Ahnendatenbank der Koneczny - Frisch - Heilweck - Familien

Notizen


Klara PROSSER

Lichtenberg was founded in 1835/36 during the period of immigration of German-Bohemian farmers and the establishment of German-Bohemian agrarian villages. The thirty families from the Prachin District [in the Bohemian Forest] who settled there had a more difficult struggle for livelihood than the Swabian immigrants in their time. The settlers had to clear the forests themselves, received little state support, and had to wait thirty years for their endowment, i.e., for the right to pass on their property to their heirs.......... Glitt is an example of a village founded by immigrants on their own initiative. Out of their own resources sixteen German-Bohemian families settled along the road to Lichtenberg in 1843 where they cleared the land and constructed houses and farm buildings. Within fifty years the village contained 470 inhabitants, a number clearly attesting to the success of the undertaking..............    Alongside the agrarian colonies, originally established under state direction, German-Bohemian families with glass-making skills and lumberers came to the Radautz area, settling in Putna, Karlsberg and Fr̸stenthal. Prompting this migration was the establishment of glass-production facilities..............  From Lichtenberg and Glitt: Schaller, Rach, Scht̃z, Baumgartner, Scheinost and Prosser.


Josef PSCHEIDT

From Altht̸te: Erl, Freundr̲fer, Hartinger, Hd̲l, Hoffmann, Schmiedt, Pscheidt, Straub, and Tremmel.

BIOGRAPHIE: Laut
"Das Mädchen aus dem Wald" Märchen, Sagen, Ortsgeschichten aus dem Radaut, http://www.bukovinasociety.org/PDF/Stephani-Maedchen-D.pdf

BIOGRAPHIE: waren die Pscheidts und die Hoffmanns in dem Ort Kraßna-Ilsky (Althütte, Neuhütte) Deutschböhmen, die ab etwa 1805 an den neugegründeten Glashütten Arbeit fanden

GEBURT: Nach http://www.bukovinasociety.org/genealogy/zoglauer/gp2673.html
wäre das Geburtsdatum before 1792
Title: LDS Library Film #1768044 -7, Radautz Trauungen (Marriages) Evang. 1818 - 1849 Note: LDS Library Film #1768044 -7, Radautz Trauungen (Marriages) Evang. 1818 - 1849


Barbara HOFFMANN

BIOGRAPHIE: Laut
"Das Mädchen aus dem Wald" Märchen, Sagen, Ortsgeschichten aus dem Radaut, http://www.bukovinasociety.org/PDF/Stephani-Maedchen-D.pdf

BIOGRAPHIE: waren die Pscheidts und die Hoffmanns in dem Ort Kraßna-Ilsky (Althütte, Neuhütte) Deutschböhmen, die ab etwa 1805 an den neugegründeten Glashütten Arbeit fanden

GEBURT: Nach http://www.bukovinasociety.org/genealogy/zoglauer/gp2673.html
stimmen die Geburtsdaten überein mit
Author: Franz Wiszniowski Title: RADAUTZ, book by Author Franz Wiszniowski, March 1966


Johann STÖBERL

Erwin Massier, Deutsche im Raum von Radautz: The Putna glass works belonged to Karlsberg. Founded under private auspices in 1797, it passed to ownership of the Radautz stud farm in 1801. The first glass makers hailed from the defunct glass works of Lubaczow in Galicia. They were German-Bohemians. In Putna they were provisioned with house and garden. Six years later (1803) the first lumberers arrived who, under contract, settled in Karlsberg. Each family received 6 yokes of land, wood for construction of buildings, and essential advances for the purchase of cattle and tools. For this they had to obligate themselves yearly to cut fifty cords of wood. When in 1825 the Putna glass works closed and left the glass workers without a means of livelihood, the twenty-one families in Karlsberg had to turn to farming under prevailing feudal obligations. But the contract to enforce the legal status of their endowment took decades to be adjudicated and only in 1868 did the Karlsbergers come into hereditary possession of their land.  Much greater is the number of German families, who, on their own, chose Radautz as their new home. The majority consisted of German-Bohemians. Many of the lumberers, who were also skillful carpenters or masons or who plied other trades, moved to the town, resulting in a gain for local commerce. They came from Altht̸te, Karlsberg and Fr̸stenthal. In addition, families from among the glass workers or their descendants settled in its environs with Glitt and Lichtenberg also yielding up inhabitants to Radautz. Furthermore, a considerable number who ventured to Bukovina for better or for worse, mainly German-Bohemian families, found work with a promising future in the town. Individual [German-Bohemian] immigrants even arrived indirectly via the Swabian villages, so that the German-Bohemians and their descendants represented the overwhelming component of the Radautz Germans.  From Karlsberg and Fr̸stental nach Radautz: Aschenbrenner, Gaschler, Korbel, Lehrach, Pankratz, Paukner, Stadler, Stb̲erl, Straub, Wilhelm, Witkowski, and Zettel.

BIOGRAPHIE: Laut Erwin Massier "Deutsche im Raum von Radautz"
http://www.bukovinasociety.org/newsletters/Buko-NL-1999-2-Jun.html
gehörte Johann Stöberl zu einer Gruppe von Glasarbeitern, die in KARLSBERG an die Putna-Glashütte geholt wurden. Diese wurde 1797 gegründet, kurz darauf die Siedlung Karlsberg.

BIOGRAPHIE: The Putna glass works belonged to Karlsberg. Founded under private auspices in 1797, it passed to ownership of the Radautz stud farm in 1801. The first glass makers hailed from the defunct glass works of Lubaczow in Galicia. They were German-Bohemians. In Putna they were provisioned with house and garden. Six years later (1803) the first lumberers arrived who, under contract, settled in Karlsberg. Each family received 6 yokes of land, wood for construction of buildings, and essential advances for the purchase of cattle and tools. For this they had to obligate themselves yearly to cut fifty cords of wood. When in 1825 the Putna glass works closed and left the glass workers without a means of livelihood, the twenty-one families in Karlsberg had to turn to farming under prevailing feudal obligations. But the contract to enforce the legal status of their endowment took decades to be adjudicated and only in 1868 did the Karlsbergers come into hereditary possession of their land.

BIOGRAPHIE: Die Glasarbeiter kamen laut Josef Frenzel "Karlsberger Chronik" von 1845
http://www.bukovinasociety.org/PDF/Stephani-Maedchen-D.pdf
("Das Mädchen aus dem Wald" Märchen, Sagen, Ortsgeschichten aus dem Radautzer Ländchen. Bukarest 1985)
aus Rosendorf bei Lubatschow, Galizien, wo die örtliche "Kristallhütte" geschlossen worden war.


Margarethe BAYER

Erwin Massier, Deutsche im Raum von Radautz: The Putna glass works belonged to Karlsberg. Founded under private auspices in 1797, it passed to ownership of the Radautz stud farm in 1801. The first glass makers hailed from the defunct glass works of Lubaczow in Galicia. They were German-Bohemians. In Putna they were provisioned with house and garden. Six years later (1803) the first lumberers arrived who, under contract, settled in Karlsberg. Each family received 6 yokes of land, wood for construction of buildings, and essential advances for the purchase of cattle and tools. For this they had to obligate themselves yearly to cut fifty cords of wood. When in 1825 the Putna glass works closed and left the glass workers without a means of livelihood, the twenty-one families in Karlsberg had to turn to farming under prevailing feudal obligations. But the contract to enforce the legal status of their endowment took decades to be adjudicated and only in 1868 did the Karlsbergers come into hereditary possession of their land. Much greater is the number of German families, who, on their own, chose Radautz as their new home. The majority consisted of German-Bohemians. Many of the lumberers, who were also skillful carpenters or masons or who plied other trades, moved to the town, resulting in a gain for local commerce. They came from Altht̸te, Karlsberg and Fr̸stenthal. In addition, families from among the glass workers or their descendants settled in its environs with Glitt and Lichtenberg also yielding up inhabitants to Radautz. Furthermore, a considerable number who ventured to Bukovina for better or for worse, mainly German-Bohemian families, found work with a promising future in the town. Individual [German-Bohemian] immigrants even arrived indirectly via the Swabian villages, so that the German-Bohemians and their descendants represented the overwhelming component of the Radautz Germans.  ................ From the period around 1830 of the great "German-Bohemian migrations": Bauer, Bayer, Binder, Gregor, Gross, Hablik, Hanny, Harand, Hasenh̲rl, Hayden, Kellermann, Krassler, Lausmann, Madl, Michler, Mirbauer, Młler, Pfeffer, Plach, Plechinger, Prexler, Rath, Reitmayer, Russ, Wagner, Wimmer, Zelesner, and Zoglauer.


Michail BODNARUK

Allgemein-Herkunft: Er war reich, hatte Grund mit Obstbäumen.
Beim Äpfelpflücken Sturz vom Baum. Danach war er angeblich "gestorben", lebte aber in der "Irrenanstalt" weiter
laut http://czernowitz.ehpes.com/new/hauster/Cz1898TotalG.html war er Hausbesitzer von 707 Rosch


Maria MOZANECKYJ

Allgemein-Herkunft: Die Mutter von Michaline Bodnariuk. Mädchenname?
Zuhause wurde ruthenisch gesprochen


Rosa LUTZ

weitereKinder:  Rudolf MAJERHOFFER
Agatha MAJERHOFFER
Leontina MAJERHOFFER
Jakob MAJERHOFFER b: 5 Mar 1892
Robert MAJERHOFFER
Stefanie MAJERHOFFER
Maria Margaretha MAJERHOFFER
Margaretha MAJERHOFFER
Living MAJERHOFFER


Anna NEUMANN

weitereKinder:  Joannes MAJERHOFFER b: 30 Apr 1858 in ,Bukowina
Andreas MAJERHOFFER b: 16 Nov 1860 in ,Bukowina
Franz MAJERHOFFER b: ABT 1863 in of Radautz,Bukowina
Maria MAJERHOFFER b: ABT 1865 in of Radautz,Bukowina
Theresia MAJERHOFFER b: 15 Jul 1867 in of Radautz,Bukowina
Ferdinand MAJERHOFFER b: 23 Aug 1869 in of Radautz,Bukowina
Francisca MAJERHOFFER b: 15 Jan 1874