FORSTER Surname, Origins, Variations, Arms, Locations, Genealogy

 

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FORSTER

 

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 History Research

Forster of Saxe-Gotha

Origins of

the Surname

Variations of

the Surname

Armorial Bearings,

 Symbols and Mottoes

Locations of

the Surname

Internet Resources

Our Family History

 

 

Origins of the Surname

Origins of the Surname

An Introduction

to the Surname

Source/Meaning

of the Surname

History of

the Surname

More About

Surnames

An Introduction to the Surname

An Introduction to the Surname

The practice of inherited family surnames began in England and France during the late part of the 11th century.   Surnames were first utilized in the Germanic region of central Europe during the second half of the 12th century.  The custom of taking on surnames began in the southern areas of Germany, and gradually spread northward during the Middle Ages.  It took about three hundred years for this tradition to apply to most families and become a constant part of one’s identity.        With the passing of generations and the movement of families from place to place many of the original identifying names were altered into some of the versions that we are familiar with today.  Over the centuries, most of our European ancestors accepted their surname as an unchangeable part of their lives.  Thus people rarely changed their surname.  Variations of most surnames were usually the result of an involuntary act such as when a government official wrote a name phonetically or made an error in transcription. 

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Map of European Languages

Research into the record of this FORSTER family line indicates that the variations, meanings and history of this surname are most likely linked to that area of Europe where German linguistic traditions are commonly found. 

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Sources and Meanings of the Surname

Source(s) and Meaning(s) of the Surname

Most modern Germanic and French family names are a means conveying lineage.  For the most part, German surnames were developed from four major sources: (1) Patronymic & Matronymic surnames most common in northern Germany are based on a parent’s first name, such as Niklas Albrecht (Niklas son of Albrecht);  (2) occupational surnames are last names based on the person’s job or trade for example Lukas Fischer (Lukas the Fisherman);  (3) descriptive surnames are based on a unique quality or physical feature of the individual like Karl Braun (Karl with brown hair); (4) geographical surnames are derived from the location of the homestead from which the first bearer and his family lived such as Leon Meer (Leon from by the sea), or derived from the state, region, or   village of the first bearer's origin for example Paul Cullen (Paul from Koeln/Cologne).

Most of the modern English, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh family names throughout Great Britain have originated as a result of the following circumstances: patronym or matronym, names based on the name of one's father, mother or ancestor, (Johnson, Wilson). Each is a means of conveying lineage; occupation (i.e., Carpenter, Cooper, Brewer, Mason); habitational (Middleton, Sidney, or Ireland) or topographical (i.e. Hill, Brook, Forrest, Dale); nicknames (i.e., Moody Freeholder, Wise, Armstrong); status (i.e. Freeman, Bond, Knight); and acquired ornamental names that were simply made up.

The German surname FORSTER is an occupational and topographic name for someone who lived and worked in a forest.  Its origins are from the Middle High German word forst ‘forest’. 

 

The English name of Forster originated in Normandy.  It is an occupational name for a maker or user of scissors, as derived from the Old English word forcetier as in clipping shearsThe English name can also be an occupational name for a worker in wood, as derived from fustre meaning a block of wood.

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History of the Surname

History of the Surname

Most Germanic Surnames from Central Europe have their roots in the Germanic Middle Ages.  The process of forming family names in what is present day Germany began during Middle High German period in the history of the German language from the early 12th Century to the 16th century The nobility and wealthy land owners were the first to begin using surnames.  Merchants and townspeople then adopted the custom, as did the rural population.  This process took two or three centuries.  In most of the Germanic States of the Holy Roman Empire, the practice of using surnames was well established by the 1500s.

Surnames of the British Isles as we know them today were first assumed in Europe from the 11th to the 15th century. They were not in use in England or Scotland, before the Norman Conquest of 1066, and were first found in the Domesday Book of 1086. The employment in the use of a second name was a custom that was first introduced from the Normans who had adopted the custom just prior to this time.    Soon thereafter it became a mark of a generally higher socio-economic status and thus seen as disgraceful for a well-bred man to have only one name.  It was not until the middle of the 14th century that surnames became general practice among all people in the British Isles

The concept of French Surnames come from the Medieval French word 'surnom' translating as "above-or-over name," surnames or descriptive names trace their use back to 11th century France, when it first became necessary to add a second name to distinguish between individuals with the same given name. The custom of using surnames did not become common for several centuries, however.

EARLY HISTORY OF THE SURNAME

     The use of FORSTER as a surname in the Germanic speaking locations is first found Bavaria.  Here the name emerged, in medieval times, through several notable families of the region.  One of the earliest of these Bavarian families was the Forsters of Philippsburg, who were conferred noble status by the Holy Roman Empire as early as 1508. The von Philippsburg’s were also seated in Austria as well as Bavaria.   Other Forsters of the Bavarian nobility were Johann Christoph Forster, noble (Freiherren) of the Holy Roman Empire.  Johann Christoph was a Bishop of the Roman Catholic Church as well as Adminisrator of Gundelfingen an der Donau.  In 1752 he was elevated to the title of Baron.  The Forsters of Mantel were ennobled, in 1784, by Charles Theodore, Prince-Elector of Bavaria. The municipality of  Mantel is now located in the district of Neustadt in Bavaria, Germany.

     Other examples of the Forster surname in this part of the German and Austrian Empires are Johann Förster, a treasury official and legal advocate, in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria.  In 1788 he was granted the noble (Freiherren) title of “von Ehrenwald”, by the Habsburg Empire   In 1757 Johann Leonard Forster was elevated to the title of Baron of Ezsenberg in the Palatinate-Neuburg.  The brothers Jacob Wilhelm and Georg Forster were nobility of Herbsleben, then in the Duchy of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, now in the Unstrut-Hainich district of Thuringia, Germany.  This family purchased Hersleben Castle in 1709 and they remained seated there until at least 1810.   There was also a Jeremais Förster of the Prussian Province of Silesia.  Jeremais was ennobled by Frederick William II of Prussia in October, 1786.  This Forster family held seat in the “Breslau Region” of the province that was centered on the city of Breslau, the historical capital of Silesia and Lower Silesia.  

     Records also show several Foresters who were commoners (bürgerliche).  For example, Georg Forster of Germany was granted a coat-of-arms in 1620, for his service as an Imperial bodyguard, most likely to a member of the aristocracy, or a senior Landsknecht officer, of the Holy Roman Empire.  Records of 1550 show another Georg Forster, a legal counselor of Nuremburg, a city in Bavaria, Germany.  Friedrich Forster of Steyr ascended to the landed gentry around 1465.  Today, the city of Steyr  is located in the Austrian federal state of Upper Austria.   

Some Notable Persons, Places, or Things Having This Name

Some of the best known persons, places, or things bearing the FORSTER name or its close variants are: Forster, New South Wales, a town in Australia;  Forster (surname), several people with the surname;  Forster Music Publisher, Inc., a sheet music publisher founded in 1916 based in Chicago;  Forster's Tern, a seabird of the tern family Sternidae;   Forster Square, Bradford, a central square in Bradford, United Kingdom;  Bradford Forster Square railway station, a railway station near Forster Square;  USS Forster (DE-334), a ship launched in 1943 that served as an escort in the Atlantic and Mediterranean during World War II.   See also: Forester (disambiguation)Forrester (disambiguation)Foster (disambiguation);  and Fosters (disambiguation).

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More About Surname Meanings & Origins

More About Surname Meanings & Origins

GERMAN SURNAMES

Many German names have their roots in the Germanic Middle Ages. The process of forming family names began early in the 12th Century and extended through the 16th century. All social classes and demographic strata aided in the development of names. First Names (Rufnamen) identified specific persons. Over time the first name began to be applied to the bearer's whole family.  At first through verbal usage, family names (Familiennamen) were later fixed through writing.  Until the 17th century, first names played a more important role. The earliest family names derived from the first name of the first bearer (Patronym). Later names derived from the place of dwelling and location of the homestead.  If a person of family migrated from one place to another they were identified by the place they came from.  Of more recent origin are names derived from the vocation of profession of the first bearer. These names comprise the largest group and the most easily recognizable, for they tell what the first bearer did for a living.  Another group are names derived from a physical or other characteristic of the first bearer.  Finally, there are names that tell you the state or region a first bearer and his family came from; the age old division in tribes and regions (Low German, Middle German and Upper German) is often reflected in names.

BRITISH SURNAMES

Although the Domesday Book compiled by William the Conqueror required surnames, the use of them in the British Isles did not become fixed until the time period between 1250 and 1450.  The broad range of ethnic and linguistic roots for British surnames reflects the history of Britain as an oft-invaded land. These roots include, but are not limited to, Old English, Middle English, Old French, Old Norse, Irish, Gaelic, Celtic, Pictish, Welsh, Gaulish, Germanic, Latin, Greek and Hebrew.  Throughout the British Isles, there are basically five types of native surnames. Some surnames were derived from a man's occupation (Carpenter, Taylor, Brewer, Mason), a practice that was commonplace by the end of the 14th century.  Place names reflected a location of residence and were also commonly used (Hill, Brook, Forrest, Dale) as a basis for the surname, for reasons that can be easily understood.  Nicknames that stuck also became surnames.  About one-third of all surnames in the United Kingdom are patronymic in origin, and identified the first bearer of the name by his father (or grandfather in the case of some Irish names). When the coast of England was invaded by William The Conqueror in the year 1066, the Normans brought with them a store of French personal names, which soon, more or less, entirely replaced the traditional more varied Old English personal names, at least among the upper and middle classes. A century of so later, given names of the principal saints of the Christian church began to be used. It is from these two types of given name that the majority of the English patronymic surnames are derived and used to this day.  Acquired ornamental names were simply made up, and had no specific reflection on the first who bore the name. They simply sounded nice, or were made up as a means of identification, generally much later than most surnames were adopted.   Source: http://www.obcgs.com/LASTNAMES.htm

FRENCH SURNAMES

Suffixes & Prefixes - While not in common use as in Italy or Sweden, some French surnames are formed by the addition of various prefixes and suffixes. A variety of French suffixes including -eau, -elet, -elin, -elle, and -elot, mean "little son of" and can be found attached to a given name to form a patronym. Prefixes of French surnames also have specific origins. The prefixes "de," "des," "du," and "le" each translate as "of" and may be found used in patronymic and geographical French surnames. Some French-Norman patronymic surnames will have the prefix "fritz," from the Old French for "son of" (Fitzgerald - son of Gerald). 

Alias Surnames or Dit Names - In some areas of France, a second surname may have been adopted in order to distinguish between different branches of the same family, especially when the families remained in the same town for generations. These alias surnames can often be found preceded by the word "dit." Sometimes an individual even adopted the dit name as the family name, and dropped the original surname. This practice was most common in France among soldiers and sailors.

Germanic Origins of French Names - As so many French surnames are derived from first names, it is important to know that many common French first names have Germanic origins, coming into fashion during German invasions into France. Therefore, having a name with Germanic origins does not necessarily mean that you have German ancestors!

Official Name Changes in France - Beginning in 1474, anyone who wished to change his name was required to get permission from the King. These official name changes can be found indexed in: Jérôme, archiviste. Dictionnaire des changements de noms de 1803 à 1956 (Dictionary of changed names from 1803 to 1956). Paris: Librairie Française, 1974.   Source: French Surname Meanings & Origins

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Variations of the Surname

Variations of
the Surname

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Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to unfold and expand often leading to an overwhelming number of variants.  As such one can encounter great variation in the spelling of surnames because in early times, spelling in general and thus the spelling of names was not yet standardized.  Later on spellings would change with the branching and movement of families. The complexity of researching records is compounded by the fact that in many cases an ancestors surname may have been misspelled.  This is especially true when searching census documents. 

Spelling variations of this family name include: Forster, Foerster, Forstern, Forstner, Ferster, Fewster, Foister, Foyster, Fuster, Fuste and many more, (as noted below). 

Spelling variations of this family name may be ascertained through the utilization of several systems developed over the years.  The most prominently known are Soundex, Metaphone, and the NameX systems.  Of the three we recommend NameX as the most accurate for family historians.

Click on the button to find the variants of this or any other surname by utilizing The Name Thesaurus a ground-breaking technology for finding Surname and Forename variants.

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This useful genealogy research tool has identified 385 million variants for 5,929,000 Surnames and 26 million variants for 1,246,000 Forenames, as well as gender identification for more than 220,000 Forenames.

NameX matched 501 spelling variations of the FORSTER surname. The top 20 are:

Metaphone is a phonetic algorithm, first published in 1990, for indexing words by their English pronunciation.  It fundamentally improves on the Soundex algorithm by using information about variations and inconsistencies in English spelling and pronunciation to produce a more accurate encoding. Later a new version of the algorithm named Double Metaphone was created to take into account spelling peculiarities of a number of other languages. In 2009 a third version, called Metaphone 3, achieves an accuracy of approximately 99% for English words, non-English words familiar to Americans, and first names and family names commonly found in the U.S.  The Metaphone Code for FORSTER is FRSTR.  There are 234 other surnames sharing this code.

The Soundex System was developed in an effort to assist with identifying spelling variations for a given surname. Soundex is a method of indexing names in the 1880, 1900, 1910, and 1920 US Census, and can aid genealogists in their research.  The Soundex Code for FORSTER is F623.  There are 3457 other surnames sharing this Code. 

If The Name Thesaurus doesn’t adequately address the name you are looking for check out the following link:

Top 10 Tips for Finding Alternative Surname Spellings & Variations

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Locations of the Surname

Locations of
the Surname

Locational Distribution of this Surname

Historical Distribution of this Surname

 

Locational Distribution of This Surname

Locational Distribution of This Surname

Knowing the geographical areas where the surname you are researching is clustered and distributed is an indispensable tool in deciding where to focus your research.  We believe that the “Public Profiler” website will open up to you a wide range of solutions which implement current research in spatial analysis.  This site provides an array of local spatial information tools useful to the genealogist. 

The information presented herein shows where the FORSTER surname is distributed within North America as well as in Europe the location of origin for this surname.      Statistics show that the country were this surname is the most highly clustered is Switzerland with approximately 592.6 persons per million of population.  The density of population in the within the United States is 44.33 persons per million of population.  The top region in the World where this surname is the most highly clustered is Eastern, Switzerland with 1791.73 persons per million, and New Castle upon Tyne, England is the top city where this surname is found.

North America

Europe

Forster- North America

Forster- Europe

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Click on the LINK to the right to see more information about the World distribution of a surname.  You can

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get greater detail for any of the following maps by clicking on the area, i.e state, county that you are interested in.

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LINKS to more websites that compute distribution maps for any surname.

·        Database of Surnames in the Netherlands

·        Database of Surnames in Belgium

·        Names Distribution in France

·        Map of the surname: Austria

·        Distribution of Surnames in Spain

·        Map of the Surname: Switzerland

·        Distribution of Surnames in Italy

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Historical Distribution of this Surname

Historical Distribution of This Surname

The main value in historical surname distribution databases and maps is that they enable genealogists to pinpoint the predominant location of a surname. This can quickly narrow down your search for a BDM certificate.  Knowing where to look is half the battle to finding ancestry records; if you can narrow down the search field it can save you a lot of time and trouble.  The core of historical surname distribution is that most people stayed within a fairly close locale.  Concentrations of surnames are clearly visible on Surname Distribution Maps, and name distribution tables (along with an atlas) make it quite likely that the origin of that name is from the area of its highest concentration.

The following “historical locations” for the FORSTER surname and some of its close variant spellings have been primarily extracted from either Burke’s The general armory of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales, Rietstap’s Armorial General, or J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.   These books were published in the mid-19th Century and revised thereafter.  The information therein is relevant to that period as well as earlier times as far back as 1500.   Most of the locations cited by Riestap, and Siebmacher are on the continent of Europe such as Germany, France, Switzerland, etc.       

NAME

PLACE(S)

PLACE(S)

Fortser or Förster

European Continent

East FrisiaSaxe-GothaPalatinate (2);  NurembergBavaria (4);  Austria (2);  SteyrGermany; SaxonyPrussia; Silesia; GörlitzGalicia;

British Isles & Ireland

Berkshire;  Northumberland;  Staffordshire;  Somerset;  Warwick; Buckingham; Bedford;  Lancaster;  London(3);  Middlesex;  Sussex(3);  Westminster;  Shropshire;  Oxford;  Worcester; Suffolk;  Ireland;  Monaghan(2);  Dublin(3);

(2) = the frequency with which this place occurs.

We recommend that you utilize our Tools for Finding Ancestral LocationsIf you have an elementary knowledge of heraldry you may wish to use this practice to trace your founding forefather.  For more information about this approach to seeking out your ancestral locations see our Using Heraldry as a Family History Research Tool.  

LINKS to various websites that compute surname distribution maps within an historical context.

·        Great Britain Family Names - 1881 Census

·        England and Wales: 1891 Census

·        Scotland: 1891 Census

·        Distribution of surnames in Ireland in 1890

·        Family Name Distribution in Germany: 1942

·        Nom de famille en France: 1891-1915; 1916-40; 1941-65; 1966-90

·        United States: 1920

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Armorial Bearings, Mottoes & Symbols

Armorial Bearings, Mottoes & Symbols

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An Introduction to

 European Heraldry

Gallery of Images

Descriptions of the

Armorial Bearings

Heraldry as a Family

History Research Tool

Motto(es) Associated

 With This Surname

 

An Introduction To European Heraldry

An Introduction to European Heraldry

     The art of designing, displaying, describing, and recording arms is called heraldry. The use of coats of arms by countries, states, provinces, towns and villages is called civic heraldry.   A coat of arms, more properly called an armorial achievement, armorial bearings or often just arms for short.  A coat-of-arms is defined as a group of emblems and figures (heraldic bearings) usually arranged on and around a shield and serving as the special insignia of some person, family, or institution.  Except for a few cases, there is really no such thing as a standard "coat of arms" for a surname.    The rules and traditions regarding Coats of Arms vary from country to country. Therefore a Coat of Arms for an English family would differ from that of a German family even when the surname is the same. 

     The seeds of heraldic structure in personal identification can be detected in the account in a contemporary chronicle of Henry I of England, on the occasion of his knighting his son-in-law Geoffrey V, Count of Anjou, in 1127. He placed to hang around his neck a shield painted with golden lions. The funerary enamel of Geoffrey (died 1151), dressed in blue and gold and bearing his blue shield emblazoned with gold lions, is the first recorded depiction of a coat of arms.

       By the middle of the 12th century, coats of arms were being inherited by the children of armigers (persons entitled to use a coat of arms) across Europe. Between 1135 and 1155, seals representing the generalized figure of the owner attest to the general adoption of heraldic devices in England, France, Germany, Spain, and Italy.  By the end of the century, heraldry appears as the sole device on seals.  In England, the practice of using marks of cadency arose to distinguish one son from another: the conventions became standardized in about 1500, and are traditionally supposed to have been devised by John Writhe.

     In the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance, heraldry became a highly developed discipline, regulated by professional officers of arms. As its use in jousting became obsolete, coats of arms remained popular for visually identifying a person in other ways – impressed in sealing wax on documents, carved on family tombs, and flown as a banner on country homes. The first work of heraldic jurisprudence, De Insigniis et Armis, was written in the 1350s by Bartolus de Saxoferrato, a professor of law at the University of Padua.

    In the Germanic areas of Central Europe heraldry spread to the German burgher class in the 13th century, and even some peasants used arms in the 14th century.  A German coat of arms is usually referred to by any of the following terms; Wappen, Familienwappen, Blasonierung, Heraldik, or Wappenschablonen.

     In the British Isles the College of Arms, (founded in 1483), is the Royal corporation of heralds who record proved pedigrees and grant armorial bearings.  In Scottish heraldry, the Lord Lyon King of Arms in the Act of 1672 is empowered to grant arms to "vertuous [virtuous] and well deserving persons."

     Although heraldry in France and the lowlands of Belgium and Holland had a considerable history, like England, existing from the eleventh century, such formality has largely died out in these locations. The role of the herald (héraut) in France declined in the seventeenth century.  Many of the terms in international heraldry come from French.

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Gallery of Images

Gallery of Images 

Our galleries contain full-sized images of Coats-of Arms that pertain to the surnames of our direct ancestral lineage.   As most surnames have many variant spellings we suggest that you also view the galleries of our other two sub-sites as they make have a surname that is similar or has a slightly different spelling that the one you are researching

Use this LINK to find images of many unique coat-of-arms in a wide

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variety of surnames many of them not found anywhere else on the internet.

Descriptions of the Armorial Bearings

Descriptions of the Arms

Descriptions some Armorial Bearings Attributed to this Surname

Copyright @ 2013-14

The associated armorial bearings for this surname and close variant spellings are recorded in Burke’s General Armoire, Rietstap’s Armorial General or J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.  The additional information, presented below, is offered with regard to the armorial bearings we’ve identified from the aforementioned sources. 

Crest - The word crest is often mistakenly applied to a coat of arms.  The crest was a later development arising from the love of pageantry.  Initially the crest consisted of charges painted onto a ridge on top of the helmet.

Wreath or Torse – The torse is a twist of cloth or wreath underneath and part of a crest. Always shown as six twists, the first tincture being the tincture of the field, the second the tincture of the metal, and so on.

Mantling – The mantling is a drapery tied to the helmet above the shield. It forms a backdrop for the shield.

Helm or Helmet - The helmet or helm is situated above the shield and bears the torse and crest. The style of helmet displayed varies according to rank and social status, and these styles developed over time, in step with the development of actual military helmets.

Shield or Arms - The basis of all coats of arms.  At their simplest, arms consist of a shield with a plain field on which appears a geometrical shape or object.  The items appearing on the shield are known as charges.

Motto - The motto was originally a war cry, but later mottoes often expressed some worthy sentiment. It may appear at the top or bottom of a family coat of arms.

COA elements (grey 10)

When reading the following descriptions of these armorial bearings you may come across a term that you would like to know more about. 

Glossary of Heraldry Terms2

As such we recommend you utilize this LINK BUTTON to locate additional information within the classic resource book originally published by James Parker and Company in 1894.

In addition to an image of the selected Armorial Bearings, presented below, we have divided each into three specific areas of content.  They are:

About the Proprietor:  A coat-of-arms design is usually granted only to a single person not to an entire family or to a particular surname. Coats of arms are inheritable property, and they generally descend to male lineal descendents of the original arms grantee.  Therefore the descriptive narratives below generally refer to this person as the “proprietor”.   The information given within the category primarily focuses upon the name of the proprietor, when the armorial bearings were granted, and by whom, as well as where he was seated.   

Blazoning the Arms:  In heraldry a blazon is a formal description of the coat of arms, from which the reader can reconstruct the appropriate image.  Primarily our blazons will focus upon a description of the shield, crest and mantling, as well as a motto, if known.  We attempt to construct our blazons utilizing current-day  terminology for better comprehension. 

Interpreting the Arms:  Heraldry symbols such as the colors, lines and shapes found on coats-of-arms are generally referred to as charges.  Although there is some debate over whether or not the charges have any universal symbolism many persons do believe they may represent an idea or skill of the person who originally had the armorial bearings created.  If this assumption has any validity charges may provide clues to early family history of that person. 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Forster of Germany

Forster of Great Britain

Forster of East Frisia

Förster von Ehrenwald

Forster of Northumberland

Forster of Nuremberg

Forster of Palatinate-Neuberg

Forster of Saxe-Gotha

Forster von Philippsburg

Forster von Mantel

Forster zu Steyr

Forster of Coolderry

Forster of Sussex

Förster of Silesia

 

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Forster of Germany

Forster of Germany

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About the Proprietor: These armorial bearings have been attributed to Georg Forster, a Commoner (Bürgerliche), of Germany.   They were granted to him, in 1620, for his service as an Imperial bodyguard (trabant), most likely to a member of the aristocracy, or a senior Landsknecht officer, of the Holy Roman Empire.

Blazoning the Arms: The shield has been partitioned fesse-wise. The top is gold and contains the forepart of a natural bear shown above a horizontal division of the shield.  The bear’s paw is grasping five green leaf-less stalks.  The base is red with two white bends.     Above a crowned helmet, the crest features the same bear.  The mantling is gold and black on the dexter, white and red on the sinister side. See an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial

Interpreting the Arms: The bear seen in these arms symbolizes the occupation of the aforementioned proprietor. This animal was thought to possess diplomacy equal to its great strength and it is the emblem of ferocity in the protection of kindred. It is also a symbol of healing and personal health, strength and bravery.

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Forster of Great Britain

Forster of Great Britain

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About the Proprietor: According to Burke’s General Armoire these arms belong to a Forster of Great Britain.

Blazoning the Arms:  The shield is described a being blue with a gold cross moline between four crosses pattee each in the four corner fields.  There is no description of any crest that might accompany the arms.   The mantling that would accompany the arms is not explained.

Interpreting the Arms: The fact that the cross moline is displayed at the center of the shield may indicate a mark of cadency indicating the proprietor was an eighth son.   This heraldic charge also symbolizes the mutual converse of human society, and is said to represent a millstone.  The cross pattée is an emblem of military honor.  As such one may conclude that the proprietor was an officer in the British military.  This cross is often associated with the Crusades and was sometimes used by the Teutonic Knights.

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Forster of East Frisia

Forster of East Frisia

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About the Proprietor: This coat-of-arms is explained in Rietstap’s Armorial General, and ascribed to a Forster of East Frisia  a coastal region in the northwest of the German federal state of Lower Saxony.  A similar coat-of-arms was granted in 1583, to Lieutenant Christoph Forster. As such one might theorize a connection to the same family lineage.   To compare see an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.

Blazoning the Arms: A red shield contains a silver tree limb stump in fesse between three silver clovers two up and one down.  The crest is a bird surrounded by three trefoils between two tree branch stumps, all silver.  The mantling is most probably silver and red. 

Interpreting the Arms:  A tree stump may be used as a symbol of re-growth and rebirth, especially when it is borne with branches spouting new leaves.   A trefoil, or a symbol of a three-leafed clover, represents the perpetuity of the past, present and future. It is also often used as a symbol of fertility and abundance. The trefoil is derived from the shamrock, which, according to legend, was chose sans an emblem of Ireland because it was used by St. Patrick to illustrate the concept of the Holy Trinity.

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Förster von Ehrenwald

Forster von Ehrenwald copy

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About the Proprietor: These armorial bearings belonged to Johann Förster, a treasury official and legal advocate, in the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria.  In 1788 he was granted the noble (Freiherren) title of “von Ehrenwald”, by the Habsburg Empire.

Blazoning the Arms: This coat-of-arms is described in Rietstap’s Armorial General as a blue shield with a silver fesse with a gold hive surrounded by bees in chief and in base a copse of trees on a green mound next to a lumberjack dressed in green wearing a hat holding a black silver ax on his shoulder all supported a green mound.  The crest shows the lumberjack issuant.  See an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.

Interpreting the Arms: The bee and hive depicted in the chief may have been utilized by the proprietor as a sign of his industry, creativity, wealth, diligence and eloquence.  As a heraldic charge, the bee is also used to represent well-governed industry.  In the base of the arms the proprietor may have included the trees and woodcutter in an attempt to recognize his of his ancestors, humble origins. The tree is a symbol of antiquity and strength. Trees allude to home or property, and they are also generally considered a symbol of life and strength. 

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Forster of Northumberland

Forster of Northumberland

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About the Proprietor: These arms are representative of the Forster nobility seated in Northumberland, England.  These arms have been attributed to Forster of Alnwick.   Others had the same arms with different crests such as Forster of Bamborough Castle, and Forster of Brunton Hall.

Blazoning the Arms: The blazoning of these arms is described in Burke’s General Armoire as having a silver or white shield with a green chevron between three black bugle horns stringed red.  The crest shows a buck standing.   Other examples of different crests with these arms are: Forster of Brunton Hall, a bugle horn; and Forster Bamborough Castle, an arm in armor holding a broken tilting gold spear.

Interpreting the Arms: The stag has a variety of symbolic meanings. It may indicate a person who foresees opportunities well, and it is a symbol used for one who is unwilling to assail enemies rashly, who would rather stand his own ground that harm another wrongfully, and one who will not fight unless provoked.   Hunting Horn represents one who is fond of the chase, of high pursuits.   Both of the aforementioned heraldic charges may also refer back to the Baronetcy of the Forsters of Bamborough Castle, Northumberland, which dates back to the early 15th Century, when Sir John Forster was a warden of the Marches, and Sheriff of Northumberland.

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Forster of Nuremberg

Forster of Nuremberg

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About the Proprietor: According to J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial these armorial bearings were granted, in 1550, to Georg Forster, a legal counselor, and a Commoner (Bürgerliche), of Nuremburg, a city in Bavaria, Germany.

Blazoning the Arms: The gold shield contains a black hunting horn.  The crest features the same hunting horn.  See an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.

Interpreting the Arms: The color gold indicates generosity and elevation of the mind.  Black generally symbolizes constancy or grief.  The hunting horn, also called a bugle horn, represents one who is fond of the chase, of high pursuits.  Based upon these heraldic charges one might assume that Georg Forster, a legal counselor, and a commoner, considers himself a generous, well-educated person who is constantly pursuing a better position in life.

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Forster of Palatinate-Neuberg

Forster of Palatinate

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About the Proprietor: These are the armorial bearings granted, in 1746 (according to Siebmacher) to Johann Christop Forster, noble (Freiherren) of the Holy Roman Empire.  Johann Christoph was a Bishop of the Roman Catholic Church as well as Adminisrator of Gundelfingen an der Donau.  According to Rietstap he was elevated to the title of Baron in 1752.     In 1754 his brother Johann Leonard Forster also became a noble of the Empire and is represented by these same arms.   In 1757 Johann Leonard was elevated to the title of Baron of Ezsenberg in the Palatinate-Neuburg.  Rietstap’s Armorial General cites the arms of both men separately as it appears that upon becoming Barons they each created new arms that were different.    

Blazoning the Arms: The shield is blue in chief, silver in the base and has a red fesse.  In the chief, on a green mound,  is a silver lark holding an olive branch in its beak   In the base is a natural deer collared coming out of a green grove.  The crest has a crown surmounted by a half-flight of silver on which is a gold hawk lure. The mantling is red and silver or white. See an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.

Interpreting the Arms: A Hawk or Falcon’s lure, as seen in the crest of thise coat-of-arms, indicates one who was fond of noble pursuits, such as hunting and falconry. The lure was constructed using a pair of wings, fashioned to resemble a bird. It was thrown up into the air to help retrieve the falcon, or hawk when it had flown too far afield after the quarry. It symbolizes a signal used to recall the absent from afar.

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Forster of Saxe-Gotha

Forster of Saxe-Gotha

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About the Proprietor: Siebmachers Wappenbuch  attributes these armorial bearings to the brothers Jacob Wilhelm and Georg Forster nobility of Herbsleben, then in the Duchy of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, now in the Unstrut-Hainich district of Thuringia, Germany.  The brothers purchased Hersleben Castle in 1709 and the family remained seated there until at least 1810.  

Blazoning the Arms: The shield is partitioned quarterly.  The 1st and 4th quarters are blue each containing branch of golden oak.  The 2nd and 3rd quarters are banded two each blue and silver. The crest features a crown surmounted by three ostrich feathers of silver blue and gold.  The mantling is silver and blue on the dexter (right) side, gold and blue on the sinister (left) side.  See an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.

Interpreting the Arms: The partitioned shield and mantling indicate that these armorial bearings represent two different entities, probably a union of the aforementioned Forster brothers.  The blue-gold part contains a golden oak branch with leave may indicate the proprietor’s strength and heroism in victory.  The most significant feature in the opposite partition is the blue and silver bends.   Like the aforementioned partition these apply to a military theme.  Bends symbolize the scarf or shield suspender of a knight commander thus signifying defense or protection.

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Forster von Philippsburg

Forester von Phillipsburg

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About the Proprietor: These armorial bearings were bestowed upon Forster von Philippsburg, in 1823, by King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria.  The von Philippsburg’s were an old noble family seated in Austria as well as Bavaria.  They were conferred noble status by the Holy Roman Empire as early as 1508. 

Blazoning the Arms: The shield is partitioned quarterly. The 1st and 4th quarters are red with two silver bands.  The 2nd and 3rd quarters are black each holding a golden deer.  The crest shows a crown surmounted by a black and gold hunting horn and a natural oak branch both surrounded by two wings. The dexter wing with two red bands and the sinister with two black bands.  The mantling is gold and black on the dexter, silver and red on the sinister side.  See an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.

Interpreting the Arms:  The partitioned shield and mantling indicated that these armorial bearings represent union of two different entities.  The black-gold part contains a gold deer a heraldic charge having a variety of symbolic meanings. It may indicate a person who foresees opportunities well or one who is unwilling to assail enemies rashly, who would rather stand his own ground that harm another wrongfully, and one who will not fight unless provoked.  In addition the deer or stag was associated with healing, for he knew which medicinal plants to take in order to shake off the hunter’s arrow. The person bearing this symbol was considered impervious to weapons.  The most significant feature in the opposite partition is the red and silver bends.   The bends, of the other partition, symbolize the scarf or shield suspender of a knight commander thus signifying defense or protection. As they are silver and red it may indicate that the proprietor perceives himself as strong magnanimous warrior who values peace and the virtue of sincerity. 

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Forster von Mantel

Forster von Mantel

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About the Proprietor: Forster von Mantel was ennobled, in 1784, by Charles Theodore, Prince-Elector of Bavaria. The municipality of  Mantel is now located in the district of Neustadt in Bavaria, Germany.

Blazoning the Arms: A blue shield holds a black grouse, (wings elevated), on two black nails, (in saltire), at the base and three silver stars in the chief.   The crest has a crown surmounted by a natural stag issuant.  The mantling is blue and black. See an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.  

Interpreting the Arms: The grouse generally signifies an association with the law or the legal profession. It is also referred to as a “moorcock” or “coot” in British heraldry.  The nails, especially when in saltire, may represent the “passion of Christ”.   The star symbolizes honor, achievement and hope. 

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Forster zu Steyr

Forster zu Steyr

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About the Proprietor: This coat-of-arms belonged to a Friedrich Forster of Steyr who ascended to the landed gentry around 1465.  According to Rietstap’s Armorial General names the location of this Forster as Styria most likely because the city and its surrounding locales were within the Duchy of Styria .  Today, the city of Steyr  is located in the Austrian federal state of Upper Austria.

Blazoning the Arms: The shield is silver and contains three green poplar trees each on a mount of the same color.  The crest shows a green poplar tree.  The mantling is silver and black. See an original ancient image of the 1498 coat-of-arms as well the 1360 arms of another Forster of Steyr from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.  

Interpreting the Arms: The only charge used in the design of these arms is the poplar tree. The tree generally used in heraldry to indicate life, antiquity or strength.  Also the use of trees may refer to a characteristic of the land held by the proprietor, may be the case with these arms. 

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Forster of Coolderry

Forster of Coolderry

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About the Proprietor: These are the arms of the Barons Forster of Coolderry, County Monaghan, Ireland.  The Baronetage was created in 1794 for Sir Thomas Forster, 1st Baronet (1751–1843).  He was followed by Sir George Forster, 2nd Baronet (1796–1876), Sir Thomas Oriel Forster, 3rd Baronet (1824–1895), and Sir Robert Forster, 4th Baronet (1827–1904). 

Blazoning the Arms: The shield is black with silver chevron of ermine between three pheons points down, 2 in chief 1 in base.  The crest features an arm embowed in armor, the hand bare, grasping the butt end of a broken spear.  The motto that accompanies the arms is “Audoces fortuna juvat.”

Interpreting the Arms: The pheon as a heraldic charge represents the head of a dart, barbed, and engrailed on the inner side. Its position is usually with the point downward, as with these arms.  The pheon symbolizes dexterity and nimble wit, as well as readiness for battle.  Though the spear, the spearhead, and the broken spear are all very similar devices, they each have a distinct symbolic meaning.  The broken spear, in the crest of these armorial bearings, is a symbol of peace.

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Forster of Sussex

Forster of Sussex

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About the Proprietor: These armorial bearings were granted by King James I, in 1604, to Sir Thomas Foster, 1548–1612, of  Battle in Sussex, England.  Forester  was a noted Justice of the Court of Common Pleas at Westminster.  

Blazoning the Arms: The arms feature a silver shield with a black bend (engrailed), on which are three golden bucks' heads (cabossed). The crest is a gold talbot's head (erased), collared and ringed with red.

Interpreting the Arms: The color black means constancy, an engrailed line symbolizes the land, and a bend signifies defense or protection. The talbot speaks of a man who prizes the virtues of courage, vigilance, and loyalty.   Thus one may conclude that the proprietor of these arms is saying that he is loyal to his Kings and will constantly be ready to courageously protect his country.  The buck’s heads may tell that he will not fight unless provoked because of a strong belief in peace and harmony.  

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Förster of Silesia

Forster of Silesia

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About the Proprietor: The arms of Jeremais Förster of the Prussian Province of Silesia.  Jeremais was ennobled by Frederick William II of Prussia in October, 1786.  This Forster family held seat in the “Breslau Region” of the province that was centered on the city of Breslau, the historical capital of Silesia and Lower Silesia.   Today Breslau is now Wrocław, the largest city in western Poland and the capital of the Lower Silesian Voivodeship.

Blazoning the Arms: A blue shield with a gold border contains four red roses connected together with a silver line.  The crest shows a crowed surmounted by a half-wing of silver.  The mantling is red and blue.  See an original ancient image from J. Siebmacher's Great and General Armorial.  

Interpreting the Arms:  The rose is a symbol of hope and joy with a red blossom, it is a symbol of martyrdom.  The wing represents swiftness and protection.

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Heraldry as a Family History Research Tool

Using Heraldry as a Family History  Research Tool

Wondering whether you are descended of the nobility*?  Are you aware of an ancestor who held a prominent political position or had a title such as Sir, or Esquire?  If so you just might be descended from royalty.   If you are of European descent, you are probably a descendant of Charlemagne.  Once you are able to prove your line of descent from him, you will then find thousands of links to other royalty in your list of relatives.  It is rare indeed that the genealogy of a person of European descent, when traceable, doesn’t hit nobility somewhere.  And once it hits one European noble, whether you like it or not, hundreds of new names will become a part of your family.

*The nobility is a class of people who had special political and social status. Nobility is inherited or granted by the Crown as a reward to people who perform a heroic deed, achieve greatness in some endeavor, or hold a prominent government position.

    If you have an elementary knowledge of heraldry you may wish to use this practice to trace your founding forefather.  If you know the geographical place (country, county, city) where the family coat-of-arms was first identified, you may well search its history for the family name in question in order to find your direct ancestor.  Remember that most noble European family pedigrees have been thoroughly researched and published.   By putting together the family surname with the known location you may find a treasure trove of valuable information about your ancestors.  Upon pursing your research you should be aware of the possibility of variant spellings of the surname.  See Variations of the Surname for more information about variant spellings of the surname.

  

Many family historians who have not connected with a noble ancestor may just want to know what their family coat-of-arms looks like.  If this is the situation you must know that except for a few cases, there is really no such thing as a standard "coat of arms" for a surname.  A coat of arms is a design usually granted only to a single person not to an entire family or to a particular surname.  Coats of arms are inheritable property, and they generally descend to male lineal descendents of the original arms grantee.  As a result you are advised to seek out a coat-of-arms for the locale where your ancestor resided.

For example: we have an Arnold ancestor who is known to have emigrated to America from the town of Erlangen, in Bavaria, Germany.  Current research shows Erlangen is located in the area of Bavaria known as Middle Franconia.  Upon review of the historic locations for Arnold as noted in one source of armorial bearings we find places in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, The Netherlands and others.   One coat-of-arms is listed as belonging to an Arnold of Franconia, Bavaria.  As such we may conclude that this is the coat-of-arms having some relevance to our ancestor.  He may well be a blood relative of the aforementioned noble Arnold.   He or his ancestor may have been employed by or a serf of the noble Arnold family of that locale.  In some cases the name of the noble family becomes the name of the locale resulting in the ancestor appropriating it a as surname, see Sources and Meanings of the Surname to ascertain whether the surname you are interested in is a locational name.

Some Resources for Locating Nobility

·     Austria-Hungary - untitled nobility

·     Austrian nobility

·     Baltic nobility

·     Bavarian noble families

·     Belgium noble families

·     Croatian nobility

·     Dutch noble families

·     Dutch Noble Family Names, 1814 to Present

·     France – House of Bourbon

·     French nobility – present remaining families

·     Holy Roman Empire – German nobility

·     Holy Roman Empire - nobility (1)

·     Holy Roman Empire – nobility (2)

·     Holy Roman Empire - noble families

·     Hungarian noble families

·     Lithuanian nobility

·     Medieval European Nobility

·     Normandy nobility

·     Norway Aristocracy

·     Polish nobility coats of arms

·     Polish noble families – Barons

·     Polish noble families - Counts

·     Polish noble families - Marquess

·     Scottish nobility

·     Swedish noble families

·     Swiss nobility

If you are interested in the armorial bearings of a particular surname we strongly advise that you utilize the resources provided within this area of our web page.  If you have any questions or need any assistance with regard to using heraldry as a means to further or widen your family history research you are welcome to contact us, see About This Webpage.

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Mottoes of this Surname

Mottoes associated with this surname

Motto(es) Associated With This Surname

British Isles

A motto is a word or sentence usually written upon a scroll and generally placed below the shield, but sometimes, especially in Scotland, above the crest.    Many ancient mottoes were war-cries such as the Douglas motto of “Forward.”    Many mottoes refer to the name of the bearer, for example “cole regem” for Coleridge.   In general most mottoes convey a sentiment, hope, or determination, such as the Cotter motto “Dum spiro spero” where the meaning is “While I have breath I hope“.     Mottoes are often used by several successive generations, but may be changed at any time by the grantee. The languages most in use are Latin, French, and English.  Exceptions are seen in Scotland where they are often in the old Lowland dialect, and in Wales, often in the language of the principality.   

Germany

It is unusual to find a motto associated with the coat-of-arms of a noble of the European continent especially a German family.  This does not necessarily mean that the Germanic culture is devoid of mottos.  For example, the national motto of Germany is “Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit”, meaning Unity and Justice and Freedom.  The German word for motto is “Wahlspruch.”   Some of the more well known German mottoes are as follows: Alte Wunden bluten leicht – Old wounds readily bleed anew;    Blut und Eisen – Blood and iron;  Das beste is gut genug – The best is good enough;  Ein’ feste Burg is unser Gott – Our God is a strong tower of defense;  Ewigkeit – Eternity;  Für Gott und Iht – All for God and her;  Gott is überall – God is over all;  Gott mit uns – God is with us;  Ich dien – I serve;  Krieg – War;  Mehr Licht! – More light!;  Nichts zoviel – Nothing in excess;  Prosit! – Good luck!;    Vaterland – Fatherland;  Vertrau’ auf Gott – Put your trust in God;  Vorwärts! – Forward!;        Zu dienen – At your service.

France

French phrases adopted as mottos, have a certain air of chivalry and perhaps a distinctly feudal sense of duty and allegiance. French mottos are more indicative of the warrior culture of the Middle Ages. Some of these phrases, however, are translations of better known Latin mottos, such as Toujours fidèle for Semper fidelis. Some of these phrases are often found in Old French spelling.  Examples of some well known French mottoes are as follows: Aimez loyaulté - Love loyalty;  Boutez en avant - Push forward;  C’est la seule vertu qui donne la noblesse - Virtue alone confers nobility;  Droit à chacun - To each his right;  En Dieu est ma foy - In God is my faith;  Foy pour devoir - Faith for duty;  Garde la foy - Keep the faith;  Inébranlable - Not to be shaken;  J’ai bonne cause - I have good reason;  Loyauté sans tache - Loyalty without defect;  Maintien le droit - Support the right;  Ni dessus, ni dessous - Neither above nor below;  Oublier ne puis - I cannot forget;  Parle bien ou parle rien - Speak well or say nothing;  Rien sans Dieu - Nothing without God;  Suivez raison - Follow reason;  Tachez surpasser en vertue - Strive to surpass in virtue;  Un Dieu, un roy, un foy - One God, one king, one faith;  Veilliez et ne craignez pas - Watch and fear not.

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        Very little is currently known regarding my Forster family line other that it originated in the Palatinate area of Germany.        My 8th great-grandmother Kunigunda Forster lived during the second half of the 17th century.  It is said that she was a from the community of Hornbach that is now located within the German state of the Rhineland-Palatinate.  Kunigunda married Theodor Born a native of Unterhof, now in Baden-Wurrtemburg, Germany.  Our lineage continues through their daughter Susanna Margaretta Forster Born who entered this world at Rimschweiler, Rhienland-Pflaz, Germany.  It is most likely that Kunigunda Forster lived in or around Rimschweiler during her entire life.

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DESCENDANT REGISTER

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KUNIGUNDA1 FORSTER was born about 1652 in of Hornbach, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany. She married THEODOR BORN. He was born in 1652 in Unterhof, Baden-Wurrtemburg, Germany ??.

Theodor Born and Kunigunda Forster had the following child:

          SUSANNA MARGARETTA FORSTER2 BORN was born on 06 Jan 1672 in Rimschweiler, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany. She died after 1715 in Rimschweiler, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany. She married Johann George Bracher, son of Georg Bracher on 06 Jan 1693 in Hornbach, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany. He was born in 1676 in Hornbach, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany. He died after 1715 in Rimschweiler, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany.

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The documents contained within this “Source Documents Archives” have been located during our research of this family, and used as evidence to prove many of the facts contained within the database of this family’s record.   We have source documents related to the following persons within our database with this surname.

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archive of source documents.  

     Most of these documents can be considered as primary or secondary evidence.  Primary evidence is usually defined as the best available to prove the fact in question, usually in an original document or record.  Secondary evidence is in essence all that evidence which is inferior in its origin to primary evidence. That does not mean secondary evidence is always in error, but there is a greater chance of error.  Examples of this type of evidence would be a copy of an original record, or oral testimony of a record’s contents.  Published genealogies and family histories are also secondary evidence.

     Classifying evidence as either primary or secondary does not tell anything about its accuracy or ultimate value.  This is especially true of secondary evidence.  Thus it is always a good idea to ask the following questions: (1) How far removed from the original is it, (when it is a copy)?; (2) What was the reason for the creation of the source which contains this evidence?; and (3) Who was responsible for creating this secondary evidence and what interest did they have in its accuracy?

SOURCE: Greenwood, Val D., The Researcher’s Guide to American Genealogy, 2nd edition, Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore, MD 21202, 1990, pgs. 62-63

You are welcome to download any of the documents contained within this archive that does not cite a copyright.  Should you encounter a problem obtaining a copy you may get in touch with us via the contact information found at the end of this web-page.

Documents 1a

If you have any source 
documents relating to this 
family, we would greatly 
appreciate hearing from you.

Documents 1a

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Migration routes

Migrations of the
American Family

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       Tracing our own family’s paths of migration can prove crucial in identifying previous generations and eventually, figuring out where and how they arrived in the “New World” as well as where they eventually settled.  Knowing the network of trails American pioneers traveled can help you guess where to start looking.  The trail map(s) provided below may assist you in understanding the routes that our direct ancestors of this family may have taken to find new homes and opportunities in the vast area now encompassed by the United States.

      During the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries hundreds of thousands of Europeans made the perilous ocean voyage to America.  For many it was an escape from economic hardship and religious persecution.  For most it was an opportunity to start over, own their own land, and make a better future for their descendents.

Immigration records show a number of people bearing the name of FORSTER, or one of its variants, as arriving in North America between the 17th and 20th centuries.  Some of these immigrants were: Richard and Jane Forster arrived in Maryland 1653 along with their children Richard, Jr., and Ann; Peter Forster came to New Jersey in 1709; John Georg Forster landed at New York in 1710; Hans Michael Forster, came to Philadelphia in 1727, as did John Jac Forster, age 30, in 1741, Conrad Forster in 1744, and Jacob Forster in 1749; George Forster came to Charles Town, South Carolina, in 1772;  Thomas and Eleanor Forster came to America in 1806.

American Migration(s) of the Forster Family

NOT APPLICABLE

Use the following links to find more early immigrants with this surname:

$ Search Ancestry.com Immigration Records; or Free Ship’s Passenger lists at OliveTreeGenealogy.com

The Development of an Historical Migration Route

It is understood that in many if not all cases we do not know exactly what routes our ancestors took as they migrated throughout the United States.   As such certain assumptions have been utilized to re-create the migration path presented above.  With regard to 18th and 19th century land routes we assume that they travelled along few trails and roads that were in existence at the time.  Research shows that a great many of these old paths and trails are today designated as U.S. Highway Routes.  For example, a major east-west route of migration known as the National Road is now U.S. Route 40, and a primary north-south migration route of the 18th century followed the Great Indian War and Trading Path is now U.S. Route 11.  In some situations the re-created migration route may travel along state routes that connect or run through the seat of a county as that populated place is probably the oldest settlement in the area. The use of water as a migration route is also likely.  For example, during the late 18th and early 19th centuries many families travelled west on the Ohio River as they moved on the new lands in Missouri or the Old Northwest Territory.  As such when applicable water routes have been included as the possible migration route.   

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World1

Ancestral locations

Ancestral
 Locations

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Researching the locations where our ancestors lived has provided us with valuable evidence needed to fill in the gaps in our family trees.  It has also led us to many interesting facts that enhance the overall picture of each family group.

Locations of Our Direct Ancestors

The names of states and counties on the following list were derived from the known places where the Direct Ancestors in the “Ancestral Lineage” (see above) were born, married, and / or died.

COUNTRY

STATE

COUNTY / SUBDIVISION

GERMANY

RHEINLAND-PFLAZ

Sudwestpfalz (Hornbach)

 

 

 

Use this LINK to find out more about this

ANCESTRAL LOCATIONS link button

ancestral family and the locations listed above.

Looking for world PEA GREEN)

Where are my

Where in the World
are My Ancestors?

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Resources which enhance our knowledge of the places inhabited by our ancestors are almost as important as their names. The LINK to the right will take you to Maps, Gazetteers,   and  other  helpful   resources 

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that will assist in discovering Ancestral Locations.  These web sites comprise only a small portion of what is available for researchers interested in learning more about where their ancestors lived.

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Family Collage grad 3 framed copy

Images gallery

Gallery of
Family Images

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During our research we have collected images and photographs that are of general interest to a particular family.  Some of them are presented on this website because we believe they tend to provide the reader with additional information which may aid in the understanding of our ancestors past lives.  We have images related to the following persons within our database with this surname.

NONE

This Link will take you to our

Family Image Archives

collection of family images.  

Free Image Search
help from Google

Use the power of Google™ to find more interesting images about this topic. This button will link you to the Google Images Search   page.   Enter   the   topic   you   are

Google Image Search Search

searching in the box and click “Search Images”. At the “Images” display page you will see the image, as well as the website of which it is associated.

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About this webpage

About This Webpage

CONTACT INFORMATION

Mail1B0-- Email us with your comments or questions.

We do like to hear from others who are researching the same people and surnames.

We need your help to keep growing!  So please Email coolmailus your

photos, stories, and other appropriate information about this topic.

RULES OF USE
You are welcome to download any information on this page that does not cite a copyright.

We only ask that if you have a personal website please create a link to our Home Page.

-- This webpage was last updated on --

01 January 2014

Diggin for Roots (2 shovels)

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Diggin for Roots (2 shovels)