Waldhauser

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Waldhauser is a family name .

Origin and meaning of the name

Fresco of the holy King Walthaser from the early 15th century in the cloister of the collegiate parish church St. Philipp and Jakob in Altötting.

The surname Waldhauser comes from a reinterpretation of the Babylonian - Hebrew first name Balaṭ-šarri-uṣur, Balthasar , "God protect his life" or "God protect the life of the king". In the biblical book of Daniel , בלטאשצר, בלטשאצר (Bélṭšaṣṣar), Greek Βαλτασαρ, Latin Baltassar is the Babylonian name of Daniel. Martin Luther translated it in 1534 as Beltsazar.

When the Chancellor Emperor Barbarossas brought the remains of the three kings to Cologne in 1164 , the saints became popular in Germany, and with it their names. Over the centuries the surname Waldhauser developed from Walthasar or Walthaser.

This family name should not be confused with the name of several places and people Waldhausen , or the district of the university town of Tübingen Waldhäuser Ost .

Family coat of arms

Waldhauser coat of arms

In green, two interlocked silver lintel rafters, topped with three silver-covered red roses. On the helmet with green-silver covers a silver-inseminated red rose between two silver-green buffalo horns divided over a corner.

Using one of Adam Waldhauser (1819–1867), great-grandfather of the applicant Hans Waldhauser, entrepreneur in Grünwald b. Munich, accepted and heraldically corrected coat of arms by the applicant in January 1983 with management authorization for all descendants in the male line of his great-grandfather Adam Waldhauser, as long as and as long as they still bear the family name of the coat of arms founder.

The Waldhauser family coat of arms is registered and thus protected in: Deutsche Wappenrolle, No. 8026/83, Volume 39, Page 90, published by the "Herold", Association for Heraldry, Genealogy and Allied Sciences, Berlin.

Personalities

According to Yad Vashem Online, at least 59 people with this surname died as victims of the Holocaust (Shoa).

Web links