Michael SOLLMANN
Characteristics
Type | Value | Date | Place | Sources |
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name | Michael SOLLMANN |
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Events
Type | Date | Place | Sources |
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death | 26. August 1635 | Drossenhausen
Find persons in this place |
[1]
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birth | 1560 |
[1]
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Parents
Michel SOLLMANN |
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Marriage | ??spouse_en_US?? | Children |
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Notes for this person
Sollmann family history as developed by Georg August Sollmann
Research by Friedrich Wilhelm Sollmann - Circa. 1917
" - out of old farm stock - "
The following declarations were obtained from the family tree and history of the Sollmann family. This work was gathered from the early city church by Georg August Sollmann at the time of May 7, 1878 until his death on the 14th of April, 1879 at
Coburg. This thick volume is an extraordinary and diligent work for the many members of the Sollmann families. This work in beautiful German script bears the motto, "Desire and more".
Georg Sollmann had gone through more than 79 church books and civil records to develop the facts herein presented. He went through the family trees and histories of 14 generations. The chief work is in the possession of his son in America.
Another copy, painstakingly duplicated the original copy and it is believed was the work of a middle school teacher. Reinhold Ungelenk, from Coburg. He was married to a daughter of Georg August Sollmann. He and his wife had agreed that after his
hopefully distant death, the 'family tree' would go over to 'my' possession. This also corresponded with a wish of the author as noted in the 'family tree' that he, first of all, on behalf of the "Schernecher family" should inherit this work.
This was in consideration of the thorough work and research of the extensive family history.
Days and weeks were necessary. I have been able to make the following extractions only within a few hours in my stay in Coburg in September 1917. (It is believed that much of the foregoing and following accounts were interspersed with personal
notes and interpretations in his own words by Friederich Willhelm Sollmann and was extracted from the German text found in the Peace Collection in Swarthmore Library. This was then translated into English and further edited by me. - Henry C.
Sollman, 1999).
Cologne,Germany - December 1917
The historical beginning of the family:
The first dwelling place was Drossenhausen on the Langenberg (Mountains) about 2 or 3 hours away from Coburg. Now that is only a small village , that lies on a bare high plain, is mention ed in the documents of the first male in the year 1317, to
the second male in the year 1457. The village consisted, as the other villages in the neighborhood already much longer. From discoveries in the area of the old graves, that the villages had already driven that with Romern Handel. The villagers
were spoken of as descendants of the French and Saxons. The women of Drossenhousen (earlier Trossenhausen) were derived of camp followers. The count of Henneberg, who dwelled at the fortress of Coburg and in the neighboring Langenbergs, had (*)
"angsiedalt" their camp followers in the village.
(Editorial comment: The computer translation of the German text into English was difficult since many words were not translated and the syntax {sentence structure} required considerable care and imagination to put into understandable English
without destroying the original meaning and intent. HCS - 1999)
(*) angsiedalt - Found no exact translation but this was apparently related to the evolution of the tribes into families or family units. You have to assume that some of these women (camp followers) gravitated to certain men. The Roman Catholic
church was trying to evangelize these central European peoples and was quite successful in bringing Christian Teachings to the masses and were successful as these peoples began to appreciate the value of the teachings by the missionaries.
In 1938 and 1939 my father-in-law, the Reverend J. H. Gockel, a Lutheran Pastor from Wilmette, IL related many such personal experiences to me. As he accepted his first 'call' which was to establish a Lutheran Mission Church in rural Casper
Wyoming in 1917. His first order of business was to gather up all the unmarried couples and their families to bring Christian Teachings to them and baptize all who had not been baptized and held several mass weddings. This was strikingly similar
to the experiences of our ancestors in the Langenberg Mountains and Coburg area in the period around 1300 A.D. Editor's Notes by H. Sollman - 1999)
The name Sollman, which appeared as Sollmann, Sohlmann and Soolman was originally probably Soldmann. Either the men who stayed in the war service of the Count of Henneberg received their pay from a paymaster or Soldmann (Ger.). The name of the
first male emerged in an official bulletin in the year 1499. The fee book in the Coburg Castle is placed in the year 1499 a Clas Solman "named weise". This "wiese" or sage in the pasture in Drossen-hausen, Clas Solman, whose Frau Barbara is
called Margarete Solmann., had referred to "feudal service" and in "property and instinct" for agriculture and breeding. Drossenhausen must have validity as the beginning place of the family.
Clas and Barbara Margarethe Solman, whose birth year was around 1465, are the progenitors.
Drossenhausen lies 1342 "Pariser" feet over the North Sea on stony barren land and is raw
cold. Winds prevailed - our first ancestors must have had a difficult and tough battle in
order to travel their "Daseinfuhrt".
At the end of 70 years, Drossenhausen village counted 102 inhabitants in 117 households,
one 1 story and four 2 story houses. On my first visit to our place of origin in September
1917, 1 found that solitary small village in somewhat the same general area. The last bearer
of the Sollmann name died there a number of years before. FE's (?) house, an after
Drossenhausen proportionately imposing farm house, stays left in dangerous dilapidated
condition. In the past, it served more for wanderers staying there rather than residents.
Anyone can acquire the money to buy the original castle for a family residence. From the
Drossenhausen heights, one has a wonderful view over the entire Coburg homeland far into
"Its grounds" and into the Main valley.
The expansion of the family:
From Drossenhausen, the family expanded in somewhat successive distances over the Coburg
land and expanded to: Alstadt, 1540; Oberlauter,1519; Hereworthsdorf 1525; Beuerfeld 1556:
Einzeberg, 1590; von Beuerfeld 1652 after Breitenau, 1625 after Meeders, Neida 1615;
Weidach l623. ln the year 1729,the first representative to appear of the family, our
great-great-great-great-grandfather, came to Scherneck. In1787 we find the first Sollmann
in Coburg, about 1825 the first in St. Petersburg, and in 1840, one in Paris and in 1842
the first namesake came to North America.
{Note: The writer was evidently unaware of the migration from Coburg to Southern Indiana
starting with Georg and his siblings in 1837. Ed. HCS)
In the family tree there are exceptional vocations: mayor and village leaders, bookbinders,
bakers, konditorei (?), job masters, coachmen, landlords and brewers, herdsmen, salespeople,
teachers, musicians, butchers, masons, haircutters, locksmiths, shoemakers, cabinet makers,
paper hangers, weavers. Recently, naturally numerous other vocations came up. The growth
of the family membership shows the following count:
In the year 1465 until 1600 there were 37 births and 4 deaths recorded and in 1601 until
1700 there were 157 births vs 86 deaths. Then in the period from 1701 through 1800 they had
recorded 237 births and 110 deaths while in the period from 1801 through 1878 they recorded
386 births and 152 deaths.
The birth excess was therefor significant. In the year 1875, the family had expanded to 37
places. While most of the marriages would be done at normal ages, in the century, 2 male
family members had already married at 20 years, 3 females at 17, and a female family member
at 16. One Sollmann married first at 67. a woman, Sollmann, first at 50 years. Childless
marriages were rare. 7 times the number of children in a family reached a full dozen, one
even reached 30 children One woman even ended her life voluntarily. It is this trace of
Nikolas Sollmann in Ahlstadt, Katarina Margarete, born Hartab out of Gradstadt, inherited
many fields from her father. According to the church books of Ahlstadt, she hanged herself
on a tree in her garden and became removed by the hangman. Her body lies buried in the
so-called Breitenbohlen (broad boards) ( a small leafy wood near Ahlstadt. During the 30
years war, some families became scattered and driven away and the destruction of the church
property during this period has impeded the work of the family historian very much.
From 1465 until 1917, the ancestry shows in the course of the century in 4 main stems-
Drossenhausen, Herbarthsdorfer, Oberlauter, Ahlstadt in 2 lines (Drossenhausen and
Beuerfelder) 2 branches Almerswinder and Gauerstadter). I placed together only the direct
ancestors of our branches the progenitors from the end of the 15th century.
The stem father, Clas Solman, was born in 1465, in Drossenhausen. This well-known couple
was said to be married 1499. The ancestors had 3 sons. Then our direct ancestors came of
that. Cunz Sollmann was born in the year 1500 and married in the year 1527. He was a farmer
in Drossenhausen. In the year 1543, he acquired the Gulthof in Buerfeld. With his 3 sons,
Hans maintained the Gulthof in Buerfeld.
It is said in the documents, that Hans, after the death of his mother " ererbt (sold ?)
and bought" and it was destroyed by flames. The year of Cunz Sollmann's death is not
recorded. The manuscript mentioned a son, Hans Sollmann. He bears in the family tree the
addendwn I (the first). He was born about 1523, lived as a farmer in Feurfeld and died in
the year 1553. He had 2 sons.
The Gulthof became immediately lost by the family after his death. Already in the year 1558,
Paulus Erhardt had sold for the good of the remaining Hans Sollmann children and received
("?"). This first one of Hans Sollmann (or was it his Frau?) had a special influence on his
descendants until the present day. In many, truly the majority of the descendants of this
line, lived a controlled roving spirit. While the descendants of other lines of the
generation of Sollmann mostly stayed sedentary and sat and sat on the sod, the descendants
of Hans Sollmann The First, scattered throughout the world.
The richest and poorest members of the generation of Sollmanns find themselves in their
descendants stem, men with prominent accomplish- ments of different fields of art,
knowledge, of public life and in practical jobs. Also, among the poor and poorest, still
unrest stuck to the youngest members of this line and had a certain inclination to
adventure.
Still, we turn back in the gray olden times of the 2 Hans Sollman's sons, the first became
our progenitor, Lorenz Sollmann I, farmer of Einzelberg, born in 1556, married 1590, died
on October 4, 1632. He was for his time a rich man. He had 3 sons and 2 daughters as a
married man, and before this a son when not married. From his son would be our ancestor,
Lorenz Sollmann II farmer and mayor in Feurfeld.
Born in 1603, married on February 6,1627, died May 1686. He increased his riches through a
rich marriage and was perhaps the richest of the entire line. He enjoyed great prestige.
Members of the family were truly doers. In the family tree, were exceptional vocations -
mayor and village leaders, bookbinders, bakers, konditorei, job masters, coachmen,
landlords and brewers, herdsmen, salespeople, teachers, musicians, butchers, masons,
haircutters, locksmiths, shoemakers cabinet makers, paper hangers, weavers. Recently,
naturally numerous other vocations came up with the growth of the family.
Quelle: Miriam Grafer Rootweb
Sources
1 | Miriam Grafer Rootweb |
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