Weber (Franconian family)
The Weber family is the name of a Catholic German noble family from Bavaria. Originating in Upper Franconia, the male line originates with Friedrich Weber (died 1739), huntsman of the Prince Bishop of Bamberg, as well as mayor of Marktleugast.
Ennoblement
Personal knighthood upon being awarded the rank of Commander of the Order of Merit of the Bavarian Crown on 19 May 1808 for Georg Michael Weber, president of the Royal Bavarian Court of Appeals in Neuburg on the Danube, later Appeals Court vice president in Amberg, with matriculation among the knightly class in the Kingdom of Bavaria on 28 May 1813.
Bavarian hereditary nobility and knighthood (Ritter) on 30 April 1845 in Munich for his son Karl Weber, a royal Bavarian government secretary, 1st class in Augsburg with enrollment in the knightly class on 27 June 1845.
Coat of arms
1813: Azure between two mullets or a bend argent. Mantling: gules and argent. Crest: five ostrich feathers, azure-or-or-or-azure.(See Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, below.)
1845: Azure between two mullets or a bend argent. Mantling: azure and or. Crest: three ostrich feathers, azure-argent-azure.[1]
The noted mathematician Eduard Ritter von Weber is a member of the family, branches of which can be found in America and Germany. Members have married into the aristocratic families of Chrustschoff (ancient Russian nobles) and von Hahnsberg.
References
- Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelslexikon Band XV, Seite 490, Band 134 der Gesamtreihe, C. A. Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 2004, ISBN 3-7980-0834-5
- Siebmachers Wappenbuch: Bayerischer Adel, Edelleute, Band II, page 122 (written description), table 150 (picture of arms). It is important to note that this image does not match the blazon of arms given in the same workâthe bend sinister and the gules in the field of the shield and mantling are errors.
- Notes
- Siebmacher, Johann (1856). von Heffner, Otto Titan; Heyer von Rosenfeld, Friedrich (eds.). J. Siebmachers grosses und allgemeines Wappenbuch (in German). Bauer & Raspe. p. 122.