The House of Finck von Finckenstein is a noble family classified as Uradel ( German for 'ancient nobility'). It is one of the oldest Prussian aristocratic families extant, dating back to the 12th century in the Duchy of Carinthia .
5-743: Finckenstein may refer to: Finck von Finckenstein , a German aristocratic family, Imperial Counts of the Holy Roman Empire and Counts in Prussia Finckenstein Palace , ( Schloss Finckenstein ) in former East Prussia, today Poland Kamieniec Suski , Poland, prior to 1945: Finckenstein a village in former East Prussia Treaty of Finckenstein (1807) Finckenstein coat of arms Finkenstein am Faaker See , town in Carinthia in Austria from where
10-864: The Prussian State Archive Königsberg , the first representative of the family appeared authentically with one 'Niche of Roghusen' in 1388 in Roggenhausen in the State of the Teutonic Order . However, his allocation is uncertain; under its current name, the house appears authentically in 1451 with 'Michael Fincke' who calls himself 'Finck von Roggenhausen' in 1474. The family was raised to Imperial Counts ( Reichsgrafen ) and Counts ( Grafen ) in Prussia as 'Finck von Finckenstein' in 1710. The Finck von Finckenstein's Imperial Count Diploma of 1710 determines as
15-597: The Finck von Finckenstein family originally comes from according to the Imperial Count Diploma Burgruine Finkenstein , the Finkenstein ruined castle in Carinthia, Austria Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Finckenstein . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to
20-717: The cradle of the house of Finck von Finckenstein the today dilapidated Finkenstein Castle ruin in Carinthia . Hereafter the house appears for the first time 1143 with Gotwold von Finkenstein, Master of Finkenstein in Carinthia. The Carinthian branch of the Finckensteins died in the 14th century, a junior branch, however, joined the Order of St John and after possibly participating in the Third Crusade conquered Old Prussia and Christianised
25-460: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Finckenstein&oldid=724381664 " Categories : Prussian nobility German noble families Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Finck von Finckenstein According to
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