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Tite Margwelaschwili (Georgian: ტიტე მარგველაშვილი, German: Titus von Margwelaschwili) (1891–1946) was a Georgian philosopher and ...
The most common cases of this are van de, van der and van den, where the articles are all current or archaic forms of the article de "the". Less common are van het and van 't , which use the similar but grammatically neuter article het .
In medieval or early modern names, the von particle was at times added to commoners' names; thus, Hans von Duisburg meant ' Hans from [the city of] Duisburg '. This meaning is preserved in Swiss toponymic surnames and in the Dutch van, which is a cognate of von but also does not necessarily indicate nobility.
Other forms also exist as combinations with the definite article: e.g. "von der" or von dem → "vom" ("of the"), zu der → "zur" or zu dem → "zum" ("of the", "in the", "at the"). [10] Particularly between the late 18th and early 20th century when an increasing number of unlanded commoners were ennobled, the " von " was typically simply put ...
Assueer Jacob Schimmelpenninck van der Oye (1631-1673), son of Jacob, Lord of Voorstonden, and Anna Catharina van Kecken, Lady of Holthuisen. Kept a journal which was published in 1870 by his descendant Alexander Baron Schimmelpenninck van der Oye. [1] Gerrit Schimmelpenninck (1794–1863) Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck (1761–1825)
Tite (footballer, born 1930) (1930–2004), Brazilian footballer; Tite Curet Alonso (1926–2003), Puerto Rican composer; Tite Kubo (born 1977), Japanese manga artist; Tite Margwelaschwili, (1891–1946), Georgian philosopher and writer; Karen Tite, English actress; William Tite (1798–1873), British architect and politician
Since 1732 the coat of arms of the third line is a conjunction of the two families von der Decken and von Offen. The coat of arms of the family von Offen is a red wheel with six spokes on a silver ground. The title Freiherr [9] in the third line stayed for two generations from 1885 to 1969.
He was the son of Bernd von Reesen (c. 1460 – 1506) and Brigitte Proite (d. 1506) who were married in 1489. [3] His younger brother Heinrich (1497 – 1532) was also a merchant; [ 4 ] his eldest sister, Margarethe (b. 1490), married, in 1516, Hans (Johann) von Schwarzwald (1468 – 1521), an alderman of Danzig.