Amsberg
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House of Amsberg | |
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Current region | |
Place of origin | Mecklenburg |
Founded | 1686 |
Founder | Jürgen Amtsberg |
Current head | Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands |
Titles |
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Cadet branches |
The House of Amsberg (
Members of the family live in the Netherlands and in Northern Germany. Its most notable member is the family's current head (i.e. senior male-line descendant), King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands. King Willem-Alexander, his brothers and his brothers' children hold the title of "Jonkheer (or female Jonkvrouw) van Amsberg" and have the surname "van Oranje-Nassau van Amsberg".
History
The family line traces back to one Jürgen Amtsberg (d. 1686), master blacksmith in the village of Schwichtenberg near Borrentin, then part of Swedish Pomerania. His great-grandson Johann David Theodor August Amsberg (1747–1820), Protestant pastor at the parish church of Kavelstorf near Rostock in the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, from about 1795 styled himself von Amsberg without objection. The Amsbergs had been commoners at first, and the preposition probably was used to signify the family from the name of their ancestors, rather than from the name of a place they originated from. A notable member was his son Philipp August von Amsberg (1788–1871), who initiated the establishment of the Duchy of Brunswick State Railway that was inaugurated in 1838. The family received official approval to use the nobiliary particle by decree of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin in 1891.
On 10 March 1966,
The marriage of the third-born son, Prince
Several members of the family, mainly descendants of Philipp August von Amsberg and of Prince Claus' great-uncle Joachim von Amsberg (1869–1945), still live in Northern Germany.
The Dutch branch of the family, i.e. Prince Claus and his descendants, has some distant Dutch/Flemish ancestors who left the Low Countries during Spanish rule, such as the Berenberg family and other prominent families of Antwerp.
Other notable family members include Colonel
Heads of the family
This is a list of the heads, i.e. the senior male-line members, of the Amsberg family, as well the patrilineal line of the current Dutch royal family. Before the 1891 ennoblement, being the senior male descendant did not have any legal relevance, and as such the term "head" is anachronistic before the family's rise as a noble and eventually royal family. The headship of the family since its recognition as noble in 1891 has some historical legal relevance prior to the formal abolition of the nobility's privileges in 1918.
- Jürgen Amtsberg, ca. 1640–1686, blacksmith
- Jürgen Amtsberg, 1680–1756, baker
- Georg Amtsberg, 1717–1772
- Johann David Theodor August Amsberg, clergyman. He started calling himself "von Amsberg" from 1795, 1747–1820, pastor in Kavelstorf
- Joachim Karl Theodor von Amsberg, 1777–1842
- Gabriel Ludwig Johann von Amsberg, 1822–1899, received permission from the Grand Duke to use the particle "von" in 1891, effectively an ennoblement
- Wilhelm von Amsberg, 1856–1929
- Claus Felix von Amsberg, 1890–1953
- Prince Claus of the Netherlands, Jonkheer van Amsberg, né Klaus von Amsberg, 1926–2002, a former diplomat of Germany
- King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands, Jonkheer van Amsberg, b. 1967.
Line of succession to the headship of the Amsberg family
Since German aristocracy practice agnatic primogeniture, the heir presumptive to the headship, and the ones next in line, are
- Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands, Jonkheer van Amsberg, the King of The Netherlands' younger brother
- Count Claus-Casimir of Orange-Nassau, Jonkheer van Amsberg, Constantijn's son
- Dirk von Amsberg (b. 1961), a grandson of General Joachim von Amsberg, who in turn was a son of Gabriel Ludwig Johann von Amsberg
- Paul von Amsberg (b. 2002), Dirk's son
Literature
- ISSN 0435-2408
- Die Ahnen Claus Georg von Amsberg (Euler) - Nassau und die Niederlande (Heck), Starke Verlag 1966, Sonderdruck aus Archiv für Sippenforschung Heft 21