Jauch | |
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Current region | |
Earlier spellings | Joherr |
Etymology | yes-man[2] |
Place of origin |
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Members |
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Distinctions |
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Traditions | Honorary almoners for Hamburg's ″General Institution for the Poor of 1788″. |
Heirlooms |
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Estate(s) |
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The Jauch family of Germany is a Hanseatic family which can be traced back till the Late Middle Ages. At the end of the 17th century, the family showed up in the Free Imperial and Hanseatic City of Hamburg. The members of the family acted as long-distance merchants. They became hereditary grand burghers of Hamburg and were Lords of Wellingsbüttel Manor – nowadays a quarter of Hamburg.
The Jauch have brought forth some notable lineal descendants, both patrilineal and matrilineal. They can trace the nearer cognatic kinship of the issue of the progenitor Johann Christian Jauch the Elder (1638–1718) in the following centuries to a number of renowned contemporaries.
Jaherr = Jasager;
auch, schon, doch, wenn gleich = Joch, Jauch;
Die hölzerne Barockwiege von ca. 1730 war ein Geschenk Königs August II. an Joachim Daniel von Jauch, dem Königlichen Bevollmächtigten für Bauangelegenheiten, zur Taufe seines Sohnes. Der Überlieferung nach diente sie im Säuglingsalter auch dem später herausragenden polnischen Historiker Joachim Lelewel (1786–1861), der ein Urenkel Joachim Daniel von Jauchs gewesen ist.