Johann Gottfried Weidling
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Johann Gottfried Weidling Zelfstandig burger in Grimma met een bedrijfje in het maken van doeken, werkte tevens als Biertelsmeister en Hospitaalvoorganger te Grimma. Het echtpaar Weidling - Ackermann bleef kinderloos, geboren: te Grimma op 5 april 1759, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Tuchmachermeister, overleden: (66 jaar oud) te Grimma op 30 augustus 1825. |
trouwt (resp. 47 en 45 jaar oud) te Leipzig op 13 april 1806 Was reeds weduwnaar,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers)
met
Dossier:
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Martha Massey
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Martha Massey, geboren: te Cambridge in 1769, overleden: (ongeveer 42 jaar oud) te Londen in 1811. |
trouwt (resp. ongeveer 23 en ongeveer 27 jaar oud) in 1792,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers)
met
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann.. published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (2) met Hannah Williams. Uit dit huwelijk geen kinderen. |  |
Rudolph Ackermann.
Alle nazaten van Rudolph Ackermann maken deel uit van de Engelse (Londen) tak.
Uit dit huwelijk 7 kinderen:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Rudolph | *1794 | Londen | †1832 | | 38 | 0 | 0 |
2 | Angelica | *1797 | | †1877 | | 79 | 1 | 0 |
3 | George | *1803 | Londen | †1891 | | 87 | 1 | 4 |
4 | Selina Jane | *1804 | | †1887 | Fulham | 83 | 1 | 6 |
5 | Johann | *1804 | Londen | †1818 | Frankfurt am Main | 13 | 0 | 0 |
6 | Adolphus | *1810 | | †1858 | | 48 | 0 | 0 |
7 | Ferdinand | *1813 | | †1860 | | 47 | 0 | 0 |
Dossier:
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Rudolph Ackermann
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Rudolph Ackermann, geboren: te Londen in 1794, overleden: (ongeveer 38 jaar oud) in 1832. |
- Vader:
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann... published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (2) met Hannah Williams. Uit dit huwelijk geen kinderen, trouwt (resp. ongeveer 27 en ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (1) in 1792, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers).
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- Moeder:
Martha Massey, geboren: te Cambridge in 1769, overleden: (ongeveer 42 jaar oud) te Londen in 1811.
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Dossier:
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Christiane Caroline Höckricht
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Christiane Caroline Höckricht, geboren: te Zwönitz op 28 januari 1758, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, overleden: (33 jaar oud) te Schneeberg op 28 maart 1791. |
trouwt (resp. 22 en 28 jaar oud) te Zwönitz op 9 juli 1780,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers)
met
Friedrich Ackermann.
Alle nazaten van deze Friedrich Ackermann maken deel uit van Schneeberger tak.
Dossier:
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- Vader:
Edelgrootvader Ackermann, geboren: circa 1473 (Waarschijnlijk woonachtig in één van de districten van het voormalig hertogdom Saksen-Altenburg; anno 2009 voor een deel gesitueerd in de deelstaat Thüringen).
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een zoon:
Dossier:
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een zoon:
Dossier:
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een zoon:
Dossier:
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16 kinderen:
Dossier:
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een zoon:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Grootvader | *1645 | | | | | 1 | 1 |
Dossier:
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Teunis Hartog
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Teunis Hartog, geboren: te Sliedrecht in 1858. |
- Vader:
Pieter Hartog, geboren: voor 1838, trouwt (beiden ongeveer 20 jaar oud) voor 1858.
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- Moeder:
Emmigje Mens, geboren: voor 1838, huisvr. en moeder.
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trouwt (beiden ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (Burgerlijke Stand) te Sliedrecht op 17 september 1881 huwelijksakte nr. 47 d.d. 17-09-1881, gemeente Sliedrecht, Stadsarchief Dordrecht
met
Uit dit huwelijk een zoon:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Wilhelm Arie | *1889 | Sliedrecht | †1965 | Schiedam | 76 | 1 | 1 |
Dossier:
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trouwt (resp. hoogstens 61 en 67 jaar oud) (Burgerlijke Stand) te Finchley op 4 oktober 1831
met
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann.. published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (1) met Martha Massey. Uit dit huwelijk 7 kinderen. |  |
Rudolph Ackermann.
Alle nazaten van Rudolph Ackermann maken deel uit van de Engelse (Londen) tak.
Dossier:
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Angelica Ackermann
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Angelica Ackermann, geboren: op 16 juli 1797, overleden: (ongeveer 79 jaar oud) in 1877. |
- Vader:
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann.. published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (2) met Hannah Williams. Uit dit huwelijk geen kinderen, trouwt (resp. ongeveer 27 en ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (1) in 1792, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers).
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- Moeder:
Martha Massey, geboren: te Cambridge in 1769, overleden: (ongeveer 42 jaar oud) te Londen in 1811.
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trouwt (Burgerlijke Stand)
met
Dossier:
>
Selina Jane Ackermann
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Selina Jane Ackermann, geboren: in 1804, Baptisten, schoolmistress te Headington (1839) (Thomas Butler was baptised at All Saints Church in Oxford on 31 August 1800, the youngest of the ten children of James and Jane Butler. His father had been baptised in All Saints parish forty years before on 10 October 1750, and his grandparents were James and Martha Butler, who were buried at All Saints on 4 May 1781 and 14 December 1796 respectively.) (Thomas Butler is listed as a printseller in Oxford’s High Street in 1823, but appears to have moved to London before 1827, as at the time of his marriage in Fulham on 29 January that year he was described as being of 1 Beaumont Buildings in the Strand. His wife Selina Jane Ackermann was then living at Ivy Lodge, Fulham, which was her father's house. An announcement of the marriage was made in Jackson’s Oxford Journal of 3 February 1827.) (Selina Ackermann was the daughter of Rudolph Ackermann (1764–1834). He was born in Saxony, but came to England as a young man in 1787 (becoming naturalized as a UK citizen in 1809). He started off as a carriage-designer, but soon his interest turned to printing. In 1792 he married an Englishwoman, Martha Massey (1769–1811), and they had nine children, of whom six, including Selina, survived. The family moved to Fulham from Camberwell Grove in 1825, and on 4 October 1831 he married his second wife, Hannah Williams, at Finchley. (See Oxford Dictionary of National Biography for more information on Rudolph Ackermann.) (The first two children of Thomas and Selina Butler were born in London and baptised at St Clement Danes in Westminster: Selina Jane Butler on 29 January 1828 and Mary Ann Butler in September 1829. Around the early 1830s the family moved to Oxford, where their third daughter, Catherine Butler, was baptised at All Saints Church on 12 February 1834, with Thomas Butler described as a carver and gilder in the High Street. The family moved to Temple Cowley around the mid-1930s: Mrs Butler was running a school there in July 1836, and their fourth child, Ferdinand Dick, was baptised at Temple Cowley on 7 April 1837. At this point, Thomas was still described as a carver & gilder. By 1839 Thomas’s shop at 20 High Street is described as "Butler & Margetts, printers", and on 9 December 1839 their fifth child, James Lockier, was baptised at St Andrew’s Church in Headington, suggesting that they were now ensconced in the Manor House; but Thomas is still described as a printseller. Their sixth child John Angelicus Thomas was born on 18 August 1843 and baptised at Headington on 24 June 1844, with Thomas now a "gentleman". At the time of the 1841 census, Thomas Butler (who was then about 41) is described as "Independent", while his wife Selina (who is in her 30s) is described as a Schoolmistress. They are living in the Manor House with their five children (ranging in age from 1 to 13), and five female servants. There appear to be 22 girl boarders aged between 11 to 20 living with them, and just one little boy pupil, aged 9. Two of the boarders appear to be relations of the proprietors: Octavia Butler (13), Thomas’s niece, and Maria Ackermann (14). By the time of the 1871 census Thomas Butler had died, and Selina, a widow, was living at 3 Bury Terrace, Paddington. She died in the third quarter of 1887 in Fulham, aged 83.), overleden: (ongeveer 83 jaar oud) te Fulham in juli 1887. |
- Vader:
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann.. published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (2) met Hannah Williams. Uit dit huwelijk geen kinderen, trouwt (resp. ongeveer 27 en ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (1) in 1792, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers).
|  |
- Moeder:
Martha Massey, geboren: te Cambridge in 1769, overleden: (ongeveer 42 jaar oud) te Londen in 1811.
|  |
trouwt (resp. ongeveer 23 en 26 jaar oud) (Burgerlijke Stand) in februari 1827 The first two children of Thomas and Selina Butler were born in London and baptised at St Clement Danes in Westminster: Selina Jane Butler on 29 January 1828 and Mary Ann Butler in September 1829.
In about the early 1830s the family moved to Oxford, and their third daughter, Catherine Butler, was baptised at All Saints Church there on 12 February 1834, with Thomas Butler described as a carver and gilder in the High Street.
The family moved to Temple Cowley around the mid-1930s: Mrs Butler was running a school there in July 1836, and their fourth child, Ferdinand Dick Butler, was baptised at Temple Cowley on 7 April 1837. At this point, Thomas was still described as a carver & gilder.
By 1839 Thomas’s shop at 20 High Street is described as “Butler & Margetts, printers”, and on 9 December 1839 their fifth child, James Lockier Butler, was baptised at St Andrew’s Church in Headington, suggesting that they were now ensconced in the Manor House; but Thomas is still described as a printseller. Their sixth child John Angelicus Thomas Butler was born on 18 August 1843 and baptised at Headington on 24 June 1844, with Thomas now described as a “gentleman”.
At the time of the 1841 census, Thomas Butler (who was then about 41) was described as “Independent”, while his wife Selina (who was in her 30s) was described as a Schoolmistress. They were living in the Manor House at Headington with their five children (ranging in age from 1 to 13), and five female servants. There were 22 girl boarders aged between 11 to 20 living with them, and just one little boy pupil, aged 9. Two of the boarders were relations of the proprietors: Octavia Butler (13), who was Thomas’s niece, and Maria Ackermann (14).
By the time of the 1871 census Thomas Butler had died, and Selina, a widow, was living at 3 Bury Terrace, Paddington. She died at the age of 83 in the Fulham district in 1887
met
Thomas Butler, zoon van James Butler en Jane Butler, geboren: in augustus 1800, gedoopt voor Baptisten te Oxford op 31 augustus 1800 in de All Siants Church te Oxford, printseller (1823), carver en gilder (1834) in de High Street te Oxford. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk 6 kinderen:
Dossier:
>
George Ackermann
|  |
George Ackermann, geboren: te Londen op 29 januari 1803, overleden: (ongeveer 87 jaar oud) in 1891. |
- Vader:
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann.. published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (2) met Hannah Williams. Uit dit huwelijk geen kinderen, trouwt (resp. ongeveer 27 en ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (1) in 1792, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers).
|  |
- Moeder:
Martha Massey, geboren: te Cambridge in 1769, overleden: (ongeveer 42 jaar oud) te Londen in 1811.
|  |
ondertrouw te Leerdam op 16 augustus 1835,
trouwt (resp. 32 en ongeveer 22 jaar oud) (Burgerlijke Stand) te Leerdam op 28 augustus 1835 (huwelijksakte nr. 16, Gemeente Leerdam)
met
Uit dit huwelijk 4 kinderen:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | N.N. | *1836 | Camberwell | | | | 0 | 0 |
2 | N.N. | *1838 | Camberwell | | | | 0 | 0 |
3 | N.N. | *1840 | Camberwell | | | | 0 | 0 |
4 | N.N. | *1842 | | | | | 0 | 0 |
Dossier:
>
Johann Ackermann
|  |
Johann Ackermann, geboren: te Londen op 30 juni 1804, overleden: (13 jaar oud) te Frankfurt am Main in maart 1818. |
- Vader:
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann... published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (2) met Hannah Williams. Uit dit huwelijk geen kinderen, trouwt (resp. ongeveer 27 en ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (1) in 1792, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers).
|  |
- Moeder:
Martha Massey, geboren: te Cambridge in 1769, overleden: (ongeveer 42 jaar oud) te Londen in 1811.
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Dossier:
>
Ferdinand Ackermann
|  |
Ferdinand Ackermann, geboren: in 1813, overleden: (ongeveer 47 jaar oud) in 1860. |
- Vader:
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann... published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (2) met Hannah Williams. Uit dit huwelijk geen kinderen, trouwt (resp. ongeveer 27 en ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (1) in 1792, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers).
|  |
- Moeder:
Martha Massey, geboren: te Cambridge in 1769, overleden: (ongeveer 42 jaar oud) te Londen in 1811.
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Dossier:
>
Adolphus Ackermann
|  |
Adolphus Ackermann, geboren: in 1810, overleden: (ongeveer 48 jaar oud) in 1858. |
- Vader:
Rudolph Ackermann, zoon van Bartholomäus Ackermann (Zadelmeester (1750)) en Justina Susanna Scharschmidt, geboren: te Stollberg op 20 april 1764, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Grootindustrieel, boekhandelaar te Londen. Rudolf Ackermann, the sixth child of Barthel Ackermann (1723–1798), a saddler, and his wife, Justina Scharschmidt (1732–1808), was born in Saxony on 20th April 1764. In 1779 Ackermann was apprenticed as a saddler. However, he had become increasingly interested in drawing and at the age of 18 he moved to Dresden to train as a carriage designer. He also spent time in Switzerland before travelling to Paris where he found work as a designer. In 1785 Ackermann found employment at the carriage making firm of Simons in Brussels. Two years later he arrived in London. According to his biographer, John Ford: "His model of a state coach for the carriage maker Goodall led to his first important commission, the design of a state coach for the lord lieutenant of Ireland in 1790; he was also employed to decorate the existing coach of the lord mayor of Dublin. He designed a state coach for George Washington in America, and an innovative security mail coach which ran between Charing Cross and Greenwich." Ackermann married Martha Massey (1769–1811) in 1792 and the couple set up house at 7 Little Russell Street, Covent Garden. Over the next few years they had nine children. Ackermann now began to concentrate on publishing and in 1795 Ackermann opened his first print shop, where he sold prints, books, artist materials and exhibited paintings. In 1797 he moved to larger premises at 101 Strand. Ackermann began publishing decorative hand-coloured prints. This included over 100 political and social caricatures by Thomas Rowlandson and other leading artists. He began working with the talented water-colour artist, William Pyne. Their first collaboration, Book with Groups of Figures for Decorating Landscapes appeared in 1798. The expansion of his business was in part financed by Prince Philipp von Lichstenstein. Ackermann continued to design carriages. According to the author of Ackermann, 1783–1983: the Business of Art (1983): "In 1804 a carriage of his design carried the pope to the self-coronation of Napoleon Bonaparte in Paris, and at the end of the following year he was commissioned to design the elaborate funeral carriage and the emblematic designs on the coffin of Admiral Lord Nelson. In 1806, using false papers, Ackermann travelled to Saxony, then under Napoleonic blockade: he visited Hamburg and Leipzig, escaping French troops by disguising himself as a coachman, and travelled to Vienna before returning to England." In 1808 Ackermann began his most ambitious venture, The Microcosm of London. Completed in 1810 it contained 104 large folio hand-coloured aquatints. William Pyne wrote the text and helped Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Pugin with the illustrations. This was followed by The Repository of Arts, a monthly magazine. John Ford points out: "Begun in 1809, featuring fashion and social and literary news, continued for twenty years, during which time 1432 hand-coloured plates appeared in it. It remains an important sourcebook for Regency style and fashions. Ackermann employed not only the architectural draughtsman Augustus Pugin, but also a figure drawer of genius, Thomas Rowlandson, who filled the interior views of London's landmark buildings with convincing life." Throughout his career he worked very closely with William Pyne. According to Pyne's biographer, Harris Myers: "He (Pyne) also contributed the text for the first two volumes of Ackermann's Microcosm of London (from 1808). Thereafter, Pyne's collaboration with Ackermann was considerable, with the publication of Rudiments of Landscape Drawing in a Series of Easy Examples (1812); W. H. Pyne on Rustic Figures in Imitation of Chalk (1813); and Etchings of Rustic Figures for the Embellishment of Landscape by W. H. Pyne (1815), first published in Ackermann's Repository. He also supplied the figures for some of the plates in Ackermann's A History of the University of Oxford (1814) and one drawing to A History of the University of Cambridge (1815)." Ackermann visited Saxony on a regular basis and in 1822 he introduced to England the German "gift book". This first annual, Forget-me-Not, proved an unprecedented commercial success, 20,000 copies a year being published. He also developed close contacts with other countries. He sent his son George Ackermann (1803–1891) to open shops in Mexico and Guatemala. Later he established shops in Colombia, Argentina, and Peru. According to John Ford: "Ackermann... published over 100 books in Spanish, including textbooks which played an important part in the education of the newly independent republics." In 1825 Ackermann established his eldest son, Rudolph, in a print shop at 191 Regent Street. He continued to publish decorative books and colour plate books, including a book on the Royal Pavilion in 1826. He married for a second time at the age of 63. Ackermann's investments in South America caused him serious financial problems. In 1828 he wrote that he was working from 6 a.m. to midnight every day in order to keep his publishing business going. Overwork affected his health and in 1830 he had a serious stroke, followed by paralysis. He suffered a second stroke in November 1833 and died on 30th March 1834 at his home at Cold Harbour, Finchley, overleden: (69 jaar oud) te Londen op 30 maart 1834, trouwt (2) met Hannah Williams. Uit dit huwelijk geen kinderen, trouwt (resp. ongeveer 27 en ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (1) in 1792, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers).
|  |
- Moeder:
Martha Massey, geboren: te Cambridge in 1769, overleden: (ongeveer 42 jaar oud) te Londen in 1811.
|  |
Dossier:
>
trouwt (Burgerlijke Stand)
met
Dossier:
>
trouwt (resp. hoogstens 26 en hoogstens 25 jaar oud) voor 1697,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers)
met
Uit dit huwelijk een zoon:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Johann Hermann | *1697 | Kierspe | †1743 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 45 | 1 | 5 |
Dossier:
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een zoon:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Vader | *1647 | | | | | 1 | 1 |
Dossier:
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trouwt (resp. ongeveer 31 en ongeveer 20 jaar oud) te Kierspe in 1729,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe in 1729
met
Anna Catharina Berghaus, dochter van Johannes Berghaus en Margaretha Hühser (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Rhinschen Schmidthausen in juni 1708, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (60 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 9 maart 1769, begraven: te Kierspe op 12 maart 1769. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk 5 kinderen:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | N.N. | *1732 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1739 | Kierspe | 7 | 0 | 0 |
2 | Johann Peter | *1734 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1776 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 42 | 2 | 6 |
3 | Johann Anthon | *1736 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1826 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 89 | 1 | 1 |
4 | Johann Hermann | *1739 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1740 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 0 | 0 | 0 |
5 | Anna Catharina | *1741 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1787 | Schmidthausen bei Kierspe | 45 | 1 | 7 |
Dossier:
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Herman Heinrich Öckinghaus
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Herman Heinrich Öckinghaus, geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe in december 1774, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 11 december 1774 Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe:. |
- Vader:
Johann Peter Öckinghaus (woonachtig, auf dem Limpurg bei Kierspe), zoon van Johann Heinrich Öckinghaus en Margaretha Sibylle Helmich (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe in 1746, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 28 juli 1746, overleden: (ongeveer 58 jaar oud) te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe op 23 april 1804, begraven: te Kierspe op 25 april 1804, trouwt (2) te Kierspe, kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 44 en 31 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe op 20 maart 1790 met Maria Gertrudt Ackermann, dochter van Johann Peter Ackermann en Anna Elisabeth Peppinghausen (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Speckenbach (?) in september 1758, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, overleden: (73 jaar oud) te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe op 31 januari 1832, begraven: te Kierspe op 2 februari 1832. Uit dit huwelijk 6 kinderen, trouwt (1) te Kierspe, kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 23 en 28 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) op 18 juli 1769.
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- Moeder:
Anna Catharina Ackermann, dochter van Johann Hermann Ackermann en Anna Catharina Berghaus (Hausfr. und Mutter), geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe in juni 1741, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 23 juni 1741 (Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe Band: 2/Kierspe S/P: 055/02 rg.nr.: 1741/17; Originaltext: Den 23ten Juni 1741 Johann Herman Ackerman, Anna Catharina Berghaus Ehel. auf der Limpurg, ein Töchterlein taufen laßen, heißt Anna Catharina.), Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Schmidthausen bei Kierspe op 3 april 1787, begraven: te Kierspe op 6 april 1787 (Band: 3/Kierspe S/P: 278/06 Reg.nr.: 1787/19; Originaltext: Den 6ten April [1787], am Freytag nach Pakm-Sontag, Uxor Anna Catharina Oeckinghaus auf Schmidthausen, ist gebohren 1741 von christl. ehel. ehrl. Aeltern, seel. Joh. Herman Ackermann und seel. Anna Catharina Berghaus, damaligen eheleuten auf der Limpurg. Darnach den 23ten Junii getauft, christl. erzogen, in Evangl. Lutherischer Religion unterrichtet, confirmirt. Im jahr 1769, den 18ten Julius verheyrathet an jezzigen Wittwer Johan Peter Oeckinghaus, da seinem solchen ehestand gebohren 4 Söhne und 3 Töchter, wovon noch 3 Söhne und 1 Tochter leben. Sie war eine treue ehefrau, Mutter und Haußmutter. Wurde krank, da sie, nachdem sie noch zuletz am Diensttag morgen das H. A. emfangen, an der Zehrung entschlafen, alt 45 Jahr 8 Monath.).
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kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers)
met
Uit dit huwelijk een dochter:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Maria Catharina | *1802 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | | | | 0 | 0 |
Dossier:
>
- Vader:
Johannes Berghaus, geboren: voor 1685, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, overleden: (ongeveer 95 jaar oud) te Rhinschen Schmidthausen voor 1780, trouwt (beiden minstens 20 jaar oud) te Rhinschen Schmidthausen circa 1705.
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- Moeder:
Margaretha Hühser, geboren: voor 1685, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfrau und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 95 jaar oud) te Rhinschen Schmidthausen voor 1780.
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trouwt (resp. ongeveer 20 en ongeveer 31 jaar oud) te Kierspe in 1729,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe in 1729
met
Johann Hermann Ackermann, zoon van Vader Ackermann von dem Limpurge en Moeder Ackermann von dem Limpurge (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: op 22 november 1697, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe in november 1697, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 18 november 1743, begraven: te Kierspe op 22 november 1743 (Sterberegister Kierspe: Band: 1/Kierspe S/P:019/05 rg.nr.: 1743/66; Orginaltext: Den 22ten Nov. Johann Herman Ackerman von der Limpurg, Maritus. aet: 46 Jahr.). |  |
Uit dit huwelijk 5 kinderen:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | N.N. | *1732 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1739 | Kierspe | 7 | 0 | 0 |
2 | Johann Peter | *1734 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1776 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 42 | 2 | 6 |
3 | Johann Anthon | *1736 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1826 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 89 | 1 | 1 |
4 | Johann Hermann | *1739 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1740 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 0 | 0 | 0 |
5 | Anna Catharina | *1741 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1787 | Schmidthausen bei Kierspe | 45 | 1 | 7 |
Dossier:
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trouwt (beiden minstens 20 jaar oud) te Rhinschen Schmidthausen circa 1705
met
Margaretha Hühser, geboren: voor 1685, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfrau und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 95 jaar oud) te Rhinschen Schmidthausen voor 1780. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk een dochter:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Anna Catharina | *1708 | Rhinschen Schmidthausen | †1769 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 60 | 1 | 5 |
Dossier:
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trouwt (beiden minstens 20 jaar oud) te Rhinschen Schmidthausen circa 1705
met
Johannes Berghaus, geboren: voor 1685, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, overleden: (ongeveer 95 jaar oud) te Rhinschen Schmidthausen voor 1780. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk een dochter:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Anna Catharina | *1708 | Rhinschen Schmidthausen | †1769 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 60 | 1 | 5 |
Dossier:
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Johann Peter Ackermann
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Johann Peter Ackermann, geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 16 mei 1734, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 21 mei 1734 (Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe: Band 2/Kierspe S/P 024/14 Rg.: 1734/39; Originaltext: Den 21ten May 1734 Johann Herman Ackerman jetzt wohnhaft auf der Limpurg ein Söhnlein taufen laßen, heißt Johann Peter.), overleden: (42 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 24 augustus 1776, begraven: te Rönsahl op 26 augustus 1776 (Sterberegister Kierspe: Band 3a/Kierspe S/P 135/03 Rg.nr.: 1776/43A en B en C; Originaltext: Den 26sten Augusti 1776, an dem damahligen Dienstage zwischen dem zwölfthen und dem dreyzehnthen Sonntag nach dem disjährigen Trinitatis Fest Sonntag; Maritus Johann Peter Akkermann von dem Limpurge, war auf eben demsellbigen Limpurge um die Mitthe des May Monatths in dem Jahre Christi 1734 gebohren und D. 21 ejusdem Mensis Maii simulque tum Veneris inter tum Dom. Jubilate atque inter tum Dom.Cantate in eodem Anno von dem nun wohlseligen damaligen hiesigen Kirspichen Herren Pastore Rofhaake getauft. Seine allbereits vorlängst schon seligverewigt gewesene leibliche Elltheren haben geheißen Johann Hermann Akkermann und Anna Cattharina Berghaus. Zum erstenmahle trat Er in den Ehestand D. 14 Augusti simulque tum Dom 10 post Dom. Festi sacresanctea Trinitatis 1757 in seinem damahligen 24sten Allthers Jahre mit der seligen Anna Gerdruth Frase, einer allsobenanndt gewesene Tochter Johannis Willhellmi Frase von der ebenfalls allsobenanndten Frase nechst bey dem benachbahrthen märkkisch-sauerländischen Dorf Röhnsahl, mit wellcher Er an dem vorangeführten Dato gleich nach dem geschlossenen öffenthlichen Kirspischen nachmitthägigen Sonntags Gotthesdienst von dem nun wohlseligen damahligen hiesigen Kirspichen Herren Pastore Rofhaake öffenthlich copuliert und dazu priesterlich eingesegnet wurde, damit Er hernechst bis zu deren Absterben auf dem Niederen oder aber auch Unteren Heukelbache in dem benachbahrthen märkkisch-sauerländischen röhnsahlischen Kirchspiehle gewohnet hat und nur einige wenige Jahre lang, und zwar dom Angeben nach nur 4 Jahre und 8 Monatthe hindurch verheyrathet gewesen. Er hat eben 3 bis hieran noch alle miteinander lebende Töchter gezeuget, darunter die beyde älltheste Töchter allschon öffenthlich confirmirt und zu dem öffenthlichen Genus des hochheiligen Abendmahls zugelassen sind. Die älltheste confirmirte Tochter wohnet vor Magd aud dem sogenanndten Holle dem benachbahrthen märkkisch-sauerländischen hallverischen Kirchspiehle, die andere konfirmirthe als mitthelste Tochter aus eben dieser seiner geführten ersten Ehe wohnet gleichfalls als Magd auf dem sogenanndten kleinen Fastenrade in dem benachbahrthen unterbergisch-röhnsahlisch und wipperfürthschen Kirchspiehle, die unkonfirmirthe jüngste Tochter dahingegen aberwohnet ebenfalls vor Magd auf der sogenanndten Weihler . (?) in eben demsellbigen benachbahrthen unterbergisch-röhnsahlisch und wipperfürthschen Kirchspiehle, die nun alle miteinander beyderseithige Elltheren oder aber Vat und Muttherlose Waysen sind. Um den May Tag des Jahres Christi 1762 soll dem geschehenen Angeben nach diese seine selige erste Ehefrau von dem Niederen oder aber auch Unteren Heukelbach in dem benachbahrthen märkkisch-sauerländisch röhnsahlischen Kirchspiehle nach dem benachbahrthen märkkisch-sauerländischen Dorf Röhnsahl hinein zur Grufth gebracht worden seinund auf dem dorthigen Kirchhofe begrabe liegen, auch soll Er nach eben sollchem Angeben nur ungefehr anderthalbe Jahre lang Witthwer nach dem erfollgten Tod und Begräbnis eben dieser seiner seligen ersten Ehegattin gewesen seyn. Zum letztenmahl trat Er in den Ehestand D. 28 Octobris separatis quondam sic appellatorum amborum . (?) Apostolorum Martyrumque Jesu Christi Simonis nempe atque Judea simulque tum Veneris inter tum Dom. 21 atque inter tum Dom. 22 post Dom. Festi sacrosanctae Trinitatis 1763 an seinem damahligen 30sten Allthers Jahre mit der nun nach Sich gelassenen und Ihn dermahlen hertzschmertzlich betrübt und Leyde tragenden Witthwe, nahmentlich Anna Sybilla Wortmanns von dem unteren oder aber auch niederen Romberge aus der hiesigen Gemeine, mit wellcher Er von meinem hochzuverehrenden hiesigen Kirspischen Herren Ampts Bruder und Collega I. F. Ennigmanno an dem vorangeführthen Dato und Tage gleichfalls öffenthlich in der dorfskirspischen KIrche vor dem dorthigen Allthar copulirt und eben dazu priesterlich eingesegnet wurde, damith Er hernechnst auf dem Limpurge bis zu seinem sellbsteigenen zeithlichen Lebens Schlus 12 Jahre, 9 Monatthe und 4 Wochen in sollcher seiner ander und zugleich letzthmahligen Eheverbindung gelebet und gleihfalls 3 Kinder, blos lauther Töchter, gezeuget hat, unter wellchen allbereits schon 2 Töchter, und zwar die älltheste und die jüngste Tochter einige Zeithlang tod und begraben wesen, die beyde miteinander in ihren damhligen noch zarthen kindlichen Jahren in ihrem Erlöser selig entschlafen sind und bis hieran nur noch die einzzige, mitthelste bis hieran noch unkonfirmirthe und losledige und bey ihrer ällthesten Stief Schwester auf der Holle in dem benachbahrthen hallverischen Kirchspiehle als dorthiger Viehhirth wohnhafte Tochter von und unter diesen dreyen Kinderen und Töchteren aus eben dieser und dersellbigen seiner zwoth und zugleich allerletzthen Eheverbindung in diesem zeithlichen und leiblichen Leben auf der Wellth zurückgelassen, die nun dermahlen eine betrübte verwayste Vattherlose Tochter ist. Sein Glaube ist standhaft, sein Christenthumm unsträflich und sein Leyden mit Gedulldt ausgeschückt gewesen. D. 18 Augusti simulque tum Dom. 11 post Dom. Festi sacrosanctae Trinitatis h.c. Anni 1776 post ejusdemMedium ist Er gleich nach seiner erfollgten Heimkehr von einem eben damahls noch von Ihme mit beygewohnten hiesigen Leichen Begräbnisse allsbald darauf an der Colica oder aber auch Kolik krank und bettlägerig worden, an welcher Er hernechnst 6 Täge lang hindurch doch nicht ohne vielen, aber nur fruchtlos an Ihme verwandtenleiblichen Arzzneymittel bestendig bettlägerig krank gewesen ist bis in seinem um den 6 Uhren des Abends des nechstvorigen Sams Sanct Bartholomaei und zugleich damahligen 24sten Tags und Dati eben dessellbigen disjährigen Augusti oder aber Erndte Monatths des auf eben demsellbigen Limpurge gantz sanfth und selig erfollgten zeitlichen und leiblichen Tod nach seinem eben damahls nur noch allererst von Ihme zurückgelegten, von seinem Tauf Tage angerechneten christlichen Lebens Allther von nur 42 Jahren, dreyen Monatthen und 4 Tägen.). |
- Vader:
Johann Hermann Ackermann, zoon van Vader Ackermann von dem Limpurge en Moeder Ackermann von dem Limpurge (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: op 22 november 1697, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe in november 1697, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 18 november 1743, begraven: te Kierspe op 22 november 1743 (Sterberegister Kierspe: Band: 1/Kierspe S/P:019/05 rg.nr.: 1743/66; Orginaltext: Den 22ten Nov. Johann Herman Ackerman von der Limpurg, Maritus. aet: 46 Jahr.), trouwt (resp. ongeveer 31 en ongeveer 20 jaar oud) te Kierspe in 1729, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe in 1729.
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- Moeder:
Anna Catharina Berghaus, dochter van Johannes Berghaus en Margaretha Hühser (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Rhinschen Schmidthausen in juni 1708, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (60 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 9 maart 1769, begraven: te Kierspe op 12 maart 1769.
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trouwt (resp. 23 en ongeveer 24 jaar oud) (1) te Kierspe op 14 augustus 1757,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe op 14 augustus 1757 (Heiratsregister Kierspe: Band 1/Kierspe S/P: 419/10 Rg.nr.: 1757/6;
Orginaltext: Den 14ten Aug. Johann Peter Ackerman, seeln. Johann Herman Ackerman auff der Limpurg nachgelaßener ehelicher Sohn und Anna Gerdruth Fraase, Johann Wilhelm Fraase, in der Fraase bey Rönsahl ehelich gezeugte Tochter. Cop. in der Kirche nachdem nachträg gb. da sie das vor einem halben Jahr schon gezeurte Kind bei sich hatten die jura erst den 20ten Marti 1758 bezahlt.)
met
Anna Gerdruth Fräse, dochter van Johannis Wilhelmi Frase en Maria Margaretha N.N. (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Rönsahl circa september 1732, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Rönsahl op 29 september 1732, Hausfrau und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 29 jaar oud) te Rönsahl in april 1762, begraven: te Rönsahl in april 1762. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk 3 dochters:
trouwt (2) te Rönsahl,
kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. 29 en ongeveer 33 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) op 28 oktober 1763
met
Anna Sybilla Wortmann, dochter van Martin Wortmann, geboren: te Romberg bei Kierspe circa november 1729, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfrau und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 52 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 27 april 1782, begraven: te Kierspe op 30 april 1782. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk 3 dochters:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Catharina Elisabeth | *1764 | Romberg bei Kierspe | †1781 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 17 | 0 | 0 |
2 | Anna Maria | *1768 | Schmidthausen bei Kierspe | †1770 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 1 | 0 | 0 |
3 | Catharina Margaretha | *1772 | Mühlen Schmidthausen | †1776 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 3 | 0 | 0 |
Dossier:
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N.N. Ackermann
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N.N. Ackermann, geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe circa 1732, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, zoon, jong overleden, overleden: (hoogstens 7 jaar oud) te Kierspe voor 1739. |
- Vader:
Johann Hermann Ackermann, zoon van Vader Ackermann von dem Limpurge en Moeder Ackermann von dem Limpurge (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: op 22 november 1697, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe in november 1697, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 18 november 1743, begraven: te Kierspe op 22 november 1743 (Sterberegister Kierspe: Band: 1/Kierspe S/P:019/05 rg.nr.: 1743/66; Orginaltext: Den 22ten Nov. Johann Herman Ackerman von der Limpurg, Maritus. aet: 46 Jahr.), trouwt (resp. ongeveer 31 en ongeveer 20 jaar oud) te Kierspe in 1729, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe in 1729.
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- Moeder:
Anna Catharina Berghaus, dochter van Johannes Berghaus en Margaretha Hühser (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Rhinschen Schmidthausen in juni 1708, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (60 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 9 maart 1769, begraven: te Kierspe op 12 maart 1769.
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Dossier:
>
- Vader:
Johann Hermann Ackermann, zoon van Vader Ackermann von dem Limpurge en Moeder Ackermann von dem Limpurge (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: op 22 november 1697, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe in november 1697, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 18 november 1743, begraven: te Kierspe op 22 november 1743 (Sterberegister Kierspe: Band: 1/Kierspe S/P:019/05 rg.nr.: 1743/66; Orginaltext: Den 22ten Nov. Johann Herman Ackerman von der Limpurg, Maritus. aet: 46 Jahr.), trouwt (resp. ongeveer 31 en ongeveer 20 jaar oud) te Kierspe in 1729, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe in 1729.
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- Moeder:
Anna Catharina Berghaus, dochter van Johannes Berghaus en Margaretha Hühser (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Rhinschen Schmidthausen in juni 1708, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (60 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 9 maart 1769, begraven: te Kierspe op 12 maart 1769.
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trouwt (resp. 31 en ongeveer 29 jaar oud) te Kierspe op 16 maart 1768,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe op 16 maart 1768 (Heiratsregister Kierspe: Band 1/Kiespe S/P: 463/03 Rg.nr.: 1768/2;
Orginaltext: Den 16ten März am Mitwoch nach Laetare, Johan Anton Ackermann des seeligen Johan Hermann Ackermann auf der Limpurg hieselbst nachgelaßener ehelicher sohn und Anna Maria Gertrudt Obernigge des seel. Johan Paul Obernigge auf der Limpurg hieselbst nachgelaßene eheliche tochter. Proclamatione tertia heic Dominica Reminicsere rite peracta Copulatio in templo factae est.)
met
Anna Maria Gerdruth Obernigge, dochter van Johann Paul Obernigge en Clara Anna Grafe (Hausfr. und Mutter), geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe circa oktober 1738, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 2 november 1738, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 72 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 27 september 1811, begraven: te Kierspe op 30 september 1811. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk een zoon:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Johann Peter Christian | *1769 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1850 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 81 | 2 | 5 |
Dossier:
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Johann Hermann Ackermann
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Johann Hermann Ackermann, geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe in oktober 1739, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 6 oktober 1739 (Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe: Band2/Kierspe S/P: 047/21 Rg.nr.: 1739/60; Originaltext: Den 6ten Octob. 1739 Johan Herman Ackerman, Anna Catharina Berghauß Ehel. auf der Limpurg, ein Söhnlein taufen laßen, heißt Johann Herman.), zoon, jong overleden, overleden: (4 maanden oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe in februari 1740, begraven: te Kierspe op 5 februari 1740 (Sterberegister Kierspe: Band 1/Kierspe S/P: 019/05 Rg.nr. 1740/4; Originaltext: Den 5ten Feb. Johann Herman, filius Johann Herman Ackerman auf der Limpurg, aut: 18 Wochen.). |
- Vader:
Johann Hermann Ackermann, zoon van Vader Ackermann von dem Limpurge en Moeder Ackermann von dem Limpurge (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: op 22 november 1697, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe in november 1697, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 18 november 1743, begraven: te Kierspe op 22 november 1743 (Sterberegister Kierspe: Band: 1/Kierspe S/P:019/05 rg.nr.: 1743/66; Orginaltext: Den 22ten Nov. Johann Herman Ackerman von der Limpurg, Maritus. aet: 46 Jahr.), trouwt (resp. ongeveer 31 en ongeveer 20 jaar oud) te Kierspe in 1729, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe in 1729.
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- Moeder:
Anna Catharina Berghaus, dochter van Johannes Berghaus en Margaretha Hühser (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Rhinschen Schmidthausen in juni 1708, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (60 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 9 maart 1769, begraven: te Kierspe op 12 maart 1769.
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Dossier:
>
Anna Catharina Ackermann
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Anna Catharina Ackermann, geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe in juni 1741, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 23 juni 1741 (Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe Band: 2/Kierspe S/P: 055/02 rg.nr.: 1741/17; Originaltext: Den 23ten Juni 1741 Johann Herman Ackerman, Anna Catharina Berghaus Ehel. auf der Limpurg, ein Töchterlein taufen laßen, heißt Anna Catharina.), Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Schmidthausen bei Kierspe op 3 april 1787, begraven: te Kierspe op 6 april 1787 (Band: 3/Kierspe S/P: 278/06 Reg.nr.: 1787/19; Originaltext: Den 6ten April [1787], am Freytag nach Pakm-Sontag, Uxor Anna Catharina Oeckinghaus auf Schmidthausen, ist gebohren 1741 von christl. ehel. ehrl. Aeltern, seel. Joh. Herman Ackermann und seel. Anna Catharina Berghaus, damaligen eheleuten auf der Limpurg. Darnach den 23ten Junii getauft, christl. erzogen, in Evangl. Lutherischer Religion unterrichtet, confirmirt. Im jahr 1769, den 18ten Julius verheyrathet an jezzigen Wittwer Johan Peter Oeckinghaus, da seinem solchen ehestand gebohren 4 Söhne und 3 Töchter, wovon noch 3 Söhne und 1 Tochter leben. Sie war eine treue ehefrau, Mutter und Haußmutter. Wurde krank, da sie, nachdem sie noch zuletz am Diensttag morgen das H. A. emfangen, an der Zehrung entschlafen, alt 45 Jahr 8 Monath.). |
- Vader:
Johann Hermann Ackermann, zoon van Vader Ackermann von dem Limpurge en Moeder Ackermann von dem Limpurge (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: op 22 november 1697, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe in november 1697, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 18 november 1743, begraven: te Kierspe op 22 november 1743 (Sterberegister Kierspe: Band: 1/Kierspe S/P:019/05 rg.nr.: 1743/66; Orginaltext: Den 22ten Nov. Johann Herman Ackerman von der Limpurg, Maritus. aet: 46 Jahr.), trouwt (resp. ongeveer 31 en ongeveer 20 jaar oud) te Kierspe in 1729, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe in 1729.
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- Moeder:
Anna Catharina Berghaus, dochter van Johannes Berghaus en Margaretha Hühser (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Rhinschen Schmidthausen in juni 1708, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (60 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 9 maart 1769, begraven: te Kierspe op 12 maart 1769.
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trouwt te Kierspe,
kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. 28 en ongeveer 23 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) op 18 juli 1769
met
Uit dit huwelijk 7 kinderen:
Dossier:
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- Vader:
Johann Paul (Paul) Obernigge auf der Limpurg, geboren: in 1705, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, overleden: (ongeveer 62 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 11 maart 1767, begraven: te Kierspe op 15 maart 1767, trouwt te Kierspe, kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 22 en ongeveer 19 jaar oud) in 1727.
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- Moeder:
Clara Anna Grafe, dochter van Johann Gerdt Petern Gravens en Engel Cattharina Rautzenberg (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Eichener Mühle bei Kierspe in 1708, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 17 december 1708, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 73 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 20 maart 1781, begraven: te Kierspe op 24 maart 1781.
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trouwt (resp. ongeveer 29 en 31 jaar oud) te Kierspe op 16 maart 1768,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe op 16 maart 1768 (Heiratsregister Kierspe: Band 1/Kiespe S/P: 463/03 Rg.nr.: 1768/2;
Orginaltext: Den 16ten März am Mitwoch nach Laetare, Johan Anton Ackermann des seeligen Johan Hermann Ackermann auf der Limpurg hieselbst nachgelaßener ehelicher sohn und Anna Maria Gertrudt Obernigge des seel. Johan Paul Obernigge auf der Limpurg hieselbst nachgelaßene eheliche tochter. Proclamatione tertia heic Dominica Reminicsere rite peracta Copulatio in templo factae est.)
met
Johann Anthon (Anton) Ackermann, zoon van Johann Hermann Ackermann en Anna Catharina Berghaus (Hausfr. und Mutter), geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe in november 1736, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 12 november 1736 (Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe: Band 2/Kierspe S/P: 033/13 Rg.: 1736/56; Originaltext: Den 12 ten Novemb. 1736 Johann Herman Ackerman, Anna Catharina Berghauß Ehel. zur Limpurg, ein Söhnlein taufen laßen, heißt Johann Anthon.), Klein Schmidt (1781), Schlösser (1802), overleden: (89 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 12 juni 1826, begraven: te Kierspe op 14 juni 1826. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk een zoon:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Johann Peter Christian | *1769 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1850 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 81 | 2 | 5 |
Dossier:
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trouwt te Kierspe,
kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 22 en ongeveer 19 jaar oud) in 1727
met
Clara Anna Grafe, dochter van Johann Gerdt Petern Gravens en Engel Cattharina Rautzenberg (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Eichener Mühle bei Kierspe in 1708, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 17 december 1708, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 73 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 20 maart 1781, begraven: te Kierspe op 24 maart 1781. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk 2 dochters:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Anna Sybilla | *1727 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | | | | 1 | 0 |
2 | Anna Maria Gerdruth | *1738 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1811 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 72 | 1 | 1 |
Dossier:
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- Vader:
Johann Gerdt Petern Gravens ( Auf Dem Kreische), geboren: te Halver voor 1679, overleden: (minstens 32 jaar oud) te Halver op 14 maart 1711, trouwt (beiden minstens 20 jaar oud) op 4 december 1699.
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- Moeder:
Engel Cattharina Rautzenberg, geboren: te Hückeswagen voor 1679, Hausfrau und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 71 jaar oud) te Halver voor 1750.
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trouwt te Kierspe,
kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 19 en ongeveer 22 jaar oud) in 1727
met
Johann Paul (Paul) Obernigge auf der Limpurg, geboren: in 1705, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, overleden: (ongeveer 62 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 11 maart 1767, begraven: te Kierspe op 15 maart 1767. |  |
Uit dit huwelijk 2 dochters:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Anna Sybilla | *1727 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | | | | 1 | 0 |
2 | Anna Maria Gerdruth | *1738 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | †1811 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 72 | 1 | 1 |
Dossier:
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Anna Sybilla Obernigge
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Anna Sybilla Obernigge, geboren: te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe tussen 1727 en 1753. |
Anna Sybilla Obernigge.
info van Karl-Heinz Bartsch te Meinerzhagen.
- Vader:
Johann Paul (Paul) Obernigge auf der Limpurg, geboren: in 1705, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, overleden: (ongeveer 62 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 11 maart 1767, begraven: te Kierspe op 15 maart 1767, trouwt te Kierspe, kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 22 en ongeveer 19 jaar oud) in 1727.
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- Moeder:
Clara Anna Grafe, dochter van Johann Gerdt Petern Gravens en Engel Cattharina Rautzenberg (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Eichener Mühle bei Kierspe in 1708, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 17 december 1708, Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 73 jaar oud) te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 20 maart 1781, begraven: te Kierspe op 24 maart 1781.
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trouwt (hoogstens 43 jaar oud) circa 1770,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers)
met
Johann Diederich Winterhoff.
info van Karl-Heinz Bartsch te Meinerzhagen.
Dossier:
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Johann Diederich Winterhoff.
info van Karl-Heinz Bartsch te Meinerzhagen.
trouwt (Anna Sybilla hoogstens 43 jaar oud) circa 1770,
kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers)
met
Anna Sybilla Obernigge.
info van Karl-Heinz Bartsch te Meinerzhagen.
Dossier:
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Johann Gerdt Petern Gravens.
info van Karl-Heinz Bartsch te Meinerzhagen.
trouwt (beiden minstens 20 jaar oud) op 4 december 1699
met
Engel Cattharina Rautzenberg, geboren: te Hückeswagen voor 1679, Hausfrau und Mutter, overleden: (ongeveer 71 jaar oud) te Halver voor 1750. |  |
Engel Cattharina Rautzenberg.
info van Karl-Heinz Bartsch te Meinerzhagen.
Uit dit huwelijk een dochter:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Clara Anna | *1708 | Eichener Mühle bei Kierspe | †1781 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 73 | 1 | 2 |
Dossier:
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Engel Cattharina Rautzenberg.
info van Karl-Heinz Bartsch te Meinerzhagen.
trouwt (beiden minstens 20 jaar oud) op 4 december 1699
met
Johann Gerdt Petern Gravens ( Auf Dem Kreische), geboren: te Halver voor 1679, overleden: (minstens 32 jaar oud) te Halver op 14 maart 1711. |  |
Johann Gerdt Petern Gravens.
info van Karl-Heinz Bartsch te Meinerzhagen.
Uit dit huwelijk een dochter:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Clara Anna | *1708 | Eichener Mühle bei Kierspe | †1781 | Limpurg bei Kierspe | 73 | 1 | 2 |
Dossier:
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Johann Peter Öckinghaus
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Johann Peter Öckinghaus (woonachtig, auf dem Limpurg bei Kierspe), geboren: te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe in 1746, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 28 juli 1746, overleden: (ongeveer 58 jaar oud) te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe op 23 april 1804, begraven: te Kierspe op 25 april 1804. |
- Vader:
Johann Heinrich Öckinghaus, zoon van Heinrich Öckinghaus en Anna Elisabeth Margaretha Isenburg (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Öckinghausen in december 1713, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Halver in december 1713, overleden: (63 jaar oud) te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe op 11 januari 1777, begraven: te Kierspe op 15 januari 1777, trouwt te Kierspe, kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. 30 en 22 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe op 19 maart 1744.
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trouwt (1) te Kierspe,
kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 23 en 28 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) op 18 juli 1769
met
Anna Catharina Ackermann, dochter van Johann Hermann Ackermann en Anna Catharina Berghaus (Hausfr. und Mutter), geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe in juni 1741, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 23 juni 1741 (Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe Band: 2/Kierspe S/P: 055/02 rg.nr.: 1741/17; Originaltext: Den 23ten Juni 1741 Johann Herman Ackerman, Anna Catharina Berghaus Ehel. auf der Limpurg, ein Töchterlein taufen laßen, heißt Anna Catharina.), Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Schmidthausen bei Kierspe op 3 april 1787, begraven: te Kierspe op 6 april 1787 (Band: 3/Kierspe S/P: 278/06 Reg.nr.: 1787/19; Originaltext: Den 6ten April [1787], am Freytag nach Pakm-Sontag, Uxor Anna Catharina Oeckinghaus auf Schmidthausen, ist gebohren 1741 von christl. ehel. ehrl. Aeltern, seel. Joh. Herman Ackermann und seel. Anna Catharina Berghaus, damaligen eheleuten auf der Limpurg. Darnach den 23ten Junii getauft, christl. erzogen, in Evangl. Lutherischer Religion unterrichtet, confirmirt. Im jahr 1769, den 18ten Julius verheyrathet an jezzigen Wittwer Johan Peter Oeckinghaus, da seinem solchen ehestand gebohren 4 Söhne und 3 Töchter, wovon noch 3 Söhne und 1 Tochter leben. Sie war eine treue ehefrau, Mutter und Haußmutter. Wurde krank, da sie, nachdem sie noch zuletz am Diensttag morgen das H. A. emfangen, an der Zehrung entschlafen, alt 45 Jahr 8 Monath.). |  |
Uit dit huwelijk 7 kinderen:
trouwt (2) te Kierspe,
kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 44 en 31 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe op 20 maart 1790
met
Maria Gertrudt Ackermann.
info.
Uit dit huwelijk 6 kinderen:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Peter Heinrich | *1792 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1798 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | 5 | 0 | 0 |
2 | Johannes | *1795 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | | | | 0 | 0 |
3 | Anna Gertrud | *1797 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1798 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | 1 | 0 | 0 |
4 | Peter Heinrich | *1799 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1873 | Borlinghausen bei Kierspe | 73 | 0 | 0 |
5 | Peter Friedrich | *1801 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1802 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | 0 | 0 | 0 |
6 | Friedrich Wilhelm | *1803 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1855 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | 51 | 1 | 1 |
Dossier:
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Anna Catharina Öckinghaus
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Anna Catharina Öckinghaus, geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe op 2 maart 1770, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 4 maart 1770 (Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe: Band: 2/Kierspe S/P: 287/03 Rg: 1770/7; Originaltext: Eod Die d. 4ten Martii 1770 Dom. Quadrageslma Sea Invocavitl im Abend haben Johann Peter Öckinghaus und Anna Catharina Ackermann Eheleute auf der Limpurg daselbst in ihrem Haus Ihr Erstgebohrenes Tochterlein taufen laßen heißt Anna Catharina.) (getuigen: Testes: Anna Elsa Margaretha Berghaus, Ehefrau Christian Diederich Plate von Rhinschen Schmidthausen; Anna Margaretha Öckinghaus, Virgo von Elbringhausen des getauften Kindes Vaters leibliche Schwester en also des getauften Kindes leibliche Möhne Väderlicher Seite; Anna Catharina Berghaus, Virgo von der Limpurg; Hermann Öckinghaus, Maritus vom Padtberge vor in der Gübach; Anton Ackermann, Maritus von der Limpurg des getauften Kinder Mütter leiblicher Bruder und also dessen Oheim), Hausfrau und Mutter, overleden: (50 jaar oud) te Linden op 3 maart 1820 (Sie starb am 03. März 1820 in Kierspe. Die Todesursache war Auszehrung. Sie wurde am 07. März 1820 in Kierspe bestattet.), begraven: te Kierspe op 7 maart 1820. |
- Vader:
Johann Peter Öckinghaus (woonachtig, auf dem Limpurg bei Kierspe), zoon van Johann Heinrich Öckinghaus en Margaretha Sibylle Helmich (Hausfrau und Mutter), geboren: te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe in 1746, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 28 juli 1746, overleden: (ongeveer 58 jaar oud) te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe op 23 april 1804, begraven: te Kierspe op 25 april 1804, trouwt (2) met Maria Gertrudt Ackermann. Uit dit huwelijk 6 kinderen, trouwt (1) te Kierspe, kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. ongeveer 23 en 28 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) op 18 juli 1769.
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- Moeder:
Anna Catharina Ackermann, dochter van Johann Hermann Ackermann en Anna Catharina Berghaus (Hausfr. und Mutter), geboren: te Limpurg bei Kierspe in juni 1741, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 23 juni 1741 (Geburts-/Taufregister Kierspe Band: 2/Kierspe S/P: 055/02 rg.nr.: 1741/17; Originaltext: Den 23ten Juni 1741 Johann Herman Ackerman, Anna Catharina Berghaus Ehel. auf der Limpurg, ein Töchterlein taufen laßen, heißt Anna Catharina.), Hausfr. und Mutter, overleden: (45 jaar oud) te Schmidthausen bei Kierspe op 3 april 1787, begraven: te Kierspe op 6 april 1787 (Band: 3/Kierspe S/P: 278/06 Reg.nr.: 1787/19; Originaltext: Den 6ten April [1787], am Freytag nach Pakm-Sontag, Uxor Anna Catharina Oeckinghaus auf Schmidthausen, ist gebohren 1741 von christl. ehel. ehrl. Aeltern, seel. Joh. Herman Ackermann und seel. Anna Catharina Berghaus, damaligen eheleuten auf der Limpurg. Darnach den 23ten Junii getauft, christl. erzogen, in Evangl. Lutherischer Religion unterrichtet, confirmirt. Im jahr 1769, den 18ten Julius verheyrathet an jezzigen Wittwer Johan Peter Oeckinghaus, da seinem solchen ehestand gebohren 4 Söhne und 3 Töchter, wovon noch 3 Söhne und 1 Tochter leben. Sie war eine treue ehefrau, Mutter und Haußmutter. Wurde krank, da sie, nachdem sie noch zuletz am Diensttag morgen das H. A. emfangen, an der Zehrung entschlafen, alt 45 Jahr 8 Monath.).
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trouwt te Kierspe,
kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. 27 en 46 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe op 29 augustus 1797
met
Johann Friedrich Schriever, geboren: te Vorth op 17 maart 1751, gedoopt voor gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers te Kierspe op 19 maart 1751, Osemundschmied, Osemundschmied, overleden: (68 jaar oud) te Linden op 6 juni 1819 Die Todesursache war Auszehrung. Er wurde am 08. Juni 1819 in Kierspe bestattet, begraven: te Kierspe op 8 juni 1819. |  |
Johann Friedrich Schriever.
info van Reinhard Helm te Hagen.
Uit dit huwelijk een dochter:
Dossier:
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Maria Gertrudt Ackermann
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Maria Gertrudt Ackermann, geboren: te Speckenbach (?) in september 1758, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, overleden: (73 jaar oud) te Elbringhausen bei Kierspe op 31 januari 1832, begraven: te Kierspe op 2 februari 1832. |
Maria Gertrudt Ackermann.
info.
- Vader:
Johann Peter Ackermann, geboren: voor 1738, gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers, trouwt (beiden minstens 20 jaar oud) circa 1758, kerkelijk huwelijk (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers).
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trouwt te Kierspe,
kerkelijk huwelijk (resp. 31 en ongeveer 44 jaar oud) (gezindte: Evangelisch Luthers) te Kierspe op 20 maart 1790
met
Uit dit huwelijk 6 kinderen:
| naam | geboren: | plaats | overleden: | plaats | oud | relatie | kinderen |
1 | Peter Heinrich | *1792 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1798 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | 5 | 0 | 0 |
2 | Johannes | *1795 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | | | | 0 | 0 |
3 | Anna Gertrud | *1797 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1798 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | 1 | 0 | 0 |
4 | Peter Heinrich | *1799 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1873 | Borlinghausen bei Kierspe | 73 | 0 | 0 |
5 | Peter Friedrich | *1801 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1802 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | 0 | 0 | 0 |
6 | Friedrich Wilhelm | *1803 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | †1855 | Elbringhausen bei Kierspe | 51 | 1 | 1 |
Dossier:
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