Teague-Earnest Family Tree » JOHANNES Hans Schnepp Jr. 9th GGF (1605-> 1670)

Données personnelles JOHANNES Hans Schnepp Jr. 9th GGF

Source 1

Famille de JOHANNES Hans Schnepp Jr. 9th GGF

Cette personne est marié(e) avec APOLLONIA Mauser.

Ils se sont mariés le 16 novembre 1629 à Plobsheim, Bas-Rhin, Alsace, France, à l\'âge de 24 ans.


Enfant(s):

  1. Georg Schnepp  1635-????


Notes par JOHANNES Hans Schnepp Jr. 9th GGF

NOTE: Several biographical sketches of Hans Schnepp on Geneanet and Ancestry.com have a specific date of death at Ingenheim. THERE IS NO SUCH RECORD in the Ingenheim parish register.

Young Hans Schnepp was working as a shepherd at Haegen, a hamlet in the parish of Maurermünster (now Marmoutier), a few miles west of Plobsheim in 1629, but came back to Plobsheim, where his father lived, to marry Apollonia Mauser.[1] It is not known where Hans grew up but it was probably in the Illkirch-Graffenstaden, Plobsheim area and he probably knew Apollonia for some time, perhaps he had even apprenticed as a shepherd with her step-father, Christmann Götz.

Hans and Apollonia soon settled in the village of Entzheim, several miles north of Plobsheim, where he worked as the community shepherd and a daughter, Maria, was born in February, 1631. Long-time associate of the Mauser-Götz family, Balthasar Klipfel, a brickmaker, along with Hans Wandereiss and his wife Anna from Plobsheim and Andreas and Magdalena Melchior from Graffenstaden, traveled to Entzheim to act as sponsors for the first child of Hans and Apollonia. [2]. In the spring of 1632 Hans Schnepp, "Shepherd at Entzheim," sponsored a son of Hans Wandereiss at Plobsheim. He was still a shepherd at Entzheim when his next child, a son, Johannes, was born in January 1633 and taken to Plobsheim for baptism on January 24th. His sponsors were the same friends and associates who had sponsored their first child.

Many families from the Alsatian villages near the City of Strasbourg fled their homes as the French armies came through in 1635 and took refuge in Strasbourg. Hans and Apollonia Schnepp were among them and while there a second son, Georg, was born and baptized at St. Nicholas Church, June 28, 1635. The baptismal sponsors were the same old friends and associates from Plobsheim who had sponsored their other children, and who like Hans and Apollonia, had taken refuge in Strasbourg. [3]

By 1638 the war was still raging but the situation in the countryside had improved and villagers began to return. Hans and Apollonia did not go back to Entzheim but went to Plobsheim, where he became a village herdsman, in time for daughter, Christina, to be born there. They took her into Illkirch to be baptized, December 16, 1638, and the pastor wrote Hans's name in the register as Hans Schnepff. The war had taken its toll and the only long time associate who was among the sponsors of Christina, was Anna, wife of Hans Wandereiss. [4]. They were still in Plobsheim when Apollonia died and was buried September 12, 1640. Her age was given as 34 years. [5].

Hans Schnepp married Maria Helffer, "daughter of the late Hans Helffer of Ohnheim," May 9, 1641 at Plobsheim. [6]. Ohnheim was in the Plobsheim parish but there is no other mention of Maria or her father in the records there. Hans and Maria remained at Plobsheim and had a son, Valentin, baptized there, February 8, 1642. By this time the only associate from the earlier years among the sponsors of Valentin, was Anna, now the widow of Hans Wandereiss [7]. The next child to be born to Hans and Maria was Matthias, baptized at Entzheim, February 18, 1644 [8]. None of the sponsors were old associates of the Mauser-Gotz family.

Hans and Maria moved into Graffenstaden, in the Illkirch parish, in 1645, where he became the community shepherd-herdsman. Their daughter, Maria was baptized December 9, 1645 and was sponsored by Anna, wife of Hans Bischoff, a cow-herder from Wibolsheim and Agnes, daughter of Andreas Melchior of Graffenstaden, who had himself sponsored several of the children of Hans and his first wife, Apollonia. [9] Hans and Maria had another son, Martin, baptized at Illkirch November 1, 1647 and again Agnes Melchior was one of the sponsors. [10]

Hans and Maria remained at Graffenstaden for the next decade, but sometime after 1656, when his son, Hans "the younger," married there, and before 1664, they moved further north and west to Ingolsheim, where Hans continued to work as a shepherd. His daughter, Maria, married Hans Hammann at Ingenheim in 1664, his son, Valentin, married in 1665 and Hans was still called "shepherd here" when his son, Matthias, married at Ingolsheim in May, 1670. [11]. Hans would have been close to age 65 by then and no doubt died within a few years but no death date has been found. There is also no further record of his second wife, Maria Helffer.

Sources
Parish Registers of Plobsheim, Illkirch-Graffenstaden, Strasbourg and Ingolsheim, Archives du Bas-Rhin, Strasbourg, France, cited in Footnotes. digital versions of the original records are now online.

Footnotes
↑ Plobsheim Paroisse Protestante BMS 1588-1714, p. 118/59.
↑ Entzheim Paroisse protesante 1594-1666, p. 55
↑ St. Nicholas Paroisse protestante BMS, 1623-1639, p. 117.
↑ Illkirch-Graffenstaden Paroisse protestante BMS, 1620-1661, p. 142
↑ Plobsheim Paroisse protestante BMS, 1588-1714, p. 308 / 327
↑ Plobsheim Paroisse protesante BMS, 1588-1714, p. 421
↑ Ibid., p. 160/83
↑ Entzheim Paroisse protestante, BMS, 1594-1666, p. 118/64
↑ Illkirch-Graffenstaden Paroisse protestante BMS, 1620-1661, p. 179.
↑ Ibid. p. 189
↑ Ingenheim Paroisse protestante BMS, 1650-1736, p. 83

Entzheim is located about 10 miles SW of Strasbourg, France, and Plobsheim is located about 10 miles S of Strasbourg. In any case, the two villages are located about 5 or 6 miles from each other.)
The Alsace-Lorraine region of present-day France has "belonged" to both France and Germany in the past.It originally was part of the Holy Roman Empire, but gradually became part of France from 1552 to 1798, by way of conquest and diplomatic compromises.
After the Franco-Prussian War, it was annexed by the newly-created German Empire in 1871. It remained in German control until after WWI.
In 1919, the territory was returned to France by the Treaty of Versailles (another "diplomatic/political" solution).In 1940, the territory was once again annexed by Nazi Germany, but reverted to France after WWII in 1945. It has remained French territory ever since.
An interesting thing about this portion of France is that if you look on a map in small-scale, you will see that the towns and villages have German names. If you look at it geographically, it looks as though it should be part of Germany.
Actually, the early occupants of that region were Germanic in origin, not French. At the time when immigrants were leaving that area and coming to America, they were predominately of German origin and spoke German, not French.
These Colonial emigrants from Alsace-Lorraine settled in PA and VA among other German emigrants.Looking at the names in this database, I see many, many people with German names, from towns and villages with German names, but actually from what is now (and was then) France! Many researchers have them from "Alsace-Lorraine, Germany"; but, the dates for these people don't support entering them being born or married, or having died, in Germany. For all those events and dates, the territory was FRANCE.
Following is a list of "German" surnames from "Alsace-Lorraine, France" who emigrated to America, and whose descendants married almost exclusively into other German families in PA and VA, and sometimes into our "Germanna" families:DUTT, BECKER, BEIBEL, BIEBER, CONRAD, FORNEY (spelling?), FREIMANN (FRYMAN), HABER, HAUPMANN, HEIRONYMUS, HELFER, KRUM (CRUM), LIEBENGUT, LOHR, MAUSER, MÜLLER (MILLER), SCHIRMER (SCHYMER), SCHNEPP (SNAPP), SNAVELY (spelling?), STEPHAN (STEVEN, SEPHEN, STEPHENS), STOCKEL, WEIDACH, WOHLJUNG.One might wonder WHY these people living in France had German surnames and lived in towns and villages with German names. Well, the truth is, as stated above, this area of Europe had always been inhabited by people of Germanic origin. The fact that the area changed hands several times between France and Germany didn't change the fact that they were GERMANS! The towns and villages from which these people immigrated lie between about 3 miles to about 15 miles from the French-German border. If you look at a good map of this area, and see where the border runs SE down to just north of Saint Avold, France, it seems logical that the border should continue southward to just east of Audincourt, France. If the border actually followed that course, all of "Alsace-Lorraine" WOULD be in Germany, as it should be. West of my imaginary border, all of the towns and villages have French names; east of that line, almost all of the towns and villages have German names! So much for politics and diplomacy when it comes to nations getting together and drawing borders

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Ancêtres (et descendants) de JOHANNES Hans Schnepp Jr.

Wolfgang Schnepp
± 1550-< 1625
ELSBETH Veltin
± 1560-< 1584

JOHANNES Hans Schnepp Jr.
1605-> 1670

1629
APOLLONIA Mauser
1606-1640

Georg Schnepp
1635-????

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    Les sources

    1. Global, Find A Grave Index for Burials at Sea and other Select Burial Locations, 1300s-Current, Ancestry.com / Ancestry.com

    Événements historiques

    • En l'an 1605: Source: Wikipedia
      • 10 février » découverte de l'île d'Anaa par Pedro Fernandes de Queirós.
      • 26 juillet » malgré le roi Henri IV, les protestants français se réunissent en assemblée à Châtellerault.
      • 27 juillet » fondation de Port-Royal en Acadie, colonie française en Amérique du Nord. Les Français sont les premiers européens à s'implanter dans ce qui est aujourd'hui devenu le Canada, ouvrant ainsi la voie à la création d'un Empire colonial français.
      • 27 septembre » victoire de la république des Deux Nations sur Charles IX de Suède à la bataille de Kircholm.
      • 5 novembre » à Londres, la Conspiration des poudres, par laquelle l'officier catholique Guy Fawkes projetait de faire sauter le Parlement d'Angleterre et de tuer le roi protestant Jacques I, est découverte et se solde par un échec.
    • En l'an 1629: Source: Wikipedia
      • 6 mars » en Allemagne, promulgation par l'empereur de l'édit de Restitution.
      • 10 mars » Charles Ier d'Angleterre dissout le parlement.
      • 22 mai » Ferdinand II et Christian IV signent la paix de Lübeck, qui met fin à la participation danoise dans la guerre de Trente Ans.
      • 4 juin » naufrage du Batavia.
      • 28 juin » promulgation de la paix d'Alès.
      • 25 septembre » signature du traité de paix d'Altmark mettant fin au conflit entre la Pologne de Sigismond III et le Royaume de Suède de Gustave II Adolphe.
    

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    Source: Wikipedia


    Sur le nom de famille Schnepp Jr.


    Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
    Charlotte Bryan-Matzke, "Teague-Earnest Family Tree", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/teague-earnest-family-tree/P4952.php : consultée 15 juin 2024), "JOHANNES Hans Schnepp Jr. 9th GGF (1605-> 1670)".