Erbvergleich Güstrow 1738: Brothers From Linstow Over Gut Lütgendorf (Klocksin)

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Inheritance comparison GÜSTROW 1738: brothers from LINSTOW, LÜTGENDORF


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– Wmore Pictures see below! –


You are bidding on one document (heritage comparison) from 1738 the end Guestrow.


Concerns that Good Lütgendorf (today OT of Klocksin, LK Mecklenburg Lake District).

Lütgendorf is one of the oldest documented places in Mecklenburg. The von Linstow family is documented here as early as 1112. In the course of the east colonization, a crusader Hinrich von Linstow was mentioned in 1171. The von Linstow managed the estate until the branch died out in 1752.


the Brothers Hans Rudolph von Linstow and Rudolph Günther von Linstow regulate the paternal and maternal estate, especially the property of the Lütgendorf house.


It fell to Rudolph Günther von Linstow by drawing lots, but he left it to his brother Hans Rudolph von Linstow and received the sum of 8,500 Reichstaler from him in return.


Dated Guestrow, 8. Nov 1738.


Signed by both brothers and by the witness Johannes Petrus Krafft.


With two seals; a third one has unfortunately been cut out (the first letter of each line of the last three lines of the text on the back is partially affected, but still recognizable).


Scope: 6 of 8 pages written (32 x 19.8 cm).


Hans Rudolph von Linstow dies in 1752; his wife Elizabeth Sophie, b. von Lowtzow married the Saxon War Councilor Joachim Reinmar von der Lühe.


There is one in the village church of Lütgendorf two-storey patron's box with the alliance coat of arms Linstow/Lowtzow of the patron couple Hans Rudolph von Linstow and Elisabeth Sophia, b. by Lo(w)tzow.


About the history of the Lütgendorf estate (with mention of the brothers’ comparison here): "The last owner is Hans Rudolf von Linstow, who left the estate in 1748 and died in 1752. After Captain Günther von Linstow still has his death, but Hans Rudolf's widow, who remarried the war councilor von der Lühe at Sophienhof, is in possession. Asked by the Lehnkammer to prove her right, she shows that she had a comparative dispute with Günther von Linstow on the basis of a will by her deceased husband, and that he ceded the property and his claims to it to her in return for payment of compensation, whereupon the sovereign consensus on this agreement on 19. February 1754 granted. Nevertheless, in 1761 the widow of the just mentioned deceased Günther von Linstow took the feudal oath on behalf of her children. However, they do not succeed in resolving the loan. Therefore, the war councilor von der Lühe and his wife sell the Lütgendorf estate on 24. October 1763 to the mayor Urban Nauert in Malchow, and when he proves unable to fulfill the contract, on 24. Nov 1764 
to Ernst Werner von Raven on Nossentin. After this had fallen into bankruptcy, it was bought by Helmuth Ludwig von Blücher in 1789, from whose heirs it 
1793 the captain Hans Heinrich Ludwig von Arnim buys. It remained in Amim's hands until 1848." (Source: Art and historical monuments of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Volume 5, Volume V: The district court districts of Teterow, Malchin, Stavenhagen, Penzlin, Waren, Malchow and Röbel, Schwerin 1902, p. 429 f.)



The deceased parents are Christoph von Linstow (1675-1737) and Dorothea Clara von Linstow, b. by Grabow (1673-1723).


As a son of theirs, I have only been able to prove one "Adolph" Günther von Linstow (b. 15. November 1707 in Lütgendorf, died. 1759, father of Major General Georg Ludwig Rudolph von Linstow), Lord of Lütgendorf and Hessian Colonel; it will probably be the Rudolph Günther von Linstow mentioned here, since no third brother is mentioned (at that time noblemen usually had numerous first names, whereby the mentioning of the given name could change).


Condition: Document folded lengthwise and crosswise; strong paper somewhat stained. A seal was cut out (by a descendant for the family seal collection). BPlease also note the pictures at the end of the item description!

Internal note: Linstow 10


pictures

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About the Linstow family (source: wikipedia):

Linstow is the name of a Mecklenburg aristocratic family with the same ancestral home in Linstow.

History: The gender appears in a document for the first time on 22. July 1281 in Rostock with the knight Gherardus de Linstowe. The main line begins with the knight Heinrich von Linstow, who is mentioned in documents from 1301 to 1318. The family still exists today in Germany and in some strong lines in Denmark. There she was born on the 28th. January 1777 granted the Danish nobility naturalization.

Anna von Linstow, b. von Levetzow entered the Dobbertin monastery as a widow in 1500 and left the monastery 100 guilders for her daughters Dorothea and Anna who lived there. From 1682 to 1704 Ilsabe Lucie von Linstow was a conventual in Dobbertin Monastery.

In the registration book of the Dobbertin monastery there are eight entries from daughters of the von Linstow families from Bellin, Diestelow and Vietschow from the years 1736-1814 for admission to the local aristocratic convent. Around 1880, the von Linstows had their Linstow manor house, which was probably built during the Thirty Years' War, rebuilt.

The estate in Klocksin belonged to the 14th century of the family.

Castle and estate Damerow and Neu Damerow was family property from 1605 to 1784.

Coat of arms: The coat of arms is divided between silver and black (oldest seal from the 3rd century). March 1325). On the helmet with black and silver covers two virgins growing forward, one white, the other black, each holding a green wreath in the outstretched outer hands and one in the middle together.

Well-known namesake

Conrad (von) Linstow, 1317 provost of the Dobbertin monastery[4]

Hans (Ernst Johann) von Linstow (1523–1592), hereditary lord of Bellin, from 1569 to 1583 provisional in the Dobbertin monastery, 1571 as visitor to the elimination of the Catholic faith and the dissolution of the Dobbertin nunnery

Georg von Linstow (1593–1650), from 1622 to 1628 monastery captain in Dobbertin, 1630 Wallenstein's appellate judge in Güstrow.[6]

Heinrich Wilhelm von Linstow (2. January 1709 to 29 April 1759), Electoral Hanoverian colonel from the Inf.-Reg. Linstow, wounded and captured at the Battle of Bergen, died at Frankfurt[7]

August von Linstow (1775–1848), Danish district administrator of the district of Sonderburg

Hans Ditlev Franciscus von Linstow (Hans Ditlev Frants von Linstow; 1787–1851), Norwegian architect

Hans Otfried von Linstow (1899–1944), German colonel and resistance fighter

Hartwig von Linstow (1810–1884), Danish-German administrative lawyer, acting president of the government of the Duchy of Lauenburg in Ratzeburg

Hugo von Linstow (1821–1899), Prussian officer, 1869 co-founder and 1. Chairman of the HERALD. Association for heraldry, genealogy and related sciences in Berlin.

Adolf von Linstow (1832–1902), Prussian lieutenant general

Waldemar von Linstow (1859–1925), Prussian major general

Otto von Linstow (physician) (1842–1916), German military doctor and zoologist

Otto von Linstow (geologist) (1872–1929), German geologist


About the history of the Lütgendorf estate (with mention of the brothers’ comparison here): "The last owner is Hans Rudolf von Linstow, who left the estate in 1748 and died in 1752. After Captain Günther von Linstow still has his death, but Hans Rudolf's widow, who remarried the war councilor von der Lühe at Sophienhof, is in possession. Asked by the Lehnkammer to prove her right, she shows that she had a comparative dispute with Günther von Linstow on the basis of a will by her deceased husband, and that he ceded the property and his claims to it to her in return for payment of compensation, whereupon the sovereign consensus on this agreement on 19. February 1754 granted. Nevertheless, in 1761 the widow of the just mentioned deceased Günther von Linstow took the feudal oath on behalf of h
About the history of the Lütgendorf estate (with mention of the brothers’ comparison here): "The last owner is Hans Rudolf von Linstow, who left the estate in 1748 and died in 1752. After Captain Günther von Linstow still has his death, but Hans Rudolf's widow, who remarried the war councilor von der Lühe at Sophienhof, is in possession. Asked by the Lehnkammer to prove her right, she shows that she had a comparative dispute with Günther von Linstow on the basis of a will by her deceased husband, and that he ceded the property and his claims to it to her in return for payment of compensation, whereupon the sovereign consensus on this agreement on 19. February 1754 granted. Nevertheless, in 1761 the widow of the just mentioned deceased Günther von Linstow took the feudal oath on behalf of h
About the history of the Lütgendorf estate (with mention of the brothers’ comparison here): "The last owner is Hans Rudolf von Linstow, who left the estate in 1748 and died in 1752. After Captain Günther von Linstow still has his death, but Hans Rudolf's widow, who remarried the war councilor von der Lühe at Sophienhof, is in possession. Asked by the Lehnkammer to prove her right, she shows that she had a comparative dispute with Günther von Linstow on the basis of a will by her deceased husband, and that he ceded the property and his claims to it to her in return for payment of compensation, whereupon the sovereign consensus on this agreement on 19. February 1754 granted. Nevertheless, in 1761 the widow of the just mentioned deceased Günther von Linstow took the feudal oath on behalf of h
Erscheinungsort Güstrow
Region Europa
Material Papier
Sprache Deutsch
Autor von Linstow
Original/Faksimile Original
Genre Recht
Eigenschaften Erstausgabe
Eigenschaften Signiert
Erscheinungsjahr 1738
Produktart Handgeschriebenes Manuskript