House of Wassenaer

van Wassenaer
noble family

Coat of Arms
Country Netherlands
Style(s) count, baron
Founded 13th century
Founder Philips van Wassenaer
Ethnicity Dutch

Van Wassenaer is the name of an old Dutch noble family. It was first mentioned in the county of Holland on November 3, 1200. They are one of the few original noble families from Holland that has not died out.

Origin of the name

The family was already noble from earliest times ("Uradel"). According to family legend, the name may be taken from the crescent (wassende) moon on the family coat of arms, borrowed from an Arabian banner that a member of the van Wassenaer family obtained while on a crusade. The lands of the House of Wassenaer include, among others, the town of Wassenaar and the Kasteel Duivenvoorde near Voorschoten. According to some family archives, Wassenaar means Wasser Herren, Sea Lords/Kings, which is a traditional immemorial title which the invading Romans (under Caligula) recognised while they were destituting the family from their also immemorial position of Kings of Batavia (position regained 400 years later for four centuries etc.) the crescent was named "Wassenaar" after the family name, and seems to correspond to the southern crusade.

History of the family

The family van Wassenaar was known as van Beveren Boekelsdijck Cool Weena-Rotterdam, Viscounts van Leyden, a branch of the van Merkelbach-Ballenstedt van Amstel family, founders of Amsterdam; the name was later also used, after marrying a daughter, by a family van Duivenvoorde, after the castle that the family owned during much of the late Middle Ages. The earliest ancestor of these other Wassenaar is one Philip, who lived in the early 13th century, and owned lands in Wassenaar. Members of the family carry the title of count or baron.

Polanen Branch

The branch of the family carrying the name van Polanen played an important role, because through the marriage of Johanna van Polanen with Engelbert I of Nassau, the House of Nassau first gained territories in the Netherlands. See: House of Polanen

Famous scions of the House of Wassenaer

Gallery

Literature

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.