Storch (1843–1910), Detlev von Storch (1910), Jürgen Detlev von Storch (1910–1945)
  • Hanshagen : Bernhard von Storch (1816–1890), Albert von Storch (1843–1910), Detlev von Storch (1910), Jürgen Detlev von Storch (1910–1945)
  • Parchow : Bernhard von Storch (1816–1890), Albert von Storch (1843–1910), Detlev von Storch (1910), Jürgen Detlev von Storch (1910–1945), Thomas von Storch (1992–2004), Gertrude von Storch ( since June 2004)
  • Rosenhagen : 1802 to the family of Restorff sold

Burial places

people

Hans von Storch at a climate conference of the European People's Party in Madrid, 2008
  • Jon Persson Stårk (1586–1623), Swedish squire and court squire to King Charles IX, in the Visigotha ​​cavalry, commander of the fleet in Sandham
  • Johann Stårck or Storck (1617–1683), born in Sweden, was  appointed Chancellor in Osnabrück in 1648 by the Swedish delegation and his relatives with Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna because of his special services to the Peace of Westphalia  . Johann Storck's mother Kerstin Stårck, née Lilliehöök af Gälared och Kolbäck, a cousin of Oxenstierna, was in regular personal correspondence with the Chancellor. Johann Storck was married to Elizabeth von Hammerstein. He left Osnabrück after the battle of Fehrbellin  and settled in Güstrow with his family
  • Gustav Storck (1662–1729), merchant and councilor in Güstrow, married to Anna Karnatz, daughter of Güstrow councilor Johann Karnatz
  • Johann Gustav Storch (1685–1749), lawyer, mayor, councilor in Güstrow and syndic of the Dobbertin monastery, married to Sophie Dorothea Schöpffer, daughter of  Johann Joachim Schöpffer , lawyer and professor of law, privy councilor and "right hand" of Karl Leopold, Duke of Mecklenburg
  • Carl Friedrich von Storch (1688–1749), councilor of the Duke and Hereditary Prince Karl (Ludwig Friedrich) of Mecklenburg
  • Johann Joachim von Storch (1716–1773), doctor juris utriusque or doctor of both rights, civil law (Corpus iuris civilis) and in canon law (Corpus iuris canonici), Mecklenburg-Schwerin court advisor and councilor in Güstrow , 1753 ennobled
  • Christoph Theodosius von Storch (1719-184), doctor of philosophy, preacher in Lohmann near Dobbertin in Mecklenburg
  • Johann Detlef von Storch (1724–1790), lawyer, Mecklenburg-Strelitzscher Hofrat, assessor
  • Casper Friedrich von Storch (1724–1799), Mecklenburg-Schwerin court and district judge assessor, landlord on Hoppenrade
  • Carl Ludwig von Storch (1729–1781), bailiff in Güstrow, Mecklenburg Landdrost and government councilor in Swedish Pomerania, ennobled in 1753, later Swedish nobility as "Stårck", 1755 co-signer of the Land Constitutional Constitutional Comparison (LGGEV) , 1776 he returned with several sons and Daughters back to Sweden
  • Johann Ehrenfried von Storch, (? -1812), royal Swedish councilor, land rentmaster, knight of the Swedish king, holder of the Wasa order, donor of the memorial stone for Friedrich Gustav von Petersson at the Kniepertor in Stralsund, he kept the royal scepter of Gustav IV Adolf and the Pomeranian Marshal's Staff
  • Gustav Friedrich Stårk von Storch (1745–1830), landlord of Mechelsdorf, Radegast, Rosenhagen and Steinhagen. Married to Luise Henriette von der Kettenburg , daughter of the Württemberg Chamberlain a. Supreme commandant of the Hohenasperg fortress Christoph Friedrich von der Kettenburg
  • Heinrich Friedrich von Storch (1766–1835), German-Russian economist, writer, first vice-president of the Academy of Sciences in St. Petersburg and privy councilor of the tsar
  • Konrad Justus von Storch (* 1770, † 1825–30), merchant and factory owner in Riga. Founder of the Russian family branch
  • Ludwig Heinrich von Storch (1772–1826), merchant and owner of a coal mine in Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA. Founder of the family branch in the United States of America, in 1810 he married Hannah Searle in Pennsylvania, whose direct ancestors were the British colonists John and Priscilla Alden, who landed in Massachusetts on the ship "Mayflower" in 1620 and signed the "Mayflower Compact"
  • Hans von Storch (17 ?? - 18 ??), staff captain of the 2nd battalion of the Grand Ducal Mecklenburg-Schwerin contingent regiment that went to Russia in 1812. Company commander of the Voltigeur Company. On January 10, 1813, he returned to Mecklenburg, the small depot of Danzig, as one of the few survivors with his team of 15.
  • Gottfried Christoph von Storch (1778–1829), Grand Ducal Mecklenburg-Schwerin Major and staff officer in Rostock. In 1812 he went as a Premier Lieutenant in the Grenadier Company of the 1st Battalion, with the Mecklenburg-Schwerin Contingent Regiment under the orders of Major General von Fallois in the campaign to Russia. On his return he became captain and real company commander in the first musketeer battalion and otherwise followed the Mecklenburg flag in all campaigns against France that the ducal troops had carried out since that time
  • August von Storch (1784–1867), lawyer, studied 1805 in Göttingen, 1806 in Heidelberg, became a vandal, 1808 he studied in Rostock until his graduation, chamberlain to the Grand Duke of Mecklenburg in Schwerin, admission to the Mecklenburg knighthood in 1840, landlord Diestelow and Brütz, married Lisette Countess von Bassewitz , daughter of the ducal Mecklenburg-Schwerin secret council president Bernhard Friedrich Graf von Bassewitz
  • Karl Friedrich von Storch (1786–1872), accepted into the Mecklenburg knighthood in 1840, landlord on Katelbogen, Rubow, Daemelow and Altschlagsdorf, married to Ulrike von Plessen, daughter of the ducal Mecklenburg-Schwerin Drosten Helmuth von Plessen
  • Alexander Andrejewitsch Storch (1804–1870), Russian officer
  • Nikolaj Andrejewitsch Schtorch (1816–1877), State Secretary and Real Privy Councilor of Tsar Alexander II.
  • Gustav Bernhard von Storch (1815–1889), landlord on Madsow until 1871, married Julie von Raven , daughter of Lieutenant Colonel Otto Gotthard von Raven, the author of the diary of the campaign in Russia in 1812
  • Bernhard von Storch (1816–1890), landlord on Detershagen, with Hanshagen, member of the Mecklenburg knighthood, married to Luise Warnke, daughter of Ludwig Warnke, landlord on Parchow
  • Gustav von Storch, (1819–1902), member of the Mecklenburg knighthood, landlord on Wildkuhl, Neusteur and Tönchow with Wunderfeld
  • Philipp Ernst von Storch (1829–1903), landlord on Rubow a. Altschlagsdorf (until 1880), Grand Ducal Mecklenburg Rittmeister
  • Albert von Storch (1843–1910), landlord on Detershagen with Hanshagen and Parchow (Mecklenburg), founder of the Fideikommiss, member of the Mecklenburg knighthood, married to Hermine Freiin von Puttkamer , daughter of the Prussian lieutenant general Heinrich von Puttkamer
  • August Otto von Storch (1849–1940), Royal Prussian Rittmeister
  • Adolf Gustav von Storch (1853–1918) co-owner of a factory in Richmond near London. He lived between Richmond and Berlin.
  • Adolf von Storch (1856–1930), Prussian general of the cavalry
  • Ernst Karl von Storch (1857–1911) Royal Prussian major. Married to Nelly von Bülow, daughter of the Grand Ducal Mecklenburg captain Friedrich von Bülow
  • Detlev von Storch, (1885–1910), landlord at Parchow, Detershagen, with Hanshagen, member of the Mecklenburg knighthood, officer in the reserve of the 1st Grand Ducal Mecklenburg Dragoon Regiment No. 17 in Ludwigslust, married to Marie Luise Plüskow , daughter of the royal Prussian Major General Karl von Plüskow
  • Bernhardt von Storch (1890–1918), Royal Prussian Lieutenant in the Reserve, fell as an intelligence officer in Reserve Infantry Regiment No. 441 at the end of World War I in Esmery Hallon, France
  • Kurt von Storch (1892–1980), businessman, co-owner of the Hamburg-based United Food Works Elbgau-Rostock GmbH & Co KG, knight of the Order of St. John
  • Jürgen Detlev von Storch (1908–1955), landlord on Parchow, Detershagen, with Hanshagen, and Hufe 12, member of the Mecklenburg knighthood, called Union of the Estates . Because of political resistance in the Third Reich imprisoned six times by the Gestapo in the prison in Bützow, most recently in the concentration camp, where he escaped by escaping. In 1945 he was politically persecuted and expropriated by the communists in the Soviet occupation zone (SBZ)
  • Berndt Detlev von Storch (1930–2004), in 1945 at the age of 14, fled to West Germany from his home, Gut Parchow, as politically persecuted by the communists in the Soviet occupation zone (SBZ). In 1952, at the age of 21, he emigrated to his uncle Gustav Berckemeyer in Casa Blanca, Fundo el Carpintero, near Valparaiso in Chile. In 1991 he returned to Gut Parchow as a resettler together with his son Thomas. Father of Klaus, Thomas Alexander and Sven von Storch.
  • Henning von Storch (1934-2018), German politician (CDU)
  • Hans von Storch (* 1949), German climate researcher and meteorologist
  • Kurt von Storch (* 1961), asset manager, founder and board member of Flossbach von Storch
  • Klaus von Storch (* 1962), Chilean aerospace engineer, brother of Thomas Alexander and Sven von Storch.
  • Thomas Alexander von Storch (1965–2004), disc jockey, entrepreneur, pilot and farmer on Alt Karin, Parchow and Westenbrügge. Brother of Klaus and Sven von Storch.
  • Sven von Storch (* 1970), German-Chilean businessman and publisher, married to Beatrix von Storch (* 1971), German politician (AfD). Brother of Klaus and Thomas Alexander von Storch. With his wife Beatrix von Storch, he leads various political networks related to Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) .

More families of Storch

There are two other families with the same name but different coats of arms, which are not related to the aforementioned von Storch:

  • 1. Storch (1775) - Catholic family originating from Merano in South Tyrol, which goes back to Carl Leopold Storch, who received the Bavarian nobility in 1775. He was a resident of Trachenfels near Etting , Upper Bavaria; Matriculated in the Kingdom of Bavaria with the aristocratic class on August 21, 1820 (for his son Franz Joseph von Storch zu Trachenfels).

Coat of arms (1775)

In blue a crowned natural-colored stork, holding a turned silver snake in stakes in its beak; two helmets: on the right with black and silver blankets the stork with the snake, on the left with blue and silver blankets a double natural-colored peacock feather.

  • 2. Storch (1790) - Protestant sex; Imperial Knighthood Munich 1790 (by Elector Karl Theodor von Pfalzbayern as Imperial Vicar for Franz Storch from Stralsund , royal Swedish rentmaster of the Duchy of Western Pomerania).

Coat of arms (1790)

In blue on a green three-mountain, a natural-colored stork, holding a natural-colored snake in its beak; on the helmet with blue-silver covers two inclined wooden oars.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h Genealogical manual of the nobility . Adelslexikon Volume XIV (Volume 131 of the complete series), CA Starke Verlag , Limburg / Lahn 2003, p. 171 f.
  2. ^ Storch - overview of the von Storch family, as of June 12, 2000, compiled by Jürgen (Hamburg), Hans (Lauenburg) and Sven (Mönchengladbach) von Storch 1999/2000, p. 1. (PDF; 197 kB)
  3. ^ Buchholz near Schwerin in gutshaeuser.de
  4. ^ Detershagen, Bad Doberan district in gutshaeuser.de
  5. ^ Hanshagen, Bad Doberan district in gutshaeuser.de
  6. ^ Parchow near Neubukow in gutshaeuser.de
  7. Michael Lissok: Two valuable testimonies of baroque sepulchral culture: the grave chapels of the families v. Storch and v. Schoepffer in the St. Marien Church in Güstrow. In: Dieter Pocher (Hrsg.): An ornament to the city. Heidberg, Güstrow 2008, ISBN 3-934776-24-8 , pp. 148-167.
  8. The Duchess is now called von Storch . In: Ostholsteiner Anzeiger , October 25, 2010.
  9. Von Storch vs. Von Storch: "Our family does not have an authoritarian tradition". In: SPIEGEL ONLINE. Retrieved April 13, 2016 .

Web links

Commons : Storch family  - Collection of images, videos and audio files