Talk:Jauch family
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Theodor Avé-Lallemant
[edit]Hello Avé, You added the titel "Count" to the name of Theodor Avé-Lallemant. Is there any proof for this rank? As far as I know, his stems allegedly from the line of the Counts Lallemant de Betz of France. But I have never seen that the german family Avé-Lallement is using a title.--213.168.66.58 12:29, 3 February 2006 (UTC)
Hi; Wow, I would love to know what you know--it would be great if you could tell me more.
I believe I first heard the title referenced on an NPR program's introduction to Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 5. It seems that printed literature, or transcripts of, introducing the first performances of Tchaikovsky’s Symph No. 5 [in Em]- to American audiences describe it as a dedication to Count. Maybe it’s –graf? If you register it might be easier to communicate…
Graf = Count. The information about Lallemant de Betz derives from: Conrad Nikolaus Lührsen, Die Familie Avé-Lallemant und ihre Töchternachkommen, DFA Band 23, Neustadt a.d. Aisch 1963, S. 205-243--Fifat 23:48, 28 February 2006 (UTC)
It should also be remembered that Theodor Avé Lallement was the recipient of the dedication of Johannes Brahms' 2nd Symphony.
As far as I know, the titele of "count" was never bestowed while they lived in Germany. My father, C. Nikolaus Lührsen, used to treat the (undocumented) origins of the Avé Lallement family with great caution.
Burgomaster??
[edit]in German, mayor = Bürgermeister or is Burgomaster supposed to be the old version??? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 84.160.14.92 (talk) 11:39, 14 January 2007 (UTC).
Parking lot
[edit]Here the rest of the old version is parked, which still has to be transformed into new text:
Notable members of the Jauch family
[edit]- Walter Jauch (1888–1976), founder of Jauch & Hübener at Hamburg, the continents most important insurance and reinsurance brokers. Through his cousin in law, the Major General Hans Oster (1887–1945) Jauch & Hübener were involved in the opposition against Hitler.
- Günther Jauch (born 1956), one of Germany's most famous television hosts.
Notable relatives of the Jauch family
[edit]- Wilhelmine Jauch (1809–1893) married Theodor Avé-Lallemant (1806-1890), to whom Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky dedicated his Symphony No. 5, descendant of Gaspard de Coligny.
- Luise Jauch (1815–1881) married Adolf Halske (1814–1888), cousin Johann Georg Halske (1814–1890), co-founder of Siemens & Halske.
- Wilhelmine Friederike Charlotte Overbeck (1829–1908), descendant of Eleonora Maria Jauch (1732—1797), married Franz Reuleaux (1829—1925), a mechanical engineer and a lecturer of Berlin Royal Technical Academy, later appointed as the President of the Academy.
- Charlotte Avé-Lallemant (1843—1929), daughter of Wilhelmine Jauch (1809—1893), married Friedrich Nölting (1830—1941), grandson of the burgomaster of Lübeck Friedrich Nölting, uncle of Henry Thode (1857—1920), who was married to Richard Wagner's (1813–1883) stepdaughter, Cosima Wagner's and Hans von Bülow's daughter and Franz Liszt's granddaughter Daniela von Bülow (1860–1940).
- Emilie Elisabeth Avé-Lallemant (1846-1921), daughter of Wilhelmine Jauch (1809–1893), married Paul Clemens Duncker (1840–1909), cousin of Wilhelm Hauff (1820–1827), German poet and novelist, and nephew of Justinus Kerner (1786–1862), German poet.
- Anna Halske (1854–1909), daughter of Luise Jauch (1815–1881), married Gustav Lichtenberg (1844–1906), grandnephew of Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, German physicist, aphorist, philosopher and satirical writer.
- Emilie Charlotte Adele Fehling (b. 1865), descendant of Eleonora Maria Jauch (1732–1797), married Bernhard von Hindenburg (b. 1859), brother of Paul von Hindenburg (1847–1934), German Field Marshal and statesman.
- Carmen Carlota Elvira Lührsen (b. 1877), granddaughter of Marie Sophie Charlotte Jauch (1811–1872), married Henry Montagu Villiers (1863–1947), grandson of Henry Villiers, Bishop of Durham, and of John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Henry Montagu Villiers was a cousin of the British philosopher and Nobel Prize winner for literature Bertrand Russel (1872–1970).
- Ines Sophie Lührsen (b. 1883), granddaughter of Marie Sophie Charlotte Jauch (1811–1872), married Vistallo Baron Taxis of Bordogna and Valnigra (b. 1884) and was sister in law of Theresa Christiana Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1902–1990).
- Hans Jauch (1883–1965) married Elsa von Othegraven (1889–1948), her three married bother and sisters married cousins of Cardinal Josef Frings (1887–1978) and Hermann-Josef Werhahn, son in law of Konrad Adenauer (1876–1967), German statesman.
- Oswald Jauch (1921–1944) was a nephew of A. Bernd Jencquel (b. 1913) and Sigrid von Amsberg (b. 1925), sister of Claus von Amsberg (1926–2002), Prince of the Netherlands and husband of Beatrix of the Netherlands.
- Christina Behrendt (b. 1961), daughter of Inge-Maren Jauch (b. 1928), married Otto von der Groeben (b. 1956) of the house of the Counts von der Groeben, grand-grandson of Andreas Achenbach (1815–1910), German landscape painter.
- Ancestor of the Jauch-Wellingsbüttel-line was Seneca Inggersen, 1. Baron Gelting (1715–1786), whose grandfather is also ancestor of the German composer Johannes Brahms (1833–1897).
Notable relationships of the Jauch family
[edit]- Composer Robert Schumann was godfather of Robert Avé-Lallemant (b. 1850), son of Wilhelmine Jauch (1809–1893).
- Composer Johannes Brahms was godfather of Johannes Avé-Lallemant (b. 1855), son of Wilhelmine Jauch (1809–1893).
- Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany was godfather of Wilhelma von Feldmann (b. 1902), descendant of Charlotte Jauch (1811–1872).
Manors of the Jauch family
[edit]The different branches of the Jauch family owned the manors
- Wellingsbüttel Manor at Hamburg-Wandsbek (until his death in 1816 domicile of Friedrich Karl Ludwig, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck, ancestor to the modern-day British royal family and the Royal Houses of Denmark, Greece and Norway)
- Schönhagen Manor – erected for Hermann Jauch (1858–1916) – at Brodersby
- Schwonendahl at Dörphof
- Fernsicht
- Krummbek Manor at Lasbek
- Palais Jauch – erected about 1725 by Joachim Daniel von Jauch at Warsaw
- Palais Lelewel – erected 1755 for Constance Jauch in the Miodowa at Warsaw
Donations of the Jauch family
[edit]- The Baroque Branch Office of J.C. Jauch & Söhne at Hamburg 1890 as a residential home for elderly men – destroyed in the Bombing of Hamburg in World War II
- The Auguste-Jauch-Stiftung at Hamburg, an almshouse for detached women – destroyed in the Bombing of Hamburg in World War II
- The Damenstift at Kiel, a residential home for elderly women - destroyed in the bombing of Kiel in World War II
- The reconstructed Fortuna Gate of the destroyed Potsdam City Palace
--Fifat (talk) 19:19, 2 September 2009 (UTC)
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