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Johan Samuel Brandt (1817 - bef. 1873)

Johan Samuel Brandt
Born in Germanymap
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
[spouse(s) unknown]
Descendants descendants
Died before before age 56 in Pösen, Saale-Holzland-Kreis, Thüringen, Germanymap
Problems/Questions Profile manager: Alan Smith private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 15 Mar 2014
This page has been accessed 321 times.

Contents

Biography

This biography was auto-generated by a GEDCOM import.[1] It's a rough draft and needs to be edited.

Name

Name: Johan Samuel /Brandt/[2][3][4]
Name: Samuel /Brandt/
Name: Samuel G /Brandt/[5]

Found multiple versions of NAME. Using Johan Samuel /Brandt/.

Birth

Birth:
Date: 1817
Place: Germany
Birth:
Date: CAL 1817
Place: Germany[6]
Birth:
Date: CAL 1817
Place: Germany[7]

Found multiple copies of BIRT DATE. Using 1817

Death

Death:
Date: BEF JUN 1873
Place: Pösen, Saale-Holzland-Kreis, Thüringen, Germany[8]
Death:
Date: BEF JUN 1873
Place: Pösen, Saale-Holzland-Kreis, Thüringen, Germany
Death:
Date: BEF JUN 1873
Place: Pösen, Saale-Holzland-Kreis, Thüringen, Germany[9]

Found multiple copies of DEAT DATE. Using BEF JUN 1873Array

Event

Event: KJ5H-LQF
Type: FamilySearch Id[10]
Event: KJ5H-LQF
Type: FamilySearch Id[11]
Event: MX6T-61Y
Type: FamilySearch Id[12]
Event: MX6T-61Y
Type: FamilySearch Id[13]

Nationality

Nationality: German

Note

Note: #N25

Sources

  1. Brandt-736 was created by Ky Rogers through the import of Gedcom 2.0.ged on Mar 12, 2014. This comment and citation can be deleted after the biography has been edited and primary sources are included.
  2. Source: #S43 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Wilhelm Brandt
  3. Source: #S213 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Gustav Brandt
  4. Source: #S288 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Mary A. Brandt
  5. Source: #S213 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Mary A Diez
  6. Source: #S288 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Mary A. Brandt
  7. Source: #S43 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Wilhelm Brandt
  8. Source: #S288 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Mary A. Brandt
  9. Source: #S43 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Wilhelm Brandt
  10. Source: #S288 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Mary A. Brandt
  11. Source: #S43 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Wilhelm Brandt
  12. Source: #S288 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Mary A. Brandt
  13. Source: #S43 Page: Database online. Data: Text: Record for Wilhelm Brandt
  • Source: S213 Author: Ancestry.com Title: Washington Deaths, 1891-1907 Publication: Name: Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date:2008;; Repository: #R2
  • Repository: R2 Name: www.ancestry.com Address: E-Mail Address: Phone Number:
  • Source: S288 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Name: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Originaldata: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;; Repository: #R1
  • Repository: R1 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com E-Mail Address: Phone Number:
  • Source: S43 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Name: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Originaldata: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;; Repository: #R1 NOTEThis information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.

Notes

Note N25Napachanie (German Grundheim) is a village located in Rokietnica Commune, Poznan County, Greater Poland Voivodship, Poland. There is the soltys office, the junior high school and the palace from 1879, built in the style of Queen Anna's North-European Renaissance in the village.
When I found marriage record---yeah!
At https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Portal%3AGermany https://wiki.familysearch.org/en/Portal%3AGermany
in Research Tools section
clicking on (bulleted) Poznan Project
typing Groom suname, then typing Bride surname
<http://bindweed.man.poznan.pl/posen/search.php>
Results for extended search
Your criteria were: Groom: Brandt Bride: Monti
Region: Any Time frame: From 1820 to 1889
Exact matches: No exact matches
Approximate matches
Protestant community in Margonin, entry # 24 in 1857 score: Groom: 100% Bride: 39%
Johann Samuel Brandt (40)
Eleonore Manthey (26)
Our database only provides basic information to identify the spouses. There is no liability for the accuracy, as it depends on the quality of the record and the skills of the transcriber. The full information about the marriage can only be found in the original records.
The original record for this marriage is held in the Archdiocesan Archive in Poznań, Poland. You can write for the certificate to the address provided below. Further genealogical research is also offered there.
Please make a reference to the Poznan Project as the source of your information when contacting the archive!
Archiwum Archidiecezjalne w Poznaniu
ul. Ks. Ignacego Posadzego 2
61-108 Poznan
POLAND
WWW: http://www.aap.poznan.pl
E-mail: sekretariat@@aap.poznan.pl
Format explanations etc. <expl.php>
Catholic recordsLutheran recordsCivil records
Margonin (Chodziez) 5258 1706 PI
Roman Catholic parish
3000 souls (in 1888)
Includes: Antonienhof, Borowskie Olędry, Clotildenhof, Eduardshof, Eichenau, Heliodorowo, Josephsruh, Józefowo, Konarskie Huby, Konary, Kowalewo, Laskowo, Lipińskie Olędry, Lipiny, Ludwigshorst, Marcinek, Margonin, Margońska Wies, Mariannenhof, Melmuch (Muchmuehle), Mylerowo, Nadolnik, Nałęcza, Nowe Próchnowo, Piłka (Sagemuhl), Szamocin (Samotschin), Smolary, Staszewo, Sypniewo, Szamocińskie Olędry, Weśrednik, WitkowiceArchdiocesan Archive in GnieznoB 1897-1955M 1889-1955D 1914-1955Archdiocesan Archive in PoznanB 1697-1896M 1697-1889D 1690-1913State Archive in PoznanB 1808-1811 1815-1817M 1809-1810 1814-1817D 1808-1817Local Roman Catholic ParishB 1897-M 1889-D 1914-
LDS microfilms
BD 1808-1809 BM 1809-1810 BMD 1810-1811 D 1811-1813 MD 1814 746796BMD 1815-1817 746797 #1MD 1810-1811 BMD 1819 746797 #2B 1697-1761 M 1697-1763 B 1761-1780 M 1780-1782 1769-1782 D 1690-1784 B 1782-1791 1191106 #4-7B 1816-1817 M 1797-1817 D 1807-1822 B 1817-1837 M 1817-1837 D 1822-1825 1191107D 1825-1837 B 1838-1850 D 1838-1850 M 1838-1865 B 1851-1854 1191108B 1791-1797 M 1782-1797 D 1782-1797 B 1780-1782 1797-1806 D 1797-1807 B 1806-1816 1201190B 1854-1872 D 1851-1873 M 1866-1889 B 1873-1878 1201191B 1878-1896 D 1874-1900 1201192 #1-2B 1897-1923 1781038 #1B 1923-1946 1781038 #2B 1947-1948 1940 1781038 #3B 1949-1950 1781038 #4B 1951-1955 1781038 #5M 1889-1898 1781038 #6M 1899-1927 1781249 #1M 1927-1948 1781249 #2M 1949-1955 1781249 #3D 1914-1948 1781249 #4D 1949-1955 1781249 #5D 1900-1913 2060223 #5
Lutheran community
1772 *
1642 souls (ca. 1900)
Archdiocesan Archive in PoznanB 1831-1945M 1835-1945D 1790-1944State Archive in PoznanB 1819M 1810-1811 1819D 1810-1811 1819
LDS microfilms
BD 1835-1875 M 1841-1875 807961 #2-5B 1831-1835 1194737 #3B 1835-1895 1194738D 1790-1884 1194739D 1884-1942 1194740 #1B 1895-1944 M 1835-1943 D 1790-1830 1194961M 1841-1875 1197692 #4M 1862-1874 1197692 #5
Civil registry
USC Margonin
State Archive in PilaB 1874- i1874-1899 CityM 1874-1894 1896- i1874-1899 CityD 1874-1894 1896- i1874-1899 CityB 1874-1885 LandM 1874-1885 LandD 1874-1885 Land
OL C
Zentralstelle für Genealogie in LeipzigM 1841-1875
The Grand Duchy of Poznan~
by Edward Callier, From the Sl~ownik Geograficzny
Population [Vol. 8, p. 955]... The population of Poznan is primarily Catholic. In some areas there are Protestant Poles, and in others German Catholics. Jews who have become wealthy move westward (see E. v. Bergmann, Zur Geschichte der Entwickelung Deutscher, Polnischer und Juedischer Bevoelkerung in der Provinz Posen seit 1824, Tuebingen, 1883). The [German] colonists brought in by Friedrich II and settled along the Notec~ river have become inveterate foes of the people they live among. The same attitude appears among German Protestants, both in the villages and in the towns. As of 1837 there were in the Grand Duchy the following numbers of townsmen: 142,812 Poles, 91,462 Germans, and 71,177 Jews. Later statistics do not differentiate the inhabitants on the basis of nationality.
In the opinion of those in government, there are no Poles within the borders of the nation of Prussia, there are only Prussians and Germans, differing only in creed. Of the towns of Poznan~, the following have predominantly German populaces: Bojanowo, Brojce, Bydgoszcz, Chodziez*, Czarnko~w, Fordon~, Kargowa, L~abiszyn, Leszno, L~obz*enica, Lutomys~l, Margonin, Miasteczko, Mie~dzycho~d, Mie~dzyrzecz, Ostro~w, Pil~a, Radolin, Rakoniewice, Rawicz, Rostarzewo, Rydzyna, Rynarzewo, Sierako~w, Skwirzyna, Szamocin, Szlichtyngowa, Trzcianka, Wielen~, Wolsztyn, Wyrzysko and Zaborowo.
The middle-class Poles of Poznan~ are improving themselves from the moral, intellectual, economic, and national standpoints. There is currently growth in the ranks of the Polish intelligentsia, consisting of priests, doctors, lawyers, literary men, merchants, tradesmen, and other such industrialists. The Germans recruit their intelligentsia mainly from the officials. The Jews form a separate circle of intelligentsia; comparatively more Jewish children go to institutes of higher learning.
History [p. 957]: The history of the Grand Duchy of Poznan~ - Polish name Wielkie Ksie~stwo Poznan~skie, German name Provinz Posen - begins with the year 1815; before then its territory belonged to various divisions of the Polish nation. The period from 1772 to 1815 was a state of transition. In 1772 the Prussian Army, on the basis of an agreement made with the Russian Empress Catherine, occupied the right basin of the Notec~ river and the northern extremity of Inowrocl~aw province from Nakl~o to Solec from above the Wisl~a sin of the Notec~ river and the northern extremity of Inowrocl~aw province from Nakl~o to Solec on the Wisl~a [Solec Kujawski]. The Commonwealth of Poland confirmed this partition; finding no opposition, the Prussian plenipotentiary, von Brenkenhoff, reached out along the left bank of the Notec~ and took Rynarzewo; encouraged by a request from Mrs. Sko~rzewska, he advanced the border of this partition through L~abiszyn. This course of affairs pleased the Prussian king. In February, 1773 he ordered the taking of 15 towns on the left basin of the Notec~, and the next year 13 more in Inowrocl~aw province. On 22 May 1775 in Inowrocl~aw his envoy accepted the required oath of allegiance from the assembled classes. The continued southward advance of the Prussian border finally awoke the tottering Com-monwealth. There was an uproar, which the King of Prussia soothed in 1775 by returning Powidz, while holding onto an area enclosed by a cordon: Wielen~, Radolin, Budzyn~, Margonin, Kcynia, Z*nin, Ga~sawa, Mogilno, Ge~bice, Strzelno, Gniewko~w. This was confirmed by an agreement in Warsaw on 22 August 1776.
Having secured possession of both sides of the Notec~ river basin by this treaty, Friedrich II undertook regulating rivers, draining meadows, digging canals, and attracting settlers. In January 1793 the Prussians seized the land known thenceforth as Southern Prussia, and the Grodno sejm confirmed this partition. The Rebellion of 1794 moved Great Poland as well, and Madalin~ski and Da~broski operated there at that time. The former defeated the Prussians at L~abiszyn on 30 September 1794 and captured Bydgoszcz on 2 October. The failure of the rebellion hastened the final collapse of the Polish nation and exposed many Poles to confiscation of their property. "A disgrace to the government," says Heinrich Wuttke, monographer of the Poznan~ region, "was the seizing of many estates that were torn away from their rightful owners and given to the unworthy gang that included Friedrich Wilhelm, or apparently sold at give-away prices." Several years later the Prussian government seized the estates of the clergy and created from them so-called "royal demesnes" (see "Gdzie sie~ podzial~y nasze kro~lewszczyzny?" ["What happened to our royal estates?"], Poznan~, 1879). So far no one has compiled a list of the estates seized
Schneidemuhl, Posen, Germany now called Pila, Poznan, Poland.




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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Johan Samuel by comparing test results with other carriers of his Y-chromosome or his mother's mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Johan Samuel:

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