Zeidler called Hofmann

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Coat of arms of the Zeidler called Hofmann

Zeidler called Hofmann is a noble family of bourgeois origin, which had the name Zeidler von Berbisdorf on Boden and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann since 1603 and was based in Saxony and Bohemia .

origin

The lineage of the Zeidler von Berbisdorf auf Boden and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann begins with the merchants Peter and Hans Zeidler, who in 1557 paid a thaler Turkish tax from their house and their property in the town of Kulmbach in Franconia . After the death of her father Peter Zeidler in 1530, her mother married Jakob Hofmann, a jeweler. His family name was added to the family name Zeidler and expanded to Zeidler called Hofmann .

Peter Zeidler called Hofmann (* around 1525 in Kupferberg in Franconia, † January 26, 1593 in Leipzig), his younger brother Hans Zeidler called Hofmann and her half-brother Jakob Hofmann founded a trading company in Nuremberg , which held court in Dresden , Berlin and Saint Petersburg with gold goods, precious stones and jewelry and had trade relations with the trading house of Tempelhoff in Berlin.

Peter Zeidler called Hofmann became a citizen of Leipzig in 1560 after the death of his younger brother Hans Zeidler (Czeidler) called Hofmann, a member of the Greater Council of Nuremberg . His epitaph in the Thomaskirche in Leipzig has been preserved. Portraits of him were handed down on two foam coins . In 1570 he married Anna Reiche (* 1544 - 30 July 1605), a daughter of Joachim Reiche (* after 1511 - 4 April 1575 in Berlin) in Leipzig. Joachim Reiche, from the Ryke patrician family (High German Reiche), who bought the “High House”, an electoral castle loan in Klosterstrasse in Berlin in 1554 and gave several loans to the Elector of Brandenburg after 1555, was “Burg - und Freisess zum Berlin ”and was enfeoffed together with his brother Hieronymus Reiche with Rosenfelde (later Berlin-Friedrichsfelde), with property in Rotzis (Rotberg) and Rangsdorf .

Acquisition of the Berbisdorf manor near Radeburg in Saxony

The four sons of the married couple Peter and Anna Zeidler called Hofmann, Peter, Joachim, Johann (Hans) and Hennig Zeidler called Hofmann, bought the manor and castle Berbisdorf , the estate Boden with the village of Dittmannsdorf , about 10 km east of Meißen on the Elbe , from Rudolf von Bünau the Elder to Berbisdorf and Radeburg. They were enfeoffed on July 5, 1600 with the property.

Elevation to the nobility

After the purchase of the Berbisdorf manor, the Boden manor and the village of Dittmannsdorf, the four brothers Peter, Joachim, Johann and Hennig Zeidler, called Hofmann, received the nobility on January 15, 1603 (Imperial Act Prague) with the title of Berbisdorf auf Boden and Dittmannsdorf with an improved coat of arms , Freedom from red wax and feudal rights . In 1605 Peter Zeidler von Berbisdorf auf Boden und Dittmannsdorf donated the church in Großdittmannsdorf as a burial place for his family and laid his mother Anna Zeidler, who died on July 30, 1605, in this church, whose portrait is preserved on a foam coin from 1571. A portrait plaque in the church of Großdittmannsdorf commemorates Peter Zeidler von Berbisdorf auf Boden and Dittmannsdorf.

Coat of arms Zeidler von Berbisdorf on the ground and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann

The coat of arms shows in red a golden tree trunk lying diagonally to the right, twice branched above and below, which a crowned black bear climbs up. As crest is at a black-golden Sendelwulst of which the right between two golden horns, black, the left is traversed red on a silver dreifels a flying up White Dove imaged. The ceilings are black and gold and red and gold.

Change of the spelling of the family name in Saxony and Bohemia

The length of the name Zeidler von Berbisdorf on Boden and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann meant that it was shortened and changed aloud in the spelling in Bohemia in the Czech language and the translation back into German, presumably also as an adaptation to the respective political religious situation during the Thirty Years War . The aristocratic name of the Zeidler von Berbisdorf auf Boden and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann is in documents and church registers: von Zeidler, u Zeidleru, von Zeidlern, von Zeydlern, von Zeidlern called Hofmann, Czeidler von Czeidlern, Scheidlern von Scheidlern, Zeidler von Berbisdorf, occasionally also from Berbisdorf. The latter led to confusion with the old Meissen aristocratic family von Berbisdorf , which is also said to trace its name back to a residence in the castle and manor Berbisdorf near Radeburg in Saxony at the beginning of the 14th century and was one of the most successful mining entrepreneurs in the central Ore Mountains before the Thirty Years War .

Residency at Berbisdorf Castle and Niemes Castle

Between 1600 and 1609 the Berbisdorf manor, the Boden manor and the village of Dittmannsdorf were jointly owned by the four brothers Peter, Joachim, Johann and Hennig Zeidler von Berbisdorf on Boden and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann. In 1609 the three younger brothers transferred their shares to their eldest brother Peter, who died before May 1622. The successor to Berbisdorf became his brother Johann, with whom the secured line of the family continued.

Johann (Hans) Zeidler von Berbisdorf auf Boden and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann, born in 1578 in Leipzig, died 1635 in Dresden, Doctor iuris utriusque of the University of Leipzig , councilor of the Electorate of Saxony and resident at the imperial Austrian court in Vienna and at the royal Bohemian court in Prague was married three times. There were descendants from each of these marriages.

  • His first marriage was on October 26, 1614 in Altranstädt with Elisabeth Gerstenberger, a daughter of the princely Saxon chancellor, who died in Vienna in 1621. Marcus Gerstenberger (1553-1613). The son from this marriage, Ferdinand Christopf Zeidler von Zeidlern (Scheidler von Scheidlern) (* 1621; † 1686), was state chamberlain, royal captain of Prague's Lesser Town and owner of the dominions Liboch , Ober-Berkowitz , Jeniowes , Weltrus , the Sukohrad estate in the parish Robitsch north of Prague and Kosteletz and Chabrtic east of Prague.
  • The second marriage was made by Johann Zeidler von Berbisdorf on Boden and Dittmannsdorf with Gertraud Nikolai, baptized in 1579 in Leipzig, died in 1623. She was a daughter of Mathias Nicolai, syndic of the city of Leipzig. It was their second marriage. When she married Johann Zeidler von Berbisdorf, she brought a house in Dresden on Moritzstrasse and 4500 guilders in cash, which was donated to a foundation for the Berbisdorf estate near Radeburg in Saxony. In her first marriage she was married to Dr. Johann Badehorn (* 1554, † 1610; son of Leonhard Badehorn ), privy councilor and canon in Merseburg and Wurzen . The son of their second marriage, Ferdinand Christoph Zeidler von Zeidlern (von Scheidler, Zeidler u Zeidleru), was a professor at the Karl Ferdinand University in Prague near St. Klement, and in 1680 and 1681 also its rector . It is unclear whether he was married. He had a son or nephew Franziskus von Scheidlern (Scheidler von Scheidlern), who married Barbara Eusebia Myskowska (Myszkowski) ze Sebusina (Sebuzeyn) from a Silesian-Polish noble family in Prague in 1710. From this connection Polixena Eusebia and Johann Wenzel Zeidler von Berbisdorf (born October 28, 1712 in Prague), who continued the proven line , emerged.
  • The third marriage was made by Johann Zeidler von Berbisdorf on Boden and Dittmannsdorf with Magdalena Röhling (* 1603, † 1649 in Niemes ), a daughter from the second marriage of Dr. Sigmund Röhling (1560–1617), raised in 1563 by Emperor Ferdinand I to the hereditary nobility with the title of Hirschfeld . The wife of Sigmund Röhling's 2nd marriage, Christina Peifer (Pfeiffer), was a daughter of Dr. David Peifer (1530–1602), electoral Saxon chancellor and poeta laureatus crowned by the court palatinate count Kaspar Brusch , who, together with his six brothers, received the nobility with an improved coat of arms on May 1, 1570 (Prague, Erbländischer Akt).

Johann Zeidler von Berbisdorf auf Boden and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann (1578–1635) gave Emperor Ferdinand II von Habsburg a loan of 32,650 Rhenish guilders in 1623 and received the rule and pledge from the Emperor's financial administration to secure this sum for 18 years the Niemes castle with a castle on the roll and the neighboring Dewin manor ( Děvín ) with the Dewin castle in northern Bohemia . This large estate of Niemes and Dewin came from the expropriation of Johann Müllner von Mühlhausen , royal Bohemian court chancellery secretary, who took part in the second lintel in Prague on November 8, 1620 on the part of the Protestant landlords in Bohemia at the beginning of the Thirty Years War .

Instead of the loan being repaid by Emperor Ferdinand II von Habsburg, Zeidler von Berbisdorf, called Hofmann, received the lords of Niemes and Dewin in 1626 as inherited property with an entry in the land table and the incolate in Bohemia. In Saxony he bought the villages of Würschnitz , Kleinnaundorf (today both districts of Tauscha ) and Neuendorf, which were tied to Berbisdorf as inheritance .

When neutral Electoral Saxony joined the Protestant Swedes in the Thirty Years' War and Swedish troops invaded northern Bohemia, plundered Niemes Castle in 1628 and set it on fire, Johann Zeidler von Berbisdorf called Hofmann tried to store grains and livestock from the farms in Niemes and Dewin to the Berbisdorf estate in Saxony and because of this "betrayal" was expropriated by Emperor Ferdinand II of Habsburg from the two lordships that were transferred to his Field Marshal Albrecht von Wallenstein, Duke of Friedland and Mecklenburg. After his murder in Eger in western Bohemia in 1634 , part of the estates was confiscated, including the recently acquired lordships of Niemes and Dewin.

Magdalena Zeidler von Berbisdorf, wife of her third marriage and widowed since 1635, received the lords of Niemes and Dewin in northern Bohemia back after she had converted to the Roman Catholic faith. She avoided the title of nobility from Berbisdorf and took the name of her family of origin Röhling von Hirschberg in Bohemia. She was able to keep Niemes and Dewin until her death in 1649 and to her son Johann Sigismund Zeidlern von Berbisdorf (born August 31, 1627 at Schloss Niemes; † July 11, 1696 in Berbisdorf) and her daughter Magdalena Zeidlern von Berbisdorf († 1703 ) to inherit. In 1651 the siblings sold the Lordship of Niemes and Dewin to Johann Putz von Adlerthurn, Imperial Austrian commissioner for the confiscations after the Battle of White Mountain near Prague, then royal Bohemian rentmaster and court chamberlain. His niece Maria Theresia Esther Putz von Adlerthurn, on Schrattenthal in Lower Austria († 1740), brought Niemes and Dewin, rebuilt in the Baroque style by the architect Octavio Broggio , as a marriage property in 1705 with Ludwig Graf von Hartig on Wartenberg , Gießhübel and Neudeck († 1735). The large estates in Northern Bohemia and the chateau in Niemes probably remained in the ownership of the descendants of the Counts von Hartig until 1945, the end of the Second World War, and then came to the Ralsko military training area .

Sigmund Zeidler von Berbisdorf was the master of Berbisdorf, Grubnitz , Ragewitz near Riesa in Saxony, Boden near Radeburg, Naundorf with Würschnitz, with which he was enfeoffed in 1651. In 1666 he had the castle in Berbisdorf converted into a three-wing complex with an inner courtyard and the church in Großdittmannsdorf , the family's burial place, restored. He had been married to Anna Margarethe von Starschedel since 1652, born February 14, 1636 in Gersdorf bei Roßwein , died on December 10, 1675 in Dresden .

Of the three children of the couple, born at Berbisdorf Castle , the son Hans Karl Dietrich Zeidler von Berbisdorf died in 1719, unmarried and childless as a royal Polish and electoral Saxon major general , and bequeathed his sister Johanna Sophie Zeidler von Berbisdorf, married von Trützschler his Land and castle ownership, that was his shares in the castle and manor Berbisdorf and the manors Grubnitz and Ragewitz . The older sister Johanna Elisabeth Zeidler von Berbisdorf, who died on his death in 1719, had brought the hereditary estates Boden and Naundorf with the village of Würschnitz into the marriage with Hofkammerrat Adam Friedrich Freiherr von Dölau as dowry . The younger sister Johanna Sophia Zeidler von Berbisdorf (* March 22, 1664; † June 9, 1729) had been married to Hans Heinrich von Trützschler , born on February 21, 1658 in Falkenstein, and died on April 7, 1734 in Dresden since 1680 , in 1699 royal Polish and until 1734 electoral Saxon privy councilor . In 1719 he bought her shares in the Berbisdorf manor near Radeburg in Saxony from his wife Johanna Sophia, née Zeidler von Berbisdorf, who was the last to have this name in Berbisdorf. Its epitaph in the church of Bloßwitz , today a district of Stauchitz, has been preserved.

Families in Bohemia

Ferdinand Christopf Zeidler von Zeidlern (Scheidler von Scheidlern) (* 1621; † November 27, 1686 in Prague), the son of the first marriage of Johann Zeidler von Berbisdorf (1578–1635) with Elisabeth Gerstenberger, married Maria in Prague in 1656 Theresia Losy von Losinthal, a daughter of Jan Anton Losy von Losinthal (1600–1682), who in 1647 received the Bohemian nobility with the title of Losinthal, in 1644 the rule of Tachau an der Mies with Winternitz, Stecken, Rzepitz and Stienitz (Czehnicz ) in West Bohemia and in 1655 obtained the Bohemian confirmation of the imperial count as Count of Losinthal.

The couple Zeidler von Zeidlern and Maria Theresa Countess Losy von Losinthal were among the wealthiest castle and large landowners in Bohemia in the period after the Thirty Years' War and provided their six daughters with considerable marriages. Another daughter Barbara (born February 10, 1671, † 1681) died at the age of 10. The Zeidler property was divided into:

  1. Rosalia Eusebia von Scheidlern (* November 6, 1657), who married Nikolaus Franz von Klebelsberg (* 1656 - December 2, 1723). The descendants resided at Trieblitz Castle near Leitmeritz on the Elbe and owned the Klebelsberg House in Marienbad in western Bohemia.
  2. Maria Theresa Scheidler Scheid learning (* September 7, 1658 in Prague, † April 6, 1709 at Castle Veltrusy ) that the basic rule Veltrusy (Weltrus) and lock and domination Jeniowes (Jeviněves) brought as a dowry in Melnik on the Elbe when they married in Prague Wenceslaus Anton Chotek von Chotkowa and Wognin . The Chotek , who came from a Bohemian nobility, brought this large estate into a family fideikommiss and in 1723 they were promoted to the Bohemian count. The couple Maria Theresia Scheidler von Scheidlern and Wenzel Anton Chotek von Chotkowa and Wognin are the old parents of Sophie Countess Chotek von Chotkowa and Wognin (born March 1, 1868 in Stuttgart; † June 28, 1914 in Sarajewo ), who were called Sophie Fürstin von Hohenberg at the side of her husband, the Austro-Hungarian heir to the throne Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Este , died in the assassination attempt in Sarajevo , which sparked the First World War .
  3. Polixena Eusebia Scheidler von Scheidlern (* 1663; † May 17, 1717 in Brodetz , Laun district in Bohemia), first married to Johann Franz Wenzel Czabelitzky von Sauticz, from a Bohemian nobility family, imperial-royal chamberlain and resident in Kundratitz and Werschowitz near Prague and in his second marriage to Theodor Wolfgang Hartmann von Klarstein († November 1, 1690), head of the Bunzlau district in Bohemia, from a Saxon family Hartmann, who had come to Bohemia in the war at the beginning of the Thirty Years War. By marrying the heir to the daughter of Matthias Arnoldin von Clarstein , the noble title Hartmann von Klarstein was formed . The family settled on Brodetz and Benatek near Jungbunzlau in northern Bohemia, possessions that Kaspar Cappleri de Sulewicz, as a member of the Protestant gentry in Bohemia, had been expropriated after the Battle of White Mountain near Prague in 1620 and who was sentenced to death and executed.
  4. Antonia Eusebia von Zeidlern (Czeidlerova), when she married Johann Joachim Pachta Freiherr von Reyhofen (* 1676; † December 26, 1742) in 1700 , brought the rule and castle Liboch ( Libechov ) near Melnik on the Elbe into the marriage . In 1716 he bought Neu-Falkenberg Castle near Deutsch-Gabel in northern Bohemia and built a family crypt in the cathedral church of Deutsch-Gabel. He is a son of Daniel Norbert Pachta von Rajowa. The couple became the first parents of the younger Pachta family .
  5. Polixana Elisabeth Czeidler von Czeidlern (born February 25, 1672 in Prague, † July 11, 1760 in Horka an der Iser (Czech: Horky nad Jizerou )). Her husband became Wenzel Mathias Desfours , from a family in Lorraine who had come to Bohemia with Field Marshal Louis Desfours du Mont et Atheinville in military service and had acquired property in northern Bohemia , including Gross-Rohosetz and Morgenstern, from the property of Kaspar, who was executed in 1621 Cappleri de Sulewicz and from the property of Field Marshal Albrecht von Wallenstein, Duke of Friedland and Mecklenburg after his murder in Eger in 1634.
  6. Josefa Eusebia Scheidler von Scheidlern married Hubert von Hartig , from a middle-class family in Hörnitz and Zittau in Saxony, burgrave of the Königgrätz district in East Bohemia and resident in Biesskowicz. He was a son of Anton Esias von Hartig († July 5, 1759), Imperial Habsburg Privy Councilor and Reichshofratsvizepprident, in the castle and rule of Ungarschitz in South Moravia, and his wife Anna Katharina Walderode von Eckhausen.

Johann Wenzel Zeidler von Zeidlern (* October 28, 1712; † March 3, 1772), a descendant of the 2nd marriage of Johann Zeidler von Berbisdorf to Gertraud Nikolai, was co-owner of the Brodetz lordship near Laun and a palace "Am Graben" in the Prague New Town . He married Louise Buquoi de Longueval in Prague (* around 1727, † after 1767 in Werschowitz near Prague). She was a daughter of Franz August Buquoi de Longueval, who died in Werschowitz near Prague, was an imperial royal chamberlain in Prague and resided in Werschowitz, Rosenberg, Zartlesdorf and Nusle . He came from an old French noble family who came to Bohemia with Charles Bonaventure de Longueval, Comte de Bucquoy , (1571–1621) in the war. As Field Marshal of the Catholic Habsburg Army, he secured the supremacy of the Austrian Emperor Ferdinand II of Habsburg in Bohemia by winning the Battle of the White Mountain near Prague on November 8, 1620 and received most of the extensive as a reward and incentive for further achievements , expropriated large estate and castle property of Adam von Schwanberg (z Sswamberka), a member of a nobility family who got away with his life after the victory of the Catholic League on White Mountain near Prague due to his young age and was largely dependent on donations until his death.

The couple Johann Wenzel Zeidler von Zeidlern (1712–1772) and Louise Buquoi de Longueval (* around 1727, † after 1767) had the son:

Laurenz Zeidler von Berbisdorf (* 1767 in Prague, † February 19, 1832 in Strischkau, parish Okroulitz) received back the old title of nobility from Berbisdorf as a state advocate in Prague, legally secured. Owner of a palace “Am Graben” in Prague and the apartment buildings in New Town No. 924 and 841 (Hybernergasse No. 8). In 1809 he bought the Allodialgut Strischkau, parish Okroulitz, district Beneschau ( Benešov ) near Prague from Heinrich Franz von Rottenhan , Oberstburggraf in Prague and Minister of Justice. On September 14, 1799, Laurenz Zeidler married von Berbisdorf in Schleb in Eastern Bohemia, Wilhelmine Kodre († November 24, 1843 in Werschowitz), a daughter of Josef Philipp Koderle († after February 14, 1813), ruler of Prince Auersberg's rule Schleb. With the six children of the married couple Laurenz Zeidler von Berbisdorf and Wilhelmine Kodre, the secured lineage of Zeidler von Berbisdorf ends on Boden and Dittmannsdorf called Hofmann.

Your children are:

  1. Gabriela Filipina Zeidler von Berbisdorf (born August 22, 1804 in Prague, † around 1870 in Strischkau near Beneschau), who, at the age of 14 , was Johann Karl Baptist Czapek in the church of St. Heinrich and Kunigunde on August 26, 1818 with the approval of the responsible district office (* June 24, 1793 in Kuttenberg in Eastern Bohemia) had married. Of the ten children of this couple, the daughter Maria Ludmilla Gabriela Czapek (born January 3, 1830 in Krinetz in Böhmen; † around 1900 in Raudautz in Bukowina , at that time a crown land of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy) married in Heinrichsgrün , Graslitz district in western Bohemia, Kajetan Ludwig Leopold Ebenhöch (* 1821 in Petersdorf near Deutsch-Gabel in Northern Bohemia), graduate of the Polytechnic Institute in Prague.
  2. Rosalia Amalia Zeidler von Berbisdorf (* July 2, 1806 in Prague, † March 9, 1877 in Vienna), who lived at Gut Strischkau near Beneschau on June 15, 1829 Ignaz Josef Chimani (* March 23, 1800 in Vienna; † May 23 1854 in Krems in Austria), member of the Higher Regional Court and Public Prosecutor, whose son Dr. med. Otto Franz Chimani, General Staff Doctor, married Johanna Franziska von Hacker, daughter of Franz Ritter von Hacker, Higher Regional Court Counselor, and his wife Karoline Winkler von Forazest in Vienna on January 12, 1870.
  3. Prokop Wilhelm Zeidler von Berbisdorf (born October 1, 1808 in Prague, parish of St. Heinrich).
  4. Maria Wilhelmine Josepha Zeidler von Berbisdorf (born February 14, 1813 at Gut Strischkau, parish Beneschau).
  5. Wilhelmine Rosalia Zeidler von Berbisdorf (born April 11, 1816 at Gut Strischkau, Beneschau parish).
  6. Adolf Johann Zeidler von Berbisdorf (born August 4, 1817 at Gut Strischkau).

In Postupitz near Beneschau, the Zeidler von Berbisdorf family had a family crypt that is said to have been preserved in 1950.

literature

  • Johann F. Roth: Directory of all named of the larger council in Nuremberg. Nürnberg 1802, p. 88. (Facsimile edition: Peter Fleischmann, Manfred H. Grieb (Eds.): Verlag für Kunstreproduktionen, Neustadt / Aisch 2002, ISBN 3-89557-155-5 )
  • Georg Habich: The German show coins of the XVI. Century. Volume 1, 2nd half. Munich 1931, p. 218 No. 1544. Volume 2, 1st half, Munich 1932, p. 295 No. 2936.
  • Hugo Rachel , Johannes Papritz, Paul Wallisch: Berlin wholesalers and capitalists . Volume 1. By the end of the Thirty Years War . Berlin 1934, p. 52. (newly published, supplemented and bibliographically expanded by Johannes Schultze, Henry C. Wallich, Gerd Heinrich. 2nd edition. Berlin 1967).
  • Association for the history of Berlin (ed.): Mixed writings following the Berlin Chronicle . Volume 2. Berlin 1888, Berlin seal plate.
  • Karl Friedrich von Frank : Status surveys and acts of grace for the German Empire and the Austrian hereditary lands until 1806, as well as imperial Austrian until 1823 with some additions to the "Old Austrian Adels-Lexicon" 1823-1918. Volume 5. Self-published, Schloss Senftenberg 1974, DNB 800675207 , p. 256.
  • Ernst Heinrich Kneschke : New general German nobility lexicon . Volume 1. Leipzig 1858, p. 587. Volume 2. Leipzig 1860, p. 521-522 (reprint: Verlag für Kunstreproduktionen Schmidt, Neustadt an der Aisch 1995/96).
  • Rudolf Johann von Meraviglia-Crivelli : J. Siebmacher's large book of arms . Volume 30. The coats of arms of the Bohemian nobility . Reprographic reprint of Siebmacher's Wappenbuch, Nuremberg, 4th volume, 9th section. Degener & Co, Neustadt / Aisch, 1979, ISBN 3-87947-030-8 , p. 272, plate 127.
  • Josef Tille: History of the city of Niemes and its immediate surroundings. Niemes 1905, pp. 116, 303.
  • G. Oettrich: Correct list of those who died along with their monuments and epitaphs in local churches in St. Sophia. Dresden 1709. (2nd edition. 1878, pp. 10, 17, 55, 59)
  • Hans-Ulrich Engel: Castles and palaces in Bohemia. Frankfurt am Main 1978, ISBN 3-8035-8013-7 , pp. 50, 51, 176.
  • Mapa hradu a zamku Ceskoslovenska. 1: 750 000. Kartographia Prague 1976, p. 64.
  • Announcements from the Association for Local Studies of the Jeschken-Iser Gau. Volume 11, 1917, p. 124; Volume 15, 1921, pp. 70–72.
  • Roman Freiherr von Prochazka : Genealogical manual of extinct Bohemian gentry families. Main band. Verlag Degener & Co, Neustadt / Aisch 1973, ISBN 3-7686-5002-2 .
  • Board of Directors of the Collegium Carolinum (ed.); Roman Freiherr von Prochazka : Genealogical manual of extinct Bohemian gentry families. Supplementary volume. R. Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, Munich 1990, ISBN 3-486-54051-3 .
  • Golo Mann : Wallenstein - His life is told by Golo Mann . Fischer, Frankfurt / Main 1971, ISBN 3-10-047903-3 .
  • Martin Kessler: The ancestors of the pastor Gustav Kessler (1833-1918). Contributions to the Central German genealogy. In: Gerhard Gessner (Ed.): German Family Archives. A genealogical compilation . Volume 66.Degener & Co, Neustadt / Aisch 1977, ISBN 3-7686-5021-9 .

swell

  • Saxon Main State Archives Dresden, files of the manor Kleinnaundorf with Würschnitz as well as the dominions Radeburg and Berbisdorf.
  • Family Archives and Family History Research Dr. Helene Bruscha, Ulm on the Danube.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Bamberg State Archives, Bamberg Monastery. Office account. Rep A 231, No. 35399 Türkensteuer Kupferberg 1557, p. 21.
  2. Johann Jakob Vogel: The Greek sex. Manuscript in the Leipzig City Library; Funeral sermon by Gertraud Tempelhoff in the Göttingen University Library; C. Brecht: The Tempelhoff family. In: Association for the history of Berlin (ed.): Mixed writings in connection with the Berlin Chronicle and the document book . Volume 1. Berlin 1880.
  3. Wolfgang Lorenz: The Röhling from Geyern. Amberg-Bucholz 2001
  4. ^ Procházka novel : Genealogical handbook of extinct Bohemian gentry families, Neustadt an der Aisch 1973, there: Putz von Adlerthurn family line (Putz de Turaquila), page 243, ISBN 3 7686 5002 2 .
  5. ^ Lineage Ebenhöch , Ebenhöh , Ebenhoch von Hocheneben from Hohenfels in the Upper Palatinate, German Gender Book , Volume 172, 45th General Volume, pp. 254 ff, 1975, CA Starke Verlag Limburg an der Lahn
  6. standard sequence Chimani and Winkler Knights of Forazest. In: Austrian Family Archives. Volume 1. Vienna 1963.