Scherer

Schierer, Scherer, Scheerer, Scherrer,
Family name
Language(s) of origin German
Related names Scheer, Scherr, Schering, Scheerbarth (Scheerbart), Tuchscherer (Duchscherer)
Footnotes:

Scherer, Schierer and Scherrer is a Christian, Swiss/German and Ashkenazic Jewish surname, and may refer to:

People

Scherrer

Schierer (formerly Schierer von Waldhaimb or Walthaimb zu Falknov)

History

The first traces of the Schierer von Waldhaimb family date back to 1289 with Schierer Bernhard Ritter von Klosterneuburg[1] an arbitration judge at the Court of Albert I., Duke of Austria. Written recordings of the medieval Schierer family are dating back to the founders of the first Bohemian glassmakers in the XVth century. Paul Schierer the Elder, born in 1443, owned a large number of glass houses and invented the colouring process of blue glass by adding cobalt (c27). Thus the Schierer family was appointed purveyors to the Court of Hapsburg and ennobled for their services by the Holy Roman Emperor, Rudolph II, in Prague in 1592 and confirmed in 1663 by Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I. Forced by the 30 years war (1618-1648) the knighted Protestant branches of the Schierer family extended to Sweden and to Denmark having their Baronial status confirmed. The Roman Catholic branches of the family remained in the Kingdom of Bohemia and Lower Austria, Litschau and Vienna. The latter branche was confirmed as Knights and raised to Freiherrlich, Barony of the Holy Roman Empire.

Coat of armes

1592: Coat of armes Schierer von Waldhaimb
1663: Coat of armes Schierer von Waldhaimb

Motto

The motto of the family: Inspiratio - Reverentia - Cognoscere.

Notable family members

Family members are among others:

Old tomb memorial slab of Dominic Schierer von Waldhaimb zu Falknov, 15th century, Bohemia
Old tomb memorial slab of Schierer von Waldhaimb zu Falknov family, 15th century, Bohemia

Other

Scherer
Scherrer

See also

References

  1. Geschichte des Herzogthumes Steiermark, Volume 6, Albert von Muchar, p 126ff
  2. "Nürnberger Künstlerlexikon: Bildende Künstler, Handwerker, Gelehrte", Manfred H. Grieb, Seite 1327, Nürenberg, August 2007.
  3. S 168, 190, "Musikgeschichte des Stiftes Kremsmünster", Altman Kellner, Bärenreiter Verlag Kassel und Basel, 1956
  4. "Die Inschriften des Bundeslandes Kärnten - Anmerkungen zu den Inschriftenträgern im Bezirk St. Veit an der Glan – die Grab- und Gedächtnisdenkmäler", Friedrich W. Leitner, Seite 201, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1982, Landesmuseum für Kärnten. Grabplatte von Meister Martin Paccobello zu St. Veit an der Glan im Pfarrhof. Katalognummer 663.
  5. Biographisches Lexikon des Kaisertums Österreich von 1875, Band 29, Seite 282ff
  6. Lit: ÖBL 9 (1988); Wurzbach 29 (1875); Adametz (1943); R. Hofmann, [Fs.] , 1993.
  7. p 112, 263, Militärschematismus des österreichischen Kaiserthumes aus der k.u.k. Hof- und Staats-Druckerey 1834
  8. Österreichischen Staatsarchiv – Abteilung Kriegsarchiv, Grundbuchblatt des Artillerieregiment Nr. 3 , Effektiv, Heft 16, Seite 197 (Karton Nr. 1840).
  9. Vereinsschrift für Forst-, Jagd- und Naturkunde, Ausgaben 1-6, Herausg. Verein böhmischer Forstwirthe, Prag 1849
  10. page 127, Bericht über die 500 jährige Jubelfeier der Universität Wien im Jahre 1865
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