Tabouillot
Tabouillot | |
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Noble house | |
Coat of arms of the Tabouillot family | |
Country | France, Germany, Norway, Spain |
Ethnicity | French |
Tabouillot is a French noble family, originally from Regret at Verdun. The family were originally members of the French Nobles of the Robe. After fleeing the French Revolution and the Reign of Terror, Louis de Tabouillot, was appointed an officer in the Prussian Army by special royal decree in 1795 and recognised as noble in the Kingdom of Prussia. Today, family members live in Scandinavia, Spain and Germany.
History
The family is descended from Jean de Tabouillot (ca. 1602–1672). His son, the prosecutor Claude de Tabouillot (born 1630), was the father of marchand tanneur Pierre de Tabouillot (died 1735), who was married to Nicole Gauffet. Their son, conseiller du Roi Claude de Tabouillot (1701–1786), was married to Elisabeth de Bignicourt (died 1787). They were the parents of conseiller du roi, prosecutor and police president of Verdun Louis François de Tabouillot (1733–1806), who was married to Anne de Grandfèbre (1747–1794).
Louis François de Tabouillot and Anne de Grandfèbre were the parents of Antoine Charles Louis de Tabouillot (1775–1813) and of Claire-Louise de Tabouillot (born 1775), who was married to the commissaire des guerres, René François Marchal de Corny, who belonged to a prominent noble family from Lorraine.[1]
Antoine Charles Louis de Tabouillot (1775–1813) was an officer of the French King's personal bodyguard Garde du Corps at Versailles and of the Armée des Princes, a royalist counter-revolutionary army during the French Revolution. During the Reign of Terror, he fled to the Kingdom of Prussia in 1793; his mother Anne de Grandfèbre was executed by guillotine in Paris in 1794 and the family's property in France was confiscated. In Prussia Louis de Tabouillot was accepted as a lieutenant of the Prussian Army on 29 January 1795 by a special decree of King Frederick William II of Prussia. The King promised him a promotion to captain when he had improved his knowledge of the German language.[2] Accordingly, he was later promoted to captain in the Count Wedel Fusilier Battalion. He was appointed as Mayor (French: maire) of Essen by the French during the Napoleonic Wars in 1811.[3]
In 1802, Louis de Tabouillot married Philippina Johanna von Brüning (1777–1835). They were the parents of Franz Georg Karl Wilhelm von Tabouillot (1803–1872), a judge in Münster, and of Alfred Philipp Ferdinand von Tabouillot, a wine merchant who was married to the noted feminist and socialist Mathilde von Tabouillot (later known as Mathilde Anneke).
Franz Georg Karl Wilhelm von Tabouillot was married to Karoline Luise Alexandrine von Scheibler, a member of a prominent German family and a descendant of the philosopher Christoph Scheibler. They were the parents of Lieutenant Ferdinand Franz Ludwig Heinrich Johann von Tabouillot (1840–1869), who was married to Anne Karolina Amalia von Pannwitz. On 29 June 1858, the family obtained royal permission in Prussia to combine the names and arms of Tabouillot and von Scheibler, and henceforth used the name von Tabouillot genannt von Scheibler.
Ferdinand von Tabouillot was the father of Major Franz Ferdinand Alexander Hans von Tabouillot gen. von Scheibler (1869–1844), who was married (from 1908) to Margarethe Eleonore Marie Helene von Grolman (1880–1964), a daughter of Major-General and Chamberlain at the Grand Ducal Hessian Court Karl von Grolman (1843–1909). The current family is descended from their son, Dr.jur. Wolfgang von Tabouillot gen. von Scheibler (1909–2002), who was married in his first marriage in 1938 in Oslo Militære Samfund to Ingrid Haagaas,[4] a daughter of the Norwegian private school owner Theodor Haagaas and Henriette Wegner Paus and a great-granddaughter of the industrialist Benjamin Wegner.[5][6]
Members of the family live in Germany, Spain and Scandinavia. The senior agnatic and legitimate branch of the noble family uses the Norwegian surname Haagaas.
Coat of arms
Argent, a fess azure charged with three stars, argent, en chef (over the fess) a hunting horn, en pointe (under the fess) a wheat garb, sable.[7]
References
- ↑ Biographie du Parlement de Metz p. 509
- ↑ Thomas Höpel, "Emigranten der Französischen Revolution in Preußen und Sachsen," in Daniel Schönpflug, Jürgen Voss (eds.), Révolutionnaires et Émigrés. Transfer und Migration zwischen Frankreich und Deutschland 1789–1806, Stuttgart, Thorbecke, 2002
- ↑ Essener Persönlichkeiten : biographische Aufsätze zur Essener Verwaltungs- und Kulturgeschichte, Schmidt-Verlag, Neustadt/Aisch 1986
- ↑ Aftenposten, 3 February 1938
- ↑ Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Adelslexikon Band XIV, Band 131 der Gesamtreihe, C. A. Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 2003, ISSN 0435-2408.
- ↑ "v. Tabouillot und v. Tabouillot gen. v. Scheibler". In: Marcelli Janecki: Handbuch des Preußischen Adels, Vol. II, 1892–1893.
- ↑ Emmanuel Michel, "Tabouillot," Biographie du Parlement de Metz, Nouvian, 1855 ["D'argent, à la fasce d’azur, chargée de troi étoiles, d’argent, accompagné, en chef, d'un cor de chasse, et en pointe, d’une gerbe de blé, de sable"]