Schuldschein Achim 1754: Plate (Embsen) Leiht V.Church; Signature J. O. V.

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You are bidding on something interesting document (promissory note) from 1754 outAchim.


With beautiful and rarefee stamp.


Sealed and personally signed from Johann Otto von During (baptized on 26. August 1711 in Ruschbaden, died. on the 10th September 1782 in Embsen, today OT von Achim), progenitor of the branch Embsen andOwner of Embsen (Achim).

His two sons, the district administrator Adolph Gerlach von Düring (1748-1800) and Franz Julius von Düring (1749-1806), died of tuberculosis. Her grave at today's Edelhof in Embsen still exists today.


Dated Achim, the 13th Nov 1754.


Johann Heinrich Plate, inhabitant and kahter in Embsen (here written "Emsen"), confesses that with the consent of his landowner Herr von Düring zu Embsen borrowed 25 Reichstaler from the Achim church funds with 5% interest from Pastor Willemer in Achim.

To confirm this, Herr von Düring seals and signs this document.


Johann Heinrich Plate signed the certificate with a cross "self-drawn x Merck" (so he was unable to write).


underneathNote from 1812 (!)that a descendant (Brüne Plate in Embsen) this capital has been repaid; dated Achim, 18. November 1812.

Signed by Dietrich Wilhelm Zeidler (1749-1825), pastor in Achim and superintendent of the church district of Bremen.


Scope:described three out of four pages.


Condition:Document folded several times. Paper browned and stained, with small tears, seal somewhat damaged. BPlease note also the pictures!

Internal note: MM5


About the Düring noble family (source: wikipedia) and Dietrich Wilhelm Zeidler (source: VereinsWiki):

dueringis the name of an old noble family from Lower Saxony. Düring, the family headquarters of the same name, is now a village in the municipality of Loxstedt in the district of Cuxhaven. Branches of the family exist to this day.

History: The family, which belonged to the Lower Saxon Uradel, first appeared in a document in 1140 with Theodericus de Diurenge. From Kersten von Duringen the Elder, named in documents 1350 and 1357, all further generations of the family are derived in an uninterrupted family line. The property at that time included Düring, Loxstedt, Donnern and Hetthorn.

The lineage spread greatly over time, forming three major lineages around 1570. The first Otto line had the branches Holenwisch and Belum, the second Dietrian line divided into the branches Horneburg, Marsell and Francop and the third Arp line divided into the branches to Holte, Bockel, Embsen, Ruschbaden and Borstel (according to Kurt von Düring: Düringschen Familientafeln , printed 1920). The first line goes out around 1800. Members from the Marsell branch of the second line later settled in Denmark. From the third line there is only the Ruschbaden branch.

The family has produced significant members. The later Swedish field marshal Johann Christoph von Düring (1695-1759) from the House of Horneburg was elevated to the Swedish baronial rank in 1719 and to the Swedish count in 1752. The count's branch founded by him died out a short time later. Karl Frederic von Düring (1792–1876) from the Marsell family received the Danish baronial title Düring-Rosenkrantz in 1845, which also became extinct in the male line. In 1881 there was a Prussian confirmation that Kurt Freiherr von Düring had the title of baron.

coat of arms

Tribal Coat of Arms: The tribal coat of arms shows in silver, a blue bar accompanied by three (2:1) forward facing red ram heads. On the helmet is a red ram's head between two buffalo horns, each divided by a blue bar over a corner of red and silver. The helmet covers are red and silver on the right and blue and silver on the left.

Town coat of arms: Elements and colors from the family coat of arms of those from Düring still appear today in the coat of arms of the town of Düring.

namesake

Johann Christoph von Düring (1695–1759), Swedish Field Marshal

Georg Albrecht von Düring (1728–1801), Hanoverian major general

Ernst Christoph Friederich von Düring (1738–1809), Danish major general

Johann Christian von Düring (officer, 1687) (1697–1766), Hanoverian officer and president of the knighthood of the Duchy of Bremen

Johann Christian von Düring (officer, 1751) (1751–1823), Hanoverian officer and general forest director

Johann Christian von Düring the Younger (1792–1862), Hanoverian forester and free corps leader; Instructor of Crown Prince George

Levin Hermann Otto von Düring (1769–1838), Prussian major general

Georg Wilhelm von Düring (1789-1828), schaumburg-lippescher major and military writer

Georg Anton Diedrich von Düring (1780–1872), major general, adjutant general to King Ernst August I, married to Josephine Countess von Alcaini (noble family) (1794–1843)

Otto Albrecht von Düring (1807–1875), judge and Minister of Justice in the Kingdom of Hanover

Adolph Nikolaus von Düring (1820–1882), physician

Georg Adolph Dietrich von Düring (1832–1905), the king's aide-de-camp and leader of the Guelph Legion

Wilhelm von Düring (1836-1907), administrative lawyer and district administrator

Johann Friedrich Karl von Düring (1839–1901), Prussian major general

Ernst von Düring-Pascha (1858-1944), dermatologist and curative teacher


Dietrich Wilhelm Zeidler, also Diedrich Wilhelm Zeidler and Diederich Wilhelm Zeidler as well as Dieterich Wilhelm Zeidler (* 23. May or 30. May 1743 in Verden; † 1. May 1825 in Achim) was a German Lutheran pastor and superintendent.

Life: Dietrich Wilhelm Zeidler was born as the son of the Verden merchant and senator Johann Gottlob Zeidler the Elder († 19. June 1792) born. His brother was the Verden Senator Johann Gottlob Zeidler the Younger (* around 1738; † 2. September 1795).

Zeidler first studied at the University of Leipzig in 1763, then at the University of Göttingen in 1764. He then worked as a tutor in Ottersberg. In 1769 he accepted the position of fifth teacher at the Domgymnasium Verden.

From 1775 Zeidler worked as a pastor at the Marienkirche in Ahausen.

From 1792 or 1793 Zeidler worked as a pastor in Daverden in the Duchy of Verden. In 1807 he moved to the city of Achim and at the same time took on the duties of Superintendent of the Bremen Church District. Under the general superintendent Georg Alexander Ruperti in the duchies of Bremen and Verden, he was one of eleven special superintendents.

The lineage spread greatly over time, forming three major lineages around 1570. The first Otto line had the branches Holenwisch and Belum, the second Dietrian line divided into the branches Horneburg, Marsell and Francop and the third Arp line divided into the branches to Holte, Bockel, Embsen, Ruschbaden and Borstel (according to Kurt von Düring: Düringschen Familientafeln , printed 1920). The first line goes out around 1800. Members from the Marsell branch of the second line later settled in Denmark. From the third line there is only the Ruschbaden branch. The family has produced significant members. The later Swedish field marshal Johann Christoph von Düring (1695-1759) from the House of Horneburg was elevated to the Swedish baronial rank in 1719 and to the Swedish count in 1752. The co
The lineage spread greatly over time, forming three major lineages around 1570. The first Otto line had the branches Holenwisch and Belum, the second Dietrian line divided into the branches Horneburg, Marsell and Francop and the third Arp line divided into the branches to Holte, Bockel, Embsen, Ruschbaden and Borstel (according to Kurt von Düring: Düringschen Familientafeln , printed 1920). The first line goes out around 1800. Members from the Marsell branch of the second line later settled in Denmark. From the third line there is only the Ruschbaden branch. The family has produced significant members. The later Swedish field marshal Johann Christoph von Düring (1695-1759) from the House of Horneburg was elevated to the Swedish baronial rank in 1719 and to the Swedish count in 1752. The co
The lineage spread greatly over time, forming three major lineages around 1570. The first Otto line had the branches Holenwisch and Belum, the second Dietrian line divided into the branches Horneburg, Marsell and Francop and the third Arp line divided into the branches to Holte, Bockel, Embsen, Ruschbaden and Borstel (according to Kurt von Düring: Düringschen Familientafeln , printed 1920). The first line goes out around 1800. Members from the Marsell branch of the second line later settled in Denmark. From the third line there is only the Ruschbaden branch. The family has produced significant members. The later Swedish field marshal Johann Christoph von Düring (1695-1759) from the House of Horneburg was elevated to the Swedish baronial rank in 1719 and to the Swedish count in 1752. The co
Erscheinungsort Achim
Material Papier
Sprache Deutsch
Autor Johann Otto von Düring
Original/Faksimile Original
Genre Recht
Eigenschaften Erstausgabe
Eigenschaften Signiert
Erscheinungsjahr 1754
Produktart Handgeschriebenes Manuskript