Both family

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House of Both
Country

Kingdom of Hungary

  • Kingdom of Croatia
Founded 13th century
Cadet branches

Bothfalva branch
Bajna branch
Szikava and Bélavár branch

  • House of Bélaváry
    • House of Burchard-Bélaváry

The Both family is an Hungarian aristocratic family who gave many personalities. Its members were Magnats Magnificus and medieval barons of the Kingdom of Hungary since the 13th century.

History

It gave different branches:

  • Both de Bothfalva (bodafalvai Both), which is issue from Osl de genere Csorna, who had seven sons. The Osl family were one the clans of the seven Magyar tribes, who received the task of colonizing the actual Győr-Moson-Sopron County. The oldest archives of the Both family date from 1282.
    • Bot (Bod, Bud) de Kistarnóc, Felsősebes lord, son of Gotthard (or Lothard) of Csorna. He received in 1285 the castle and lands of Kistarnóc from the King Ladislaus IV of Hungary, and Panatarnóca by Charles I of Hungary in 1310, that area becomes Budfalva (now Ботфалва in Ukraine).
    • Péter Both Botfalvai († c. 1417), főispán (supremus comes) of Ugocsa.
    • György Both de Botfalvai († c. 1451) főispán de Ung.
  • Both de Sycava et Bélavar (szikavai és bélavári Both, from the precedent), next Burchard von Bélavary de Sicava, who gave a famous dynasty of pharmacists in Tallinn, in Estonia, in the Raeapteek (from Johann I. to Johann X. ; 1582 - 1911).
    • György Both de Szikava et Bélavár († 1588), royal judge, captain of the Devín Castle.
    • Dávid Bélavary, diplomat, influential Councillor of Prince Gabriel Bethlen, president of the Chamber of Hungary (1621–1624), lord and captain of Mukachevo, president of the royal chamber for Upper Hungary, in Kassa.
    • Konrád Bélaváry de Sikava (18th century - 19th century), General, governor of Nubia.
    • Konrád Burchard-Bélaváry (1837–1916), Consul general of Brazilia in Budapest, Business magnate, member of the House of Magnats.
    • Rudolf/Rezsö von Burchard-Bélavary (1870 -), son of Konrad. PhD in economics and political science, business magnate and Councillor and Chef de service to the Ministry of the Interior (miniszteri titkár).
    • Andor Burchard-Bélaváry (1880-1947). He is a royal MD with the title of Senior Councillor of the Government (kormányfőtanácsos), and a businessman.
    • Julius-Konrad Gyula Burchard-Bélaváry (1820–1917), engineer, captain of Hussar, commandant in the Hungarian army during the Hungarian Revolution in 1848, he was next to his friend general count Henryk Dembiński. He later became the CEO of the French champagne Delbeck and president of the Union of Great Brands (Syndicat de Grandes Marques), in Reims.
    • István Burchard-Bélaváry (1864–1933), artist.
    • Marcel Burchard-Bélaváry (1864–1914), French commandant, writer, he is killed in the beginnings of the First World War.

Main alliances

Csapy (c. 1465), Csáky (16th century), Bánffy de Alsólindva (15th-16th century), Batthyány (1508), Horváth (c. 1555), Istvánffy (c. 1560), Hassaghi (16th), Hagymássy (15th), von Canferbeck (c. 1580), von Spreckelsen (c. 1630), Viczmándy de Izbugya (c. 1630), Dessewffy (1663), von Thieren (1649, 1698), von Wistinghausen (1678, 1747), von Cahl (1679), von Knorring (c. 1748), von zur Mühlen (1757), Rausch de Traubenberg (c. 1770), von Rosenberg (1774), von Kursell (c. 1785), Krakus-Mayerin (1786), von Smitten (c. 1800), Wiemuth (c. 1822), Bukowski von Stolzenburg (c. 1820), von Glehn (1823, 1831), Oláh de Landser (ca 1850), Wojakowski (1824), von Wimpffe (de) (19th-20th)), Delbeck) (1857), Henriot (1887), Noël (1887, 1896), Pallavicini (1901), du Authier (c. 1905).

gallery

Sources

  • Magyar Heraldikai és Geneológiai Társaság, Budapest, 1894, 1899, 1901, 1902, 1926
  • Récits de famille, Histoire de la Famille Burchard-Bélavàry, by Cdt Marcel Burchard-Bélavary, Berger-Levrault et Cie, Nancy, 1906; La Hulpe, Bruxelles, 2001
  • A Bothfalvi B. -család címere by Meliorisz B., Turul, 1901 (netlexicon.hu)
  • Nagykanizsa - Romlottvár, by George Szekér dipl. Architecte, 2007, Budapest
  • The Business Strategy of Fathers and Sons:A Hungarian Family in the 19th and 20th Centuries, Klement Judit, ed. in AETAS - Journal of history and related disciplines (1-2/2005)

See also

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