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Doede van Voorhout
- Preferred Name: Doede van Voorhout[1] [2] [3]
- Alternate Name: Doede Van Voorhout
- Alternate Name: van Voorhout
- Gender: M
- Nickname:
- Birth: ABT 1100 in Voorhout, Noord Holland, Netherlands at LATI: N2.2224 LONG: E0.4851
- Burial: 1161 with note: GEDCOM data
- Death: 1161 in Wassenaar, Zuid-Holland Netherlands at LATI: N2.1434 LONG: E0.4013 with note: GEDCOM data
- Occupation: Drost van HollandBET 1167 AND 1189
- FSID: GM1X-LLL
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
About Doede van Voorhout
Personal data Doede van Voorhout
Born around 1100. [Source 1]
Died before 1161. [Source 2]
Connecting points
This person also appears in the Pedigree of the Van der Stelt-Verberg family.
Doede van Voorhout and his family
Relationship with Woman Van Doede van Voorhout.
Children):
Christmas decoration of Wassenaer (Van Raephorst) ± 1130- ± 1189
Notes by Doede van Voorhout
Alias Dudo de Furneholt Wealthy Rhineland nobleman. Listed in 1101-1130. .
Mentioned in a charter of 1108, in which he testifies before the bishop of Utrecht together with the count and viscount Halewijn I van Leiden. Alias *: Dudo de Furneholt Son: Kerstant van Raephorst * Mentioned 1101-1130. It can be concluded from the "Old register of Count Florins" from around 1282 that he was in possession of the ferry over the Rhine, at the location of the current bridge Het Haagse Schouw, formerly called Doedinxvere, and Schouw van Duivenvoorde. It is now established, however, that this loan was originally greater than is apparent from the record of around 1282. Indeed, there is an older description of the loan which states that the loan included "die vere verische des Rijnsover ende Zwadenburdamme", ie the ferry right on the Rhine between Katwijk and Zwammerdam. In other words; Doede must have possessed the ferry right over the entire Dutch part of the Rhine. Such a property stamps the owner into an important lordship. This can be further illustrated by the fact that the toll was traditionally held by the viscount over the same area of the Rhine. Both rights are derived from the lordly steam regal. The importance of the Doeninx ferry is also evident from a connecting medieval road. This has been reconstructed from 's-Gravenzande via Monster,' s-Gravenhage and Wassenaar directly to the Schouw. Over the entire distance, this road bore the name of Rijnweg in the Middle Ages, to first be given the name Doedinxlaan (Doeslaan) near the ferry. The owner and also the name giver of the fief will have to be searched among the prominent Rhineland nobles. Only a nobleman qualifies for this: Doede van Voorhout. The question remains, what significance can be attached to it that the Rhineland nobleman Doede calls himself with the surname "Van Voorhout". In the first quarter of the twelfth century a possession of the craftsmanship cannot be said to exist, a considerable vroonhof on the spot is not known, the church with the tithes of Voorhoud is early in the hands of Egmond Abbey. Could Doede have taken his name from some connection with the dire castle, which was located within the parish of Voorhoud, and which we still know today as the ruin of Teilingen?
It is remarkable that around the time that persons with the name "Van Teilingen" first appear (1162 and 1174), we can assume that the interests of the son of Doede are concentrated within Wassenaar and not in Voorhout. The Van Doede family has given up his rights in Voorhout on behalf of Van Teijlingen's relative to the count's house. Teylingen in Voorhout The first castles in the Netherlands were completed. Many had arisen from a motte, which looked like the castle of Leiden today. However, Teylingen seems to be an ordinary round moated castle, which dates from the early thirteenth century. The castle initially consisted of a keep and a gate tower with stair tower. These buildings were connected by a high brick boundary wall of about 7 meters in height, with a walkway on arches. The whole lay in a circular moat. The outer castle was on a separate site in front of the castle, which was also moated. In later years, the keep was replaced by a tower-shaped brick residential building built into the ring wall, which was several stories high. The castle was founded here to guard the Rijndijk and the road to Haarlem on the edge of the then existing forests. It takes a lot of imagination to recall this situation when you are on the site of the current castle ruin! The current castle ruin has a diameter of approximately 37 meters. The gatehouse is located on the north side. The main building has been built against the wall on the east side, which now has a height of approximately 19 meters. On the inside, its width is about 16 meters, on the wall side about 24 meters. The depth of the main building is about 11 meters. Another Teylingen, which was called Oud-Teylingen, but was later called Lokhorst, was located at Warmond. Originally Teylingen was inhabited by the Lords of Teylingen, but the beginning of Teylingen's history is rather dark. Soon, however, the castle at the counts of Holland fell. They made Teylingen the official residence of the timber farmers of Holland. The most famous resident of Teylingen was Jacoba of Bavaria, who also lived in the castle as a forester. Especially during the last days of her life, she lived at Teylingen and died there in 1436.
The specifically shaped Jacoba jugs from the Middle Ages, which are often found during excavations in moats, still remind her of this. Teylingen Castle had a hard time in the Eighty Years' War. Especially in the early years of this war, the lock was severely damaged during combat. Around 1614 the castle was no longer renovated, but a more comfortable accommodation was built on the front castle. It became a palatial building, which we know from an anonymous pen drawing from 1724. Castle gardens and a park were also built around the castle and the new residential building. The defensibility of the castle was no longer necessary at that time. The emphasis was placed on pleasant habitability. Those front buildings were also demolished around 1800.
When in 1677 the keep suffered great damage again, this time due to a fire, the residential tower was no longer being renovated. Since then, Teylingen has increasingly fallen into ruin, as we know it today. That we can still admire the ruin is because a sale around 1800 stipulated that the keep with the ring wall should not be demolished. More and more land was sold around the castle ruins, until only a small part remained for the castle. In 1888 the ruin became the property of the Dutch State and was listed as a monument, so that the ruin of Teylingen could be consolidated. Thanks to the foundation of the Slot Teylingen Foundation in 1975, the ruin and its surroundings were greatly embellished. The foundation ensured that, with the support of central government, a number of lands could again be bought in the immediate vicinity of the castle ruins, so that Teylingen was no longer in such a limited area. The foundation also ensured that the moats were excavated again and that a new access bridge was made. That is why the ruin of Teylingen is now a jewel in the bulb region. Slot Teylingen can be viewed. Teylingen is located in the municipality of Voorhout close to the border and northwest of the municipality of Sassenheim. The ruin is easiest to reach by driving from the Noordwijkerhout exit on the A44 in the direction of Noordwijkerhout. The ruin of Teylingen is then - past the intersection with the N208 (to Lisse) - on a side road to the left of this road, immediately after leaving the village of Sassenheim. Some literature: - Drs. Ingrid W.L.Moerman, De Ruïne van Teylingen, part XXVI from the series Dutch Castles (NKS / ANWB), z.p., 1976. - A.G. Schulte (ed.), Ruines in the Netherlands, Zwolle, 1997. - Jos Stöver et al. (Ed.), Castles and country estates in South Holland, Zutphen, 2000. -
Own documentation. Voorhout For centuries, Voorhout with its buildings was a pinhead on the map. In 1988 Voorhout celebrated its 1000th anniversary in a grand manner. However, historians are not unanimous about the year 988. One speaks about Voorhout before 989, others about 1064 or even 1083. The fact is that the village, also called Foranholte, had a large and extensive wooded area, which stretched from Lisse to Rijnbrug / Oegstgeest and from Katwijk, Noordwijk to Sassenheim. In terms of area, it could compete with Leiden. The area was sparsely inhabited; there were only a few hundred Voorhouters, mainly agricultural workers. There was certainly no question of a village center, which only developed in the late 1800s. According to evangelical notes from Egmond Abbey, Dirk II, one of the Dutch graves, donated on 6 May 988, and his consort the church of Voorhout at the abbey. In 1064 an open letter to Emperor Henry IV was said to mention a church and chapel in Voorhout. The Christian chapel made of tuff was then donated to the Diocese of Utrecht with the Heerlijkheid Foranholte. Twelve years later, the parish of Vorenholte was lent to the abbey. Sassenheim also belonged to Voorhout as a daughter church. In 1083 Count Dirk V in Flandria confirmed the gift certificates of his ancestors. Known noble families appeared in the wooded Voorhout in the early Middle Ages. As early as 1283 we see the noble families Nagel, Boekhorst and van Teijlingen. Shouts were encountered under the Nails for more than two centuries. In the craft accounts of Voorhout from 1459 there is already mention of “Jan Naghels voor die bregge”. The current Nagelbrug is not the original one, however, which lay over the D Tuesdayse Wetering, the waterway connection between Noordwijk, Sassenheim and Warmond, a hundred meters back. In the vernacular, the old Nagel bridge, which was demolished in 1967, was called the Lage or Oude Schoolbrug. The Hoge of Nagelbrug was built in 1657 for fl. 195. at the same time as the digging of the Haarlemmertrekvaart. The inn and regthouse De Bonte Koe, which was demolished in 1971, also dates from that period. At the end of the twelfth century, Teijlingen Castle was home to the considerable Teijlingen family. Lord Willem died in March 1244. As far as is known, he left four children. William's son Willem died almost forty years later. The castle and the other fief goods fell to the count of Holland and since the deceased was childless, there was no follow-up.
It goes on, but the max no of words has been reache
=== Vermeld 1101-ca.1130, bezit het veerrech ===
Vermeld 1101-ca.1130, bezit het veerrecht over de Rijn tussen Katwijk en Zwammerdam "Die ver twischen des Rijnsovers ende Zwadenburdamme"
Preferred Parents:
Father: Hallwin van Wassenaer II, b. 1082 in Bleiswijk, South Holland The Netherlands d. 1142 in Bleiswijk, South Holland The Netherlands
Mother: Bertha van Lynden, b. ABT 1083 in Bleiswijk, Holland, Netherlands d. BET 1121 AND 1152 in Bleiswijk, Holland, Netherlands
Family 1: Badeloge van Voorne, b. ABT 1100 in Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands d. 1168
- Kerstant Doedensz van Raephorst, b. 1135 in Voorschoten, South Holland, Netherlands d. ABT 1189 in Kasteel Duivenvoord, Voorschoten, Zuid-Holland
Sources:
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Doede Van Voorhout - Published information: birth-name: Doede van Voorhout
Note: Published information: birth-name: Doede van Voorhout
Published information: male
Published information: birth: ; Netherlands
Published information: death: before 1161; Netherlands
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2259380689
- Title: Ancestry Family Trees
Author: Ancestry Family Tree
- Title: Web: Netherlands, GenealogieOnline Trees Index, 1000-Current
Publication: Name: http://search.ancestry.com/collections/9289/records/22739400;
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