Pfuel

Pfuel

Pfuel

German ancient noble family


The Pfuel family (also Pfuhl or Phull) is an ancient German noble family that arrived to Brandenburg in the year 926 and later widened their influence to Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Mecklenburg, Pomerania, Württemberg, Westphalia, Eastern Europe and Sweden.

Quick Facts Website ...
Jahnsfelde manor-house
Tüßling castle, Bavaria, photographed, as inhabited by the Counts Bruges-von Pfuel today

Members of the family held the title of Count.[1] Today, they bear the name Counts Bruges-von Pfuel.

Family line

Ancestors' list for direct paternal main line:[2]

  • Henricus de Puele, c. 1215
  • Heino de Puele (1282–1307)
  • Heino von Pule (1306–1349)
  • Strassen von Pfuel (died 1375)
  • Otto von Pfuel (1375–1420)
  • Bertram von Pfuel (born. c. 1405–1410, died 1482), 1440 to 1477 documented
  • Friedrich von Pfuel (1460–1527)
  • Bertram von Pfuel (born 1510/1515, died 1574), 1531 to 1574 documented
  • Friedrich von Pfuel (1545–1594), 1577 to 1587 documented
  • Bertram von Pfuel (1577–1639), 1597 to 1638 documented
  • Friedrich Heino von Pfuel (1620–1661)
  • Christian Friedrich von Pfuel (1653–1702 near Kaiserswerth), Killed in action
  • Hempo Ludwig von Pfuel (1690–1770 in Gielsdorf)
  • Ludwig von Pfuel (1718 in Gielsdorf – 1789 in Berlin)
  • Friedrich von Pfuel (1781 in Jahnsfelde – 1846 in Karlsbad)
  • Alexander von Pfuel (1825 in Berlin – 1898 in Jahnsfelde)
  • Heino von Pfuel (1871 in Jahnsfelde – 1916 in Berlin), DOW)[3]
  • Curt Christoph Graf Bruges-von Pfuel (1907 in Berlin – 2000 in Bonn)
  • Christian Friedrich Graf Bruges-von Pfuel (born 1942 in Jahnsfelde)
  • Frederic Alexander Graf Bruges-von Pfuel (born 1978 in Munich)

Estates

Brandenburg

  • 1367 Falkenberg
  • 1375 Werftpfuhl, Altranft
  • pre-1413 Frankenfelde, Bliesdorf, Reichenow, Möglin, Wollenberg, Schönfeld, Reichenberg, Biesow
  • 1445 Wriezen
  • 1449 Jahnsfelde
  • 1450 Gielsdorf, Grünthal, Leuenberg, Schulzendorf
  • 1472 Trebnitz
  • 1480 Quilitz (Neuhardenberg)
  • pre-1500 Tempelfelde, Torgelow, Tiefensee, Steinbeck, Quappendorf, Ruhlsdorf, Garzau, Garzin
  • 1529 Friedersdorf
  • 1536 Wilkendorf
  • pre-1663 Buckow, Hohenfinow, Prötzel, Hasenholz, Dahmsdorf, Obersdorf, Kienitz, Münchehofe

Berlin

  • Strausberg
  • 1472 Biesdorf
  • 1609 Marzahn
  • 1655 Dahlem

Saxony-Anhalt

  • 1641 Helfta
  • 1654 Polleben
  • 1664 Eisleben, Wimmelburg
  • 1668 Seeben, Muldenstein
  • 1680 Nedlitz

Baden-Württemberg

  • 1787 Obermönsheim

Pomerania

  • 1827 Schwerin
  • 1838 Elmershagen

Bavaria

  • 1991 Tüßling
  • 1991 Gut Mamhofen (Starnberg)

Members

Notable members of the family include:

"Baron Pfuel", Friedrich von Amerling (1836), Belvedere, Vienna
Children of the Pfuel family, mid 17th century
Ignatia Franziska von Pfuhl with her husband Klemens Karl von Freyberg; detail of a fresco by Joseph Keller, church of St. Moritz (Zell), Eisenberg, Bavaria
The Steamer Henry Von Phul (1860)

Literature

  • Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelslexikon Band X, pp. 336f., Band 119, C. A. Starke, Limburg (Lahn) 1999, ISBN 3-7980-0819-1
  • Bernhard von Gersdorff: Preußische Köpfe – Ernst von Pfuel. Stappverlag, 1981, ISBN 3-87776-154-2
  • Stephanie von Pfuel: Wenn schon, denn schon. LangenMüller, 2007, ISBN 978-3-7844-3115-4
  • Marco Schulz: Jahnsfelde Schlösser und Gärten der Mark. Freundeskreis Schlösser und Gärten der Mark, Sibylle Badstübner-Gröger (Publisher). ISBN 978-3-941675-00-1

References

Media related to Pfuel family at Wikimedia Commons


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