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the vicars of Eckweiler After revisiting the Weiß Chronicles including the biography of Johannes Weiß, the vicar of Eckweiler from 1740 to 1772, I had another look at the history of the village, which unfortunately disappeared from the surface of the Earth in the 1980s, leaving nothing but the little church and an old chestnut tree. It reminded me that the Lutheran village clergymen in that area formed an interesting kind of network between neighbouring parishes and across generations. For instance, the next vicar of Eckweiler taking over from Johannes Weiß, was his son in law. Four of my direct ancestors played parts in that game regionally. Johannes Weiß at Eckweiler was the most recent one, then there's his father-in-law Philipp Nicolaus Ebner at Alterkülz, then the great-great-grandfather of his daughter-in-law at Gebroth, and finally Peter Siegel, who studied with Martin Luther and brought the Reformation to Kirn, was the earliest. In an effort to better understand the culture of these networks, I'll list all the vicars who held the parish of Eckweiler in a timeline from the Reformation through to its dissolution, to see if there are any further connections with people we know (names of interest in bold). My main source for this endeavour is the book: > Eckweiler: Eine Kirche ohne Dorf > Monika Kirschner, Hans Werner Ziemer > 2005 (printed privately, no ISBN number referred to as "the book" below, but in an earlier effort to draw up a family tree of an Eckweiler person not (yet) related to me, I also used the Einwohnerbuch Eckweiler-Daubach, which I don't have at hand right now. That ancestry of Johann Nikolaus Fuchs also includes several of the clergymen listed below. #### timeline 1557 16.7. official date of the Reformation in the Hintere Grafschaft Sponheim, the microstate to which Eckweiler then belonged. (While the book says it belonged to Hintere (Eastern) Grafschaft Sponheim, Wikipedia says at least in the initial partitioning it was part of the Vordere (Western) Grafschaft Sponheim. It may have been reshuffled to the other part at some point, but the Reformation came to both parts simultaneously, which were otherwise surrounded by mostly catholic areas.) 1557-1586 Remigius Thiel is the first Lutheran vicar of Eckweiler. He died at Eckweiler 9.1.1602 aged over 80. 1586-1593 Johannes Ries, then moved on to Gebroth. 1593-1599 Melchior Beerwein. He ran into trouble and disappeared without a trace. 1599-1621 Johann Valentin **Faber**. He died in Eckweiler January 1621. His son and grandson also were vicars, more info about the family here. According to that forum contribution, his wife, Juliane Teutchag, was the daughter of the vicar of Wallhausen, from a long line of clergymen in Hessen. The unusual name may be a misreading of Tautphoeus, which originated from a latinised version of the village name Dautphe (near Biedenkopf, Hessen) where that lineage came from. 1621-1635 Nicolaus **Mohr** Now that's interesting because I think he may very well be related to our Landschreiber Mohr in the same generation. Both are believed to have died from the plague which hit the area in 1635-36. The village of Daubach near Eckweiler was reported to have no residents left for about a decade. until 1663 Johann Jakob **Faber** , grandson of Johann Valentin Faber, listed above, was the vicar. Not sure when his tenure started as the 30-years-war and the plague may have interrupted village life and church services. The earliest mention in the book is from 1650. From 1663 until 1677 he was the vicar in nearby Pferdsfeld, which meant he oversaw the burial of the next vicar of Eckweiler: 1663-1674 Johann Michael **Becker** who died 30.4.1674 aged only 37. According to Gedbas he married Anna Katharina Hauth (from a long lineage of clergymen, who married two other colleagues before and after this one) and had a son called Johann Friedrich Becker born 28. May 1673 in Eckweiler. NB I have an ancestor Anna Eva Becker from Laubenheim who married in 1671 at Horn. Her father was Wendel Becker from Laubenheim. 1674-1690 Johann Justus **Leyendecker**. Born ca. 1642 in Trarbach, died 28.11.1699 in Weiler. That is funny - he appears in a family tree we once drew up for somebody else who's not related to me (yet) but whose ancestors in the Hunsrück area moved very much in the same kind of social circles as mine. (That's the ancestry of Johann Nikolaus Fuchs, born 24.8.1820 in Eckweiler.) And oops, the Fabers mentioned above are also part of this family tree, as are the Schauss family who held the post station and inn in the village. 1691-1697 Johann Heinrich Brach 1697-1740 Johann Philipp Forst. According to this page, he married Elisabetha Margaretha Liernur from a family that produced multiple clergymen. Her Father was Johann Albert Liernur, who was the vicar of Bergen from 1678 to his death 31 Mar 1707. Johann Philipp Forst died 30.1.1752 at Eckweiler aged 77. 1740-1772 Johannes **Weiß** (1704-1772). My ancestor - see the Weiß Chronicles for his short biography. Note that his wife, Katharina Elisabeth Ebner (1712-1790), was the daughter of a Lutheran priest as well. She came from Trarbach, where her father and grandfather hat taught at the grammar school (Lateinschule) which still exists today. 1773-1818 Philipp Jacob Bauer, who was married to Maria Elisabeth Weiß (-1819), the daughter of his predecessor, so he also appears in the Weiß Chronicles, with the claim that they had no children. The residents register of Eckweiler notes two children, however, who both died before reaching school age. According to the book, Philipp Jakob Bauer died 27.7.1818 aged 85, having retired from the vicar's job earlier that year. According to GedBas, however, he was born 24.11.1734 at Enkirch (on the river Mosel, just downstream of Trarbach) and died 29.8.1818 in Eckweiler which would make him 83. He is part of a very extensive family network on GedBas, with a complete set of eight great-grandparents and name line ancestry (wine growers at Enkirch) going back to the 16th century, but no obvious link to any of my Bauer ancestors in the area. Funnily enough, I have another protestant priest from Enkirch among my direct ancestors, Nikolaus Andreae, who became vicar of Gebroth (not far from Eckweiler) in 1632. And his great-great-granddaughter married a son of Johannes Weiß. It's all one big network, I'm telling you. 1818-1822 The vicar of nearby Pferdsfeld, Markus Mitscher, also serves Eckweiler, but the parish resists being permanently merged into that of Pferdsfeld and having to commute for services. 1822-1827 Georg August Ludwig Schmidtborn, who moved on to Kirn after his brief tenure. He went on to have a rather stellar career in the church administration, see his Wikipedia entry. 1827-1829 Georg Röbenacke, who followed a call to Wetzlar after only two years in office. There he drowned in the river Lahn. Could have lived a long and happy life in Eckweiler ... In 1828 Regina Katharina Weiss (born 10.9.1779), granddaughter of the vicar Johannes Weiss, and daughter of the mayor of Pferdsfeld, married Johannes Fuchs in Eckweiler. She was 49 years old at that point, so probably married to somebody else before? 1829-1844 Johann Wilhelm Arnold Mebus He died 25.3.1844 freezing to death at age 81 when travelling on foot from Winterburg to Eckweiler and caught in an unseasonal snowdrift. 1845-1847 Konrad Cörper Died 28.9.1847 aged only 39. 1848-1859 Gustav Adolf Lang, moved on to Hottenbach 1859-1862 Karl Heinrich Noel. Died 22.11.1862 at Eckweiler, aged 44. 1864-1888 Gustav Heinrich Roffhack. Died at Eckweiler 15.4.1888 aged 76. During his tenure, in 1881, the teacher Valentin Klee took office in the village, who left detailed comments about many aspects of village life. He was not impressed with Roffhack's work but liked the work of his successor better: 1889-1900 Johann Wilhelm Vogelsang. He moved on to Kirn. First to be represented with a portrait photo in the book. On 28.8. 1891 Christian Gottlieb Weiß (* 29.5.1819), great-grandson of our vicar Johannes Weiß, wrote down the Weiß Chronicles, stating explicitly that he was living at Eckweiler at that time. Based on that date, our family connection with Eckweiler lasted for at least 150 years, from 1740-1891. However, his daughter Sophie married Franz Philipp Kehrein in Eckweiler (his family seems to have had a farm in Pferdsfeld). Their older son (born before 1880) appears to have stayed in Eckweiler had five children there (and Christian Gottlieb may have been living with them when he wrote down the family history, seeing his wife had died in 1886), so for all we know there may have been descendants right through to the time the place was evacuated. Their younger son Karl Kehrein (1880-1942) was a baker at Kirn, where my great-great aunt Johanna borrowed the Weiß Chronicles from him and made the copy we still have today (the original has gone missing). Incidentally, Karl Kehrein was married to Lina Martin, who according to our records was also a cousin of Johanna's via the Kauer family (Gedbas disagrees though). According to this newspaper clipping, Artur and Else Kehrein refused to leave Pferdsfeld when the villages were cleared in the 1980s. Artur died in 1994 and Else eventually moved to a care home in Sobernheim where she died in 2014, but their house was only demolished in 2022, long after the military airfield ceased to exist. So between the two villages we easily get to 250 years of family presence. 1900-1906 Wilhelm Rheingans. In 1906, he published a short history of the parish of Eckweiler which I haven't got. Then he moved on to the new industrial city Oberhausen in the Ruhr area (not to be confused with the eponymous village in the Hunsrück). According to Gedbas he had four children and died 7.2.1914 in Elberfeld, aged 43. 1907-1934 Otto Jungjohann. Building work on the church that was planned under his two predecessors finally started happening in 1908, always accompanied by the critical remarks of teacher Valentin Klee in his school chronicles. Both his predecessors came for the grand inauguration ceremony on 2.12.1908. On 9.2.1915, the village was connected to the electricity network. 1935-1942 Eduard Jungjohann, son of the predecessor. Retired for health reasons and died the same year at Ulm. 1943-1952 Ernst Altenpohl 1952-1952 Eduard Otto Heinz Hinnemann (GedBas entry) Died suddenly on 16.11.1952 while the bells were ringing for a service he was due to hold. 1954-1956 Erich Lotze. Moved to Wuppertal. 1956-1957 NN Theunert. Died 26.9.1957. Didn't even leave a record of his first name. 1959-1976 Peter Schumacher. The last one officially appointed to this parish. As the increasing problems with the nearby airfield made people move away, the remaining residents were served by priests from neighbouring parishes until the evacuation. 10.6.1979 the villages of Pferdsfeld and Eckweiler officially cease to exist. In Eckweiler alone, the last 302 residents were resettled and 51 houses demolished, leaving only the church standing. * * * Other Eckweiler-related VIPs include Friedrich Wilhelm Utsch, who may or may not have been the inspiration for the folk song "Ein Jäger aus Kurpfalz", and who used a hunting lodge at Entenpfuhl, which the book claims as Eckweiler territory. A later reincarnation was built on Pferdsfeld's land in an effort to save tax, apparently. Leads for further study: * This genealogy wiki has short biographies of many parsons (more than 50 family names) in the Hunsruck area in English - sadly not including any of my ancestors or in-laws. Although the Andreae person at the top of the list must be related to my ancestor Nicolaus Andrae who was vicar of Göroth and Gebroth (Gedbas). * Stop Press, clicking through from that Gedbas entry I found another clergymen in my family tree, Johann Balthasar Orth, vicar of Kirn from 1560-69, thus the direct successor of Peter Siegel. (Oh, and related to Goethe.) And another one, Valentin Konstantin Keiser. Basically both grandfathers of Nicolaus Andrae's wife were vicars too. And after his death, she married another one, Valentin Corvinus, who appears in that wiki list linked above. The Corvinus guy married three Orth women in succession, two sisters and their cousin. All of which calls for a separate blog entry or two. * * * Who is who? - see my new name index for all things family history.

Alle 28 Pfarrer von #Eckweiler in einem Blogpost: proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-vicars-of-ec... #Familiengeschichte #Genealogie #Hunsrück #Sobernheim #Pferdsfeld #EvangelischeKirche

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Another #Eckweiler post will go live this time tomorrow ... It's kind of my Macondo :)

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Original post on mastodon.social

I find it depressing that the whole village was bulldozed to the ground because of the unbearable noise from a military airfield that closed less than 20 years later. On the other hand, it's kind of useful for #familyHistory research that the search term #Eckweiler isn't swamped with results […]

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another family tree from Eckweiler ... rescued from my ancient website which is now offline. Looking at this again after around 15 years, I've discovered a few things to add, including new ancestors 768, 769 and some details found online. (I needed this genealogy to be online because there is another entry coming up where I will have to refer back to it.) Early 20th century photo of the inn Gastwirtschaft "Alte Post" (former post station on the route Brussels to Innsbruck) held by the Schauss family over several generations. The chestnut tree is still standing. Source. #### Ancestors of Johann Nikolaus Fuchs, born 1820 at Eckweiler compiled by Jörg Groß and Michael Groß based on the book: Einwohner Eckweiler Daubach 1519-1900. Heimatkundliche Schriftenreihe der Verbandsgemeinde Kirn-Land, Bd. 28 NB these people are not linked to my ancestors yet, but as they inhabited an area that was crawling with my folks (specifically the Kauer and the Imig clans), and both sets of ancestors were of similar social standing and even held the same job at different times. For instance, the Faber men below were vicars of Eckweiler like my ancestor Johannes Weiß and his son in law Philipp Jakob Bauer in the Weiß Chronicles, which were actually written in Eckweiler. Hence I reckon there must be a link somewhere, it's just a question of finding it. Further details regarding some of these people (e.g. professional careers, descendants) are available upon request. --- **Number** | **name, first name** | **birth date, place** | **death date, place** | **marriage date, place** * * * 1 | Fuchs, Johann Nikolaus | 24.08.1820 Eckweiler | | emigrated to the US * * * 2 | Fuchs, Friedrich Adam | 27.03.1785 Eckweiler | 12.08.1861 Eckweiler | 05.04.1807 Eckweiler 3 | Schauss, Maria Katharina | 21.03.1791 Eckweiler | 17.09.1845 Eckweiler * * * 4 | Fuchs, Johannes | ~28.04.1759 Allenfeld | 31.03.1835 Eckweiler | 18.05.1784 Eckweiler 5 | Böhler, Anna Sophia | 01.06.1766 Eckweiler | 29.12.1824 Eckweiler 6 | Schauss, Johann Adam | 04.01.1756 Eckweiler | 26.05.1794 Eckweiler | 26.04.1774 Eckweiler 7 | Enders, Catharina Elisabeth | 12.12.1756 Eckweiler | 05.10.1805 Eckweiler * * * 8 | Fuchs, Johannes | | | 31.01.1758 Allenfeld 9 | Beuscher, Maria Margareta | ~24.01.1740 Allenfeld | 10 | Böhler, Friedrich Adam | 1718 (calc.) | 16.09.1797 Eckweiler | 11.01.1740 Eckweiler 11 | Leyendecker, Maria Ursula | 1723 (calc.) Eckweiler | 23.11.1800 Eckweiler 12 | Schauss, Peter | 28.01.1728 Eckweiler | 18.02.1818 Eckweiler | 1751 Eckweiler 13 | NN, Anna Maria | ca. 1730 Eckweiler | 14 | Enders, Samson | ~ 12.04.1726 Eckweiler | | 1756 Eckweiler 15 | Reiniger, Anna Katharina | 05.01.1728 Eckweiler | * * * 18 | Beuscher, Johann Peter | | | 19 | NN, Maria Elisabetha | | 22 | Leyendecker, Johann Jost | ~ 17.12.1690 Eckweiler | | 07.09.1716 Winterburg 23 | Jung, Maria Johanetta | ~ 28.10.1695 Winterbach | 24 | Schauss, Johann Heinrich | ~ 07.02.1694 Eckweiler | 21.08.1772 Eckweiler | before 1717 Eckweiler 25 | NN, Anna Katharina | 1695 | 04.02.1741 Eckweiler 28 | Enders, Hans Valentin | ~24.6.1677 Eckweiler | []28.1.1743 (calc.) Eckweiler | 30.1.1713 Eckweiler 29 | Schanzenbach, Anna Katharina | ~5.8.1691 Eckweiler | 24.1.1774 Eckweiler 30 | Reiniger, Hector | ca. 1700 (est.) | | before 1723 Eckweiler 31 | NN, Anna Katharina | ca. 1700 (est.) | * * * 44 | Leyendecker, Johann Franz | ca. 1665 | | 03.01.1690 Eckweiler 45 | Bauer, Maria Elisabeth | 27.12.1664 Eckweiler | before 1715 46 | Jung, Johann Gabriel | | | 20.4.1669 47 | Spang, Elisabeth Engel | ~ | 48 | Schauss, Hans Christoph | ~ 18.10.1663 Eckweiler | 56 | Enders, Johann Georg | ca. 1645 (est.) Eckweiler | | 20.4.1675 Eckweiler 57 | Schmidt, Maria Margaretha | ~24.1.1655 Eckweiler | 58 | Schanzenbach, Melchior | 1652 Eckweiler | | 01.06.1683 Eckweiler 59 | Schlarb, Gertrud | ca. 1660 (est.) Winterbach | 60 | Reiniger, Gottfried | ca. 1680 (est.) | | before 1704 Eckweiler 61 | NN, Maria Ursula | ca. 1680 (est.) | * * * 88 | Leyendecker, Johann Justus | 1642 (calc.) Trarbach | 28.11.1699 Weiler | before 1660 Niederbrombach (?) 89 | NN, Katharina | 1639 (calc.) | 20.03.1710 Weiler 90 | Bauer, Eberhard | 21.09.1638 | | 18.08.1663 Eckweiler 91 | Enders, Katharina | ca. 1645 Eckweiler | 92 | Jung, Hans Jacob | Gebroth | 18.12.1666 Winterbach | 7.6.1636 93 | Spengler, Anna Elisabeth | | 94 | Spang, Heinrich | | | 9.1.1648 Winterburg 95 | NN, Ottilia | Johannesberg | 96 | Schauss, Johann Gabriel | 23.01.1625 Eckweiler | 09.07.1678 Eckweiler | 30.01.1644 Simmern 97 | Klein, Maria Magdalena | ca. 1620 Simmern | 112 =182 | Enders, Valentin | 23.09.1617 Eckweiler | 01.04.1667 Eckweiler | before 1645 Eckweiler(?) 113 =183 | NN, NN | ca. 1620 (est.) | 114 | Schmidt, Hans Martin | ca. 1630 Winterbach | | 24.01.1654 Eckweiler 115 | Bauer, Ursula | ca. 1630 | 116 | Schanzenbach, Hans Bernhard | 17.9.1616 Winterburg | 5.12.1681 Eckweiler | 24.6.1651 Eckweiler 117 | Kilian, Anna Katharina | ~6.8.1620 Eckweiler | 11.2.1663 Eckweiler 118 | Schlarp, Theobald | | | 119 | | | * * * 180 | Bauer, Hans | 15.08.1591 Eckweiler | 05.01.1662 Eckweiler | before 1637 Eckweiler 181 | Faber, Anna Bärbel | 19.08.1612 Eckweiler | 182 =112 | Enders, Valentin | 23.09.1617 Eckweiler | 01.04.1667 Eckweiler | before 1645 Eckweiler(?) 183 =113 | NN, NN | ca. 1620 (est.) | 186 | Spengler, Hans Peter | | 16.11.1654 Winterbach | 3.1.1609 Winterburg 187 | Beuscher, Gertrud | | 188 | (Spang) | | | 189 | NN, NN | | 10.12.1660 192 | Schauss, Melchior | 24.02.1595 Eckweiler | 24.06.1628 Eckweiler | 04.12.1621 Eckweiler 193 | Anthes, Helena | ca. 1600 Schönberg | 194 | Klein, Theobald | | | | | | 224 =364 | Enders, Johannes | 28.06.1580 Eckweiler | | 05.06.1615 Eckweiler 225 =365 | Kilian, Agnes | ~15.09.1590 Eckweiler | 20.05.1657 Eckweiler 228 | Schmidt, Johannes | | | | | | 230 | Bauer, Hans | ca. 1606 | 15.01.1662 Eckweiler | before 1623 231 | NN, Philippina | ca. 1600 | 232 | Schanzenbach, Christoph | | | 25.1.1614 Winterburg 233 | Beier, Ursula | | 234 | Kilian, Valentin | ~11.11.1594 Eckweiler | | before 1616 Eckweiler 235 | NN, Elisabeth | ca. 1595 (est.) | 236 | Schlarp, Johann(?) | | | | | | * * * 360 | Bauer, Hans | ca. 1560 | | before 1587 Eckweiler(?) 361 | NN, Maria Elisabeth | ca. 1560 (est.) | 362 | Faber, Valentin | 1580 (est) Eckweiler | 12.1.1621 Eckweiler | 4.8.1607 Eckweiler 363 | Schauss, Agnes | 3.8.1589 Eckweiler | 12.1.1621 Eckweiler 364 =224 | Enders, Johannes | 28.06.1580 Eckweiler | | 05.06.1615 Eckweiler 365 | Kilian, Agnes | ~15.09.1590 Eckweiler | 20.05.1657 Eckweiler 374 | Beuscher, Franz | | | | | | 384 =726 | Schauss, Hans Velten | ca. 1560 Eckweiler | 25.3.1644 Eckweiler | 1584 Eckweiler 385 =727 | Plezena, Katharina | ca. 1565 | 5.4.1609 Eckweiler 386 | Anthes, Hans | | | | | | 448 =728 | Enders, Hans | 1534 (calc.) | 27.2.1614 Eckweiler | before 1570 Eckweiler 449 =729 | NN, Ena | 1550 (calc.) | 1586 Eckweiler, 36 y.o. 468 | Kilian, Adam | ca. 1555 (est.) | | before 1580 469 | NN, Agnes | ca. 1560 (est.) | * * * 724 | Faber, (Johann) Valentin | 1553 Erbesbüdesheim | Jan 1621 Eckweiler | ca. 1580 725 | Teutchag, Juliane | before 1555 | before 1607, 52 y.o. 726 =384 | see above | | | 727 =385 | see above | | 728 =448 | Enders, Hans | 1534 (calc.) | 27.2.1614 Eckweiler | 729 =449 | NN, Ena | 1550 (calc.) | 1586 Eckweiler, 36 y.o. 730 | Kilian, Hans | 1550 (calc.) | 4.9.1626 Eckweiler, 76 y.o. | before 1577 Eckweiler 731 | NN, Else | ca. 1555 (est) | 768 =1452 | Schauss, Hans Jürgen Bregh | ca. 1535 Eckweiler | 2.11.1582 Eckweiler | source 769 =1453 | Hoelfeldt, Johanne Margrethe | ca. 1540 Eckweiler | 1.11.1582 Eckweiler 896 =1456 | Enders, Hans | 1510 (calc.) | 17.6.1588 Eckweiler 70 y.o. | 897 =1457 | NN, Elß | ca. 1510 (calc.) | 7.5.1580 Eckweiler 70 y.o. 936 =1460 | Kilian, Hector | 1525 (calc.) | 24.7.1572 Eckweiler, 47 y.o. | ca. 1550 Eckweiler 937 =1461 | NN, NN | 1521 (calc.) | 23.3.1607 Eckweiler, 86 y.o. * * * 1450 | Teutchag, Jost =? Justus Jacobi Tautphoeus, vicar of Wallhausen | | 11.5.1617 | source for the Tautpheus | | | 1456 =896 | Enders, Hans | 1510 (calc.) | 17.6.1588 Eckweiler 70 y.o. | 1457 =897 | NN, Elß | ca. 1510 (calc.) | 7.5.1580 Eckweiler 70 y.o. 1460 =936 | Kilian, Hector | 1525 (calc.) | 24.7.1572 Eckweiler, 47 y.o. | ca. 1550 Eckweiler 1461 =937 | NN, NN | 1521 (calc.) | 23.3.1607 Eckweiler, 86 y.o. * * * 2900 | Tautphoeus, Johannes Jacobi, vicar of Wallhausen | | | source 2901 | Walther, Margarethe | | | | | | | | | | | | | * * * Notes 725, 1450 The name Teutchag only occurs in the residents book of Eckweiler referring to the daughter of the vicar of Wallhausen, whose name was in fact Tautphoeus, so I assume that this is just a misreading of a very unusual name, which the ancestors derived from the village of Dautphe near Biedenkopf, Hessen. 2900/01 the Tautphoeus / Jacobi and Walther ancestries lead away from the area of interest (specifically to Biedenkopf in Hessen) but is apparently well-researched and both lineages have lots of clergymen. See this biography of a son of 2900/01. Some of their descendants have Wikipedia entries and apparently became catholics at some point.

have some #familyHistory from the village of #Eckweiler (which no longer exists). Not my family this time, but a connection could pop up any time. proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2026/02/a-family-tree-fr...

#genealogy #germany #Familienforschung #Sponheim

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chronicles of the Weiß family This fundamental rock on which much of our family history is built has been on my website since time immemorial, but as I am now giving up on my hosting arrangement, I'll need to save it here (and update it a bit as well, with links to recent developments): Back in 1891, a four-times great uncle of mine took the trouble of writing down the history of his family in some detail, in a document entitled “Familien Chronik der Familie Weiß” (cited as “the Weiß chronicles” below). My great great aunt Johanna Kauer borrowed this document from a cousin in the 1930s, copied it and added details of her own family. It’s a story of refugees from the troubled Eastern parts of Europe whose descendants ended up in the Hunsrück mountain range beween Rhine and Moselle, and settled there for many generations. In the 19th and 20th century, there were moves to the West and East respectively, each time followed by a rather hasty return to the Hunsrück. What is also remarkable about this lineage is that there are nine different professions in 10 generations (myself included). Therefore, I used the professions in the chapter titles, as they will facilitate navigation. For the same reason, the chapter numbering goes backwards, counting down to my generation as the number 1. Table of contents: I. The Weiß chronicles (1680-1891) 10. The merchant 9. The parson 8. The village mayor 7. The teacher II. The Kauer family (1844-1972) 6. The shoemaker 5. The railway man 4. The businessman **I. The Weiß chronicles (1680-1891)** 10. The merchant Christian Weiß is regarded as the founding father of this lineage, only because we know very little about him and nothing at all about his parents. He must have been born around 1680 -- the only clues being the birth years of his son Johannes, 1704, and of Johannes’s future father-in-law, 1681. The Weiß chronicles state that Christian Weiß was a merchant who was born in Silesia, which then belonged to the kingdom of Bohemia, was evicted from there because of his protestant faith. The conflict between a largely protestant population and a catholic ruler in Bohemia was the ignition for the Thirty Years War. As the protestants lost and the catholic rule was re-established, many protestants fled. (By the way, all people in this story are Lutheran protestants, unless specified otherwise.) However, Christian Weiß himself was probably too young to to be a Bohemian refugee involved in the immediate aftermath of the war, so maybe his parents were evicted. In any case, the chronicles say that Christian Weiß found refuge in Königsberg, without any further specification. We had always assumed that this was the city belonging to the Brandenburg-Preußen dukedom (which in 1701 proclaimed itself the Kingdom of Prussia under Frederic I, in a ceremony held at Königsberg). Another descendant of the Weiss lineage, however, found evidence suggesting that Christian Weiss (whose name may have been different, too) lived in a village called Königsberg in Hessen, close to the town of Wetzlar. Christian Weiß settled there and had two sons with his wife Maria Elisabeth. We don't know her maiden name, but she may have family ties to the village of Seibersbach, because their son Johannes received his confirmation there. A bit of number-crunching to fill the space: If, as 20th century research suggests, each person has a 90% probability of being the child of the man whom they believe to be their father, Christian Weiß still is more likely to be my ancestor than not, at 53 %. Just as well that we don’t know anything about his father, because that guy would only have just under 48 % chance of being the true founding father of the lineage. 9. The parson Of Christian Weiß’s two sons, one stayed in Königsberg and took up his father’s trade, while the other, Johannes Weiß (1704-1772) studied theology at Gießen (which makes the village of Königsberg appear a much more plausible starting point than the city in East Prussia would have been) and came as a parson-in-training (Pfarrkandidat) to Dörrebach in the Hunsrück mountain range, just a few kilometers west of Bingen on the river Rhine. There he was appointed a parson in 1729. In May 1740 (according to the Eckweiler book, the Weiß chronicles claim it was 1742), he moved to a parsonage in Eckweiler (some 20 km deeper into the Hunsrück), where he remained a parson until his death in 1772. In fact the Weiß chronicles were written in that very same village nearly 120 years later. The village of Eckweiler dates back to the 9th century, its church to around 990. Sadly, its history spanning more than a thousand years came to an abrupt end. In 1979, the village was officially dissolved. Following the introduction of Phantom fighter jets on the nearby airfield of the Bundeswehr, the noise had become unbearable. The last 250 villagers were relocated to a brand new suburb of the nearby town of Sobernheim, and all buildings except for the church -- not the original building, but the same location where Johannes had held his service some 250 years earlier -- were demolished. Too hastily, as it turned out, as the end of the cold war also saw the Bundeswehr selling off the airfield to a car manufacturer who planned to use it as a test course, but never did. So Eckweiler, known locally as “the church without a village” is very nice and quiet nowadays. The church of Eckweiler, the only building left standing of the historic village. Source: Wikipedia / Von Devlaminck - Eigenes Werk, CC BY-SA 4.0, There is a book about the history of Eckweiler, its church, and its parsons. According to this source, Johannes Weiß was a very assertive type of person, who would always make sure that everybody got their due. In first years of his 32-year tenure, he had the church renovated inside and out. His lasting legacy, however, was to be the village school, built in 1770. According to the same book, Eckweiler had 157 inhabitants in 1769, all of whom were protestants. Johannes’s parsonage also extended to the neighbouring village of Daubach, with 80 inhabitants including 36 protestants. In 1732, Johannes married Katharina Elisabeth Ebener or Ebner (1712-1750), the daughter of the parson of Alterkülz (still Hunsrück, but 40 km NNE of Eckweiler), Philipp Ebener (~1681-1734). The Weiß chronicles state that Ebener’s family was originally from Hungary and was deplaced by the Thirty Years War, but that must have affected Philipp's grandparents, as his father, Johann Jacob Ebner, was born in 1646 at Trarbach on the river Moselle, where he was a conrector, i.e. a teacher entitled to teach the final year pupils at grammar schools (Lateinschule). The school still exists today and has confirmed that Johann Jacob Ebner taught there from 1686 till 1708, and his son Philipp Nikolaus from 1708 till 1720, i.e. before becoming the parson of Alterkülz. Note that the Ebener and Weiss folks of this generation must have been moving in the same circles as the writer W.O. von Horn (real name Friedrich Wilhelm Philipp Oertel, born in Horn), who comes from a family that includes five generations of protestant priests in that area. In fact at least four marriages of my direct ancestors happened at Horn, so some of these may have been officiated by a member of the Oertel family. Johannes and Elisabeth had seven children, 1. Johannetha Weiß married a forester named Federkeil, at Gebroth (Hunsrück). 2. Johann Gottlieb Weiß, the future mayor of Pferdsfeld, a neighbouring village. 3. Regina Weiß married a Mr Weimar from Dörrebach. 4. Maria Elisabetha Weiß married Philipp Jakob Bauer, a parson at Enkirch, who later took over the parsonage of his father-in-law at Eckweiler. Maria died childless in 1819. 5. Marianne Weiß married Philipp Orth from Weiler near Martinstein, on the river Nahe. 6. Philipp Theodor Weiß became a private tutor for the counts of Solms, he drowned while hunting wild ducks in the back waters of the river Rhine. 7. Christian Weiß died while a student at university. ... of whom the second will be of interest for our lineage: 8. The village mayor Johann Gottlieb Weiß was born in 1736 and went on to become the mayor of the village of Pferdsfeld (which, like Eckweiler, was evacuated in 1978-82 because of the military airfield). He married Anna Katharina André from Gebroth (a tiny village, just a few km E of Eckweiler). We know nothing about her family (except that the family name has survived at Gebroth to this day). Note, however, that Gottlieb’s older sister Johannetha had also married someone from the same village (see above), so there may be some sort of pattern. Following the example set by his parents, they had seven children, 1. Johann Philipp Weiß, a teacher at Weiler on the river Nahe, married Anna Margaretha Kaiser, from Merxheim (Nahe). 2. Johannetha Weiß married Leopold Wagner from Winterburg. 3. Magdalena Weiß married Johann Fleischer from Pferdsfeld. 4. Philipp Weiß, a teacher at Gödenroth, and later at Winningen (Mosel), married Katharina Petermann from Allenbach. 5. Regina Katharina Weiß married Johann Fuchs from Eckweiler. 6. Christian Gottlieb Weiß, became a teacher at Hellenthal, Raversbeuren and Simmern u. Dhaun. 7. Maria Katharina Weiß, born in 1786, married a parson called Ried from Schauern (Hochwald) and went off to Rio de Janeiro, allegedly (here's what really happened). ... of whom the sixth will be of interest for the continuation of our lineage: 7. The teacher Christian Gottlieb Weiß (1782-1867) is the earliest born ancestor of whom we have a photo. He worked as a teacher, at first in Hellenthal (Eifel, i.e. north of the Moselle). This is where he seems to have found his wife. In 1806, he married Anna Gertraud Käuer, (1777-1858; alternative spelling: Keuert) from Gemünd. Her parents, Tilmanus Keuert and Regina Catherina Freischmid were from Hellenthal (Eifel). He then taught at Raversbeuren, and from 1819 until his retirement in 1853 at Simmern unter Dhaun, a village today known as Simmertal, not to confused with the main town of the region which is also called Simmern. They are both on the same little river, the Simmerbach, but Simmern unter Dhaun is close to where it joins the Nahe river (near Kirn), while the town of Simmern is upstream, on the highlands of the Hunsrück. Relative to Christian Gottlieb’s home village of Pferdsfeld, Simmern unter Dhaun is just 5 km SSE, so he may have jumped at this opportunity to work closer to his family home, after the previous jobs were much farther away. The school at Simmern unter Dhaun can be traced back to 1563, for which year the village chronicles record that a teacher’s salary was paid. In 1824, five years into Christian Gottlieb’s tenure, the “protestant elementary school” had 126 pupils. The following year, 14 Jewish children joined them as well. In 1838, the position of a second teacher was approved, and in 1841 a Mr Schneider was hired. In 1846, the school house, dating back to 1747, was extended with a second storey. Since then, it had two classrooms and two flats for teachers, plus a barn and stables. However, as these buildings were too small to get a proper farm going, the schools land was leased to local farmers. We don’t know whether either of the flats was occupied by the Weiß family (whose children were all grown up by then). Christian Gottlieb’s earnings at that point were: * 47 Thalers from the Fabry foundation * free residence, firewood, small amounts of natural produce; * as a sacristan, bell-ringer, and organist for the local church he also got 1 Thaler in cash and * 22 Thalers worth of natural produce. In 1851, Christian Gottlieb built a house with barn and stables where he then lived with his wife and the growing family of his daughter Henriette, who had six children with her husband Friedrich Kaiser. One of them, Johann Kaiser, moved into the house of his parents in 1913, after retiring from his job as a teacher in Cologne. The house stayed “in the family” for more than a century, until 1961. In 1852, the government of the Kingdom of Prussia, of which the Hunsrück area was now a part, politely enquired whether Christian Gottlieb didn’t want to retire from his teaching job, as he was already 70 years old, and there had been complaints about him. He retired the following year, after 34 years as a teacher at this school. Mr Schneider took over as first teacher for a year, but in 1854 new teachers were appointed to both positions. Anna Gertraud died in 1858, aged 81. Christian Gottlieb died in 1867, aged 85. The school house survives to this day, but is in residential use today. Christian Gottlieb and Anna Gertraud had 8 children and at least 20 grandchildren. The fifth, and to some extent also the second child will be of interest for further developments, while the 7th is the author of the Weiß chronicles. 1. Karoline (Kornelia) Weiß, 1807-1877, married farm labourer and coachman (Georg) Philipp Fuchs, at Simmern unter Dhaun. Reportedly, there have been troubles related to alcoholism and tuberculosis in that family, but they still managed to have 11 children, born 1829-1851. 2. Maria Magdalena Weiß, 1809-1885, married Peter Schmidt from Hahnenbach. They had one daughter, (Caroline) Wilhelmine Schmidt, * 1848, who married Ferdinand Weirich, and from whom the Weirichs and Giloys at Hahnenbach are descended, who who kept the village inn until the late 20th century. 3. Johannetha Weiß, 1809-1879, married Friedrich Dick from Monzingen, reported to have set sail for America with “a stable full of children.” (Possibly because of the famine of 1845/46 triggered by potato blight.) 4. Karl Weiß, a railways man at Hamm (Westfalen), married Wilhelmine Schmidt from Hamm, had one daughter. 5. Sophie Weiß, 1815-1862, see below. 6. (Regina) Wilhelmine Weiß, 1817-1865, did not marry. 7. Christian Gottlieb Weiß, born ca. 1821, in 1844 married a widow, Maria Katharina Kessel, had two sons and two daughters. He is the author of the Weiß chronicles. His daughter Sophie Weiß married a Mr Kehrein. Their son Karl Kehrein married his cousin Lina Martin, also a great-grandchild of the teacher C. G. Weiß (via his 5th child, Sophie, the next stop in our lineage). Through Karl Kehrein, who was a baker at Kirn and knew my great-great aunt Johanna Kauer, the Weiß chronicles came to our knowledge. Sadly, however, Karl Kehrein’s descendants don’t know what happened to the original. 8. Henriette Weiß, 1822-1895, married Friedrich Kaiser, had 6 children: Karl, Fritz (2 children), August (3 children), Johann, Hermann ... **II. The Kauer family (1844-1972)** From this point onwards, we leave the original contents of the Weiß chronicles. My great-great aunt, Johanna Kauer, who had saved the chronicles for our family by copying them from an original held by her second cousin Karl Kehrein, seamlessly turned them into the Kauer chronicles by adding details of her own family. Increasingly, the following events are also backed up by original documents which we still hold. 6. The shoemaker Sophie Weiß (1815-1862) was born at Raversbeuren, during the second placement of her father’s teaching career, but mainly grew up at Simmern unter Dhaun, where the family settled in 1819. In 1844, she married Mathias Kauer (1813-1885), a shoemaker from the town of Simmern, the administrative centre of the Hunsrück area, some 15 km N (and upstream) of Simmern unter Dhaun. This is the founding couple of the Kauer clan, so their offspring are listed here. Much of the following info on the old website has been superseded by things I published on the blog in recent years, so I may not need it here any more. I'll link to the relevant entries and maybe create a couple of new entries specifically for each generation: 5. The railway man: Christoph Gottlieb Kauer 1845-1909 from Simmern is Number 2 in this blog post, will do a separate post with his biography some time. 4. The businessman Julius Düsselmann has appeared in my series Every picture tells a story several times, eg here.

The little church is the only surviving building of the village where the chronicles of the Weiss family were written in 1891. proseandpassion.blogspot.com/2026/01/chronicles-of-we... #familyhistory #Eckweiler #RheinlandPfalz #Simmern #Hunsrück

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