Generation Five
10. Chun VOR
DER HARDT (5162);[1]
born between 1520 and 1525; married Gela Latsch
(5163), daughter of Tillman Latsch
(5354), before 1547; died between 1562 and 1563 in the Haardt ironworks
settlement in Weidenau, Nassau-Siegen, Germany.[2]
Gela LATSCH (5163) was born circa 1525. She died after 1583 in the Haardt ironworks
settlement in Weidenau, Nassau-Siegen, Germany.[3]
Children of Chun Vor
Der Hardt (5162) and Gela Latsch (5163) were as follows:
19. i. Franz (5355); born between 1548 and 1550; died 1578.[4]
He was a merchant connected with the iron industry in Siegen,
Nassau-Siegen, Germany.[5]
+ 20. ii. Henchen
(5160), born 1555 (of the Haardt Ironworks settlement in Weidenau,
Nassau-Siegen, Germany.
21. iii. Jacob
(5164); born 1563 in of the Haardt ironworks settlement in Weidenau,
Nassau-Siegen, Germany.[6]
He was one of the foremost iron-masters of his day and the
ancestor of Friedrich Flender, the champion of civil liberty, who was beheaded
in 1707 by the tyrant, Prince William Hyacinth, the ruler of Catholic
Nassau-Siegen.[7]
14. Tillman PATT
(5112); born circa 1530 in the Haardt ironworks settlement in Weidenau,
Nassau-Siegen, Germany; married Gela Fick (5113), daughter of Ludwig Fick
(5147) and Hella ? (5148), circa 1560; died after 1603 in the Haardt ironworks settlement in
Weidenau, Nassau-Siegen, Germany.[8]
He lived between 1566
and 1583 in the Haardt ironworks settlement in Weidenau, Nassau-Siegen,
Germany.[9]
He began military service in 1572 in the Haardt ironworks settlement in
Weidenau, Nassau-Siegen, Germany, a Militia member. The Patt surname probably came from "Pate"
or godfather referring to the godfathers of the four brothers. Tillman Patt was sometimes called Tillmann
Hart or Tillmann vor der Hardt.[10]
Gela FICK (5113)[11],[12]
was born circa 1540.
Children of Tillman Patt
(5112) and Gela Fick (5113) were:
+ 22. i. Ludwig
(5109), born between 1562 and 1563 in the Buschgotthardshuetten iron-works
settlement in Weidenau, Nassau-Siegen, Germany; married ? Gruebner (5110).
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[1]called "Chun Flendener" after his death.
[2]Ibid.
[3]Ibid., p. 234.
[4]Ibid.
[5]Ibid.
[6]Ibid.
[7]Ibid.
[8]Ibid., p. 240.
[9]on special tax-lists of 1566, 1567, 1572, and 1583.
[10]Holtzclaw, Nassau-Siegen Immigrants, p. 240.
[11]seems to have been a younger sister or more probably the eldest daughter of Ludwig Fick.
[12]Ibid.