Familienstammbaum Knol » Jan Bosch (± 1852-????)

Persönliche Daten Jan Bosch 


Familie von Jan Bosch

Er ist verheiratet mit Kunje Jans Knol.


"Ernstheem" is now on Eenrumerweg in Winsum, near Eenrum, on the road from Mensingeweer to Baflo.
The northeastern Knol farm is located at coordinate: N53 21.712 E6 28.549

In the 16th century, the Korendijk 5 farm formed a center for Anabaptists.
The crippled well-off farmer Eppe Peters made his farm available for services under the direction of Obbe Philips in 1534, giving the farm the name လden Arck upt Sandtဝ, လDe arcke Noëဝ ( ~Noahမs Ark) or simply လDe Arck".

In 1534¬â€ Jacob van Campen¬â€ and¬â€ Obbe Philips¬â€ stayed here for a time. The latter no doubt founded the congregations in¬â€ Appingedam¬â€ and¬â€ 't Zandt¬â€ and perhaps also the one in the city of Groningen. The presence of Anabaptists in the city is attested by a record of 3 May 1534, which forbids their presence there.
On 8 May the Anabaptists were expelled from the province. But these edicts were indifferently enforced; the severest penalties were fines and temporary exile; only one was put to death in Groningen. Up to this time the movement seems to have been chiliastic, but entirely peaceful in character; even when the¬â€ M√ºnsterites¬â€ gained the upper hand, the peaceful element was not submerged. "There were peaceful Anabaptists before, during, and after the M√ºnster episode" (K√ºhler). The revolutionary movement was brief, but very powerful in Groningen.
Twenty-eight emissaries were sent out from M√ºnster in 1534. One of them, Claes van Alkmaer, reached the province of Groningen and found two believers ready to return with him to the New Jerusalem. They were¬â€ Jacob Kremer¬â€ of Winsum and Tonnis (Antonius) Kistemaecker of Appingedam. In December they returned to spread¬â€ Rothmann's¬â€ Van der Wrake, a work of propaganda.
Kistemaecker now remained in Appingedam, where there was a considerable Obbenite congregation. He apparently became the originator of the Zandt revolutionary movement, which took place at the farm of the wealthy Eppe Pieters. The farm was known as လden Arck upt Sandtဝ, လDe arcke Noëဝ (Noahမs Ark) or simply လde Arck".

About the middle of January 1535 some 1,000 persons assembled here and more than 300 people were baptized at the meeting. Hans Schoenmaker proclaimed himself the Messiah; and encouraged the assembly to kill all priests and government authorities and inherit their kingdom. The local magistrate was powerless to counter the movement. In addition to Schoenmaker,¬â€ Cornelis int Kerckhof¬â€ (Kershof) near Garsthuizen now appeared as "true" Messiah. Now the Stadholder took steps against them; the group itself also turned against Hans. Andries Droogscheerder, with the odd nickname of "Doctor Nenytken," openly expressed his doubt about this Messiah.
Hans was imprisoned in Groningen and soon died there, having lost his mind. Cornelis was also seized, but released after giving a confession. The movement can therefore not have been a real threat to the state. Meetings of Anabaptists in¬â€ Leermens¬â€ and 't Zandt were dispersed ·Äî nothing more happened.

After the disappearance of Anabaptism, the area remained an important area for Mennonites.

source : https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Groningen_(Netherlands)

also know as Saint Johannes Lutheran Cemetery and is located at
3175 N. Teutonia Ave
Milwaukee, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, 53206 USA

Another Union Cemetery is located at:
5982 North Port Washington Road
Glendale, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, 53217 USA

The remains of 36,069 soldiers (as of Aug 2014) from all wars are interred here, including 16,485 known Union Civil War soldiers and 4,141 unknowns. Established in 1867, the original interments were the remains of Union soldiers removed from temporary burial grounds around Nashville·Äôs general hospitals, as well as the Civil War battlefields at Franklin and Gallatin, Tennessee, and Bowling Green and Cave City, Kentucky. The stone wall surrounding the property and the limestone archway at the entrance were completed about 1870. The cemetery was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.

NOTE: No Confederate soldiers are buried in Nashville National Cemetery.

Sie haben geheiratet am 20. März 1879 in Oldehove, Gemeente Zuidhorn, Groningen, Netherlands.Quelle 1


Notizen bei Jan Bosch


Vader Jan Freerks Bosch
Moeder Frouwke Jans Elema (landbouwersche)

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Quellen

  1. Oldehove huwelijksregister 1879, aktenummer 3, via https://www.allegroningers.nl/zoeken-op-...

Über den Familiennamen Bosch

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Justin Knol, "Familienstammbaum Knol", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/knol-tree/I86330880.php : abgerufen 7. Januar 2026), "Jan Bosch (± 1852-????)".