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1. Schwenk Ancestry · 2. Lieb Ancestry · 3. Breymayer Ancestry | ||
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Fourth GenerationFriderich Breymayer, Innkeeper, BrewerNow it's 1700, the dawn of the Age of Enlightenment in the Western World. And with it was ushered in little Friderich. Once again, let us put this year in historical perspective. The world would have to wait nearly six years before experiencing the birth of our Ben Franklin; 32 years before George Washington's entree, and 49 years until the birth of Germany's Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. And it will be 76 years before our Colonies become an independent nation. As in the foregoing generations, we will try to sketch an outline of this man and his wife, drawing the scanty data from church books and the scholarship of Dr. Rudolf Kiess. Friderich was only four when his father died. We know that his mother did not marry again - at least prior to 1727 - and so he must have been raised by her. His older brother Johannes was age 21 when their father died, and he may have served as a sort of head of the household until his marriage in 1709. And this is all we know about Friderich until the year 1726. On November the 6th of that year, Pastor Wolfgang Friderich Blifers took quill in hand, dipped it in ink which would often fade into illegibility, and proceeded to record the nuptial event in the Ehebuch. As we shall later see, he was a good man, but his penmanship was horrible! And that, coupled with the cheap ink, lead this researcher often into despair. And it may be that our Maria Breymayer's name lies undeciphered somewhere on the pages of his death entries. Another very odd aspect of Herr Blifers' recording of this marriage is that it was entered on the right edge of the page. The page records four marriages besides the one under discussion: one in 1724; one in 1725; one in 1728 and the last one in 1729, and with no space left between those entries. It is almost as though Parson Blifers entered this 1726 event after the 1729 marriage. Or was this meant as a mean spirited gesture, his and the Church's dim view of such an affair? (clarification appears seven lines down). It seems we are coming up with more questions than answers in this chapter! In any event, he recorded the marriage of our Friderich Breymayer and Felicitas, daughter of C. Geckeler, a schoolmaster from Ödenwaldstetten, a village north of there. An eleven-word undeciphered sentence follows the above information. A best guess it that this had to do with an event which had occurred about nine weeks earlier there in Mundingen. That event was the birth of Johann Jacob Breymayer, and the date was Aug. 30th. The parents were our Friderich and Felicitas. Why did they wait so long to see the preacher? He was old enough. Did the schoolmaster over in Ödenwaldstetten have some objections? Did Felicitas not really care for this young man? Had Fridrich not yet fulfilled the requirements of the State that he possess a rifle and sidearm, a fire brigade bucket, or had not yet planted two fruit trees on communally-owned land and cared for them to their fruit-bearing stage in order to have the right to marry? Who knows? Perhaps this delay in "getting to the church on time" was connected to the sale of the "Hirsch" property to Friderich by his mother that same year?? According to the Kiess book, Friderich, in the early part of this century, built a brewery building directly adjacent to House # 7. Apparently he did this around 1726, the year he acquired this property. He then converted part of the house to an inn, the "Gasthof zum Hirsch", which as we already know is still in business today. Where he had learned the skills of brewing beer is unclear. There had apparently been no brewery in Mundingen prior to this. He obviously had learned this trade outside his village. Dr. Kiess states in a section which describes a brief history of the "Hirsch" and two other such businesses, that Friderich had "come from Lauterach." That is a village just over the hill near the Donau. And so it is probable that he went there several years prior to 1726 and worked as an apprentice with dreams of later owning his own brewery and pub in his home village. He and Felicitas brought five more babies into the world. They were: Johann Friderich, Anna, Catharina, Johann Friderich. Johannes was their last child. He was born in 1733. He died in 1755, apparently not having married. All the others, except for the firstborn Johann Jacob, died in infancy or in childhood. Life for Friderich came to an end on Dec. 30, 1734. Our Rev. Blifers failed to enter the cause of death in the death register. In 1736 with three young sons to care for and a business to run, Felicitas remarried. Perhaps she had hired a brewer to run the brewery next door and then grew to care for him. In any event, on April 24, 1736, she married Hans Jerg Koz, a brewery worker from nearby Rottenacker. We learn, again from Dr. Kiess, that Hans in 1753 bought the property of House # 45, just down the street with the idea of "perhaps getting rid of the competition." Earlier, that building had served as the local Rathaus, village hall, and its owner had a very small wine-tavern business there, but really hardly a tavern, in that it did not even have a sign hanging above the door. In any event, Hans and Felicitas then had the "monopoly" on the tavern and lodging business until around 1782 when a new inn called the Adler was built just on the east edge of town. But that place would not give them any competition, for they both died before the Adler was built. Hans died in 1763; Felicitas died on May 14, 1767, both in Mundingen. | |
The Fifth GenerationJohann Jacob Breymayer, Innkeeper, BrewerJohann Jacob was born on Aug. 30, 1726. He was the firstborn of six and the only one to survive and marry. There was at least one other Johann Jacob Breymayer in Mundingen and so he was referred to as Johann Jacob der Wirts Sohn, the innkeeper's son. He was eight years old when his father died. At that time he had two brothers still living, a Johann Friderich and Johannes. As we learned above, his mother remarried in 1736. It seems clear he learned the art of brewing from his stepfather, Hans Jerg Koz, and how to run an inn from his mother and stepfather. When he was 27, he ambled over to the residence of widow Anna Agnes Blifers to have a talk with her regarding her 20 year old daughter, Anna Elisabeth. He had known this young woman since she was a child and was very fond of her. She had said yes. The visit was fruitful. The wedding took place on Oct. 20, 1753. They then took up residence in his mother's home, the Hirsch Inn. His mother and stepfather apparently then moved into House # 45, the property which H.J. Koz had purchased that same year - the former "minor competition" of the "Hirsch." It appears that Johann Jacob was then running the brewery and inn. When his stepfather died in 1763, the "Hirsch" property was deeded over to him. Some of the evidence for the above comes to us once again through the scholarship of Dr. Kiess. On pages 242-243 in his book, we find a list of all the adult inhabitants of Mundingen in the year 1764. In that year there was a special "military tax" levied on the subjects of the Duchy of Württemberg. We see there the name of Felicitas, widow of H.J. Koz. After his name appears the occupation, baker. So now we know he baked as well as brewed! Her residence was in House # 45. Her buildings and land were appraised at a value of 878 Gulden. She owned four head of cattle, two sheep and one pig. Two Gesinde, worker/servants, resided under her roof. Her total assets show to be 955 Gulden and a few Kreuzer. These assets put her in tax class # 6, with class # 1 the poorest, # 10 the wealthiest. Now let's return to the family of her son J. Jacob. Their first baby was born in 1755. This baby died as an infant. Six more babies would be born into this family, the last in 1766. Five children lived to adulthood. Marriages could not be found for any of those except for their daughter Felicitas, born Feb. 21, 1764, our beloved Felicitas What follows is a digression from the Breymayer story, but it deserves telling. It has to do with a very interesting direct ancestor of ours who played a small part in Mundingen's history. In 1762, the mother of Anna Elisabeth died there in Mundingen. She, Anna Agnes Blifers, born Kuser, was age 69 when she died. She was born probably in Tübingen, the university city, not far south of Stuttgart. In around the summer of 1729 there, she married a recently widowed clergyman, Herr Wolfgang Friderich Blifers. Herr Blifers birthplace was also Tübingen; his birth date was May 25, 1685. His father and father's father were bookbinders in that city. He studied theology at the University of Tübingen. His first wife had been Eva Maria Angler and the marriage took place almost certainly in his home city and probably shortly before receiving his first pastorate in Mundingen in 1719. Their first child was born in Dec. 1719; their sixth in Feb. 1727. Eva Maria died in Mundingen on Sept. 27, 1727. And as said above, he then remarried to our Anna Agnes Kuser. The only child born of this union was our Anna Elisabetha, 24 Aug. 1733. In a section of his book, Dr. Kiess listed all the pastors of this parish church from the Reformation through 1983, and described briefly something of their contributions to the community and/or personalities. His sketch of our W.F. Blifers is very interesting and enlightening; therefore a translation of that by this writer (and likewise descendant of the subject) is included here. | ||
"Wolfgang
Friedrich Blifers (Pastor 1719-1752) from Tübingen
Our Grandpa Blifers was not the only clergyman who was less than pleased with his post in Mundingen. Only 18 years before he arrived there, the local parson was an Andreas Kuon. He only stayed there three years. He often complained about his flock not attending church regularly, and that he often held the church service "almost alone." In 1704 his apparent prayers were answered and he was granted a new pastorate. Before departing, he entered his comments of "gratitude" onto a page in the birth register thanking God for not having rejected his plea to leave that place. He also wrote, "I leave here as Lot left Sodom." He had, with foresight, penned these words in Latin, and only his successors and a scholar like Dr. Kiess would ever understand his departing comments. Dr. Kiess commented that, "It is not known whether his wife turned to a pillar of salt." And now back to the Breymayer story. In the same military tax list of 1764 mentioned above, we learn more about our J. Jacob. He was shown as "Wirt" , owner of House # 7. Buildings and land assessed on a value of 1307 Gulden. He owned five horses, 10 cattle, three sheep and two pigs. Total value of livestock: 226 Gulden. Total assets: 1719 Gulden. Tax class # 8. Five children at home; three workers/servants. His tax for the year was nearly 14 Gulden. That amount of money might be equivalent to a good milk cow. The year is 1767. A tragic year for this family. On January 24, seven year old Jacob Friderich died of convulsions, or Gichter. This was an disorder of the digestive organs and a very common cause of death among children. Just five days later, our Johann Jacob followed his son to the grave. The recorded cause of death was Stechen im Munde, probably a term for diphtheria. For now, this natural cause of death defies definition for the writer. And then in the May, Felicitas, the mother of recently deceased Johann Jacob, died of "inneren Brand"; this was very probably the term then for cancer. Poor Anna Elisabeth! Five young children to care for and a business to run. She was then not quite 34 years of age. And so because we lack the facts, we can only guess she may quickly have put out the word that the "Hirsch" was in need of a brewer, perhaps the same as her mother had done back in early 1735. What we do know is that a man named Elias Fischer from Weilheim appeared on the scene and married our widow Anna Elisabeth on July 25, 1768 in Mundingen. He must have been a brewer by trade, for one does not learn those skills overnight. In that same year, the ownership of the Hirsch property and that of House # 45 was transferred over to Elias, which followed the law when a widow remarried. Our little Felicitas was not quite three when her father died, and so Elias was really the only father she would know. In the Schwenk section of this story, Elias and his role in the family was discussed, and so it is time to conclude this story of our Breymayer ancestry. We already know that right at the end of that century, the Breymayer "tributary" joined the "main stream" (our point of view, only) of the Schwenk lineage. That occurred in 1798 with the birth of our Johannes Schwenk. And he is the one who has transmitted to us our proud and honorable Schwenk and Breymayer ancestry. And then in the years of 1830 through 1840, as we have already seen, the Lieb tributary joins our stream of ancestry with the birth of Maria Agnes Felicitas, Luise, John and August Schwenk. These are just three of the many lines our our ancestry in Germany. We learned a little, or at least their names were mentioned, of the others: Sauter, Hilsenbeck, Mangold, Ostertag, Harscher, Kauder, Laur from Laichingen and Feldstetten. And in Mundingen the family names of: Kaud, Bopp, Blifers, Kuser and Geckeler. And west of there in the Pfullingen area and Dettingen, the families which joined the Lieb line: Bansovius, Eberhardt, Gwinner, Häring, Handel and others. We all carry a little bit of all of them in our veins. It would a bit inappropriate, no, pointless to offer them our collective gratitude. They probably are not listening anyway. They simply did what people do; make love, have babies, care for them and hope they grow up and do the same. But if perchance the spirit of Anna Ursula Schwenk, born Ostertag, is listening right now, here Grandma Anna is a heartfelt THANK YOU for saying ja to old man Conrad back in 1771! §§§ |
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