Bylandt

The House of Bylandt is the name of an ancient house of nobility originating in the Lower Rhine region. It later split into the cadet branches of Bylandt-Well, Bylandt-Rheydt and Bylandt-Halt-Spaldorf.

van Bylandt
noble family
Country Netherlands
 Germany
Founded13th century
FounderWilhelmus dictus Doys
Titlescount, baron
Cadet branchesBylandt-Well
Bylandt-Rheydt
Bylandt-Halt-Spaldorf

History

The first tracable ancestors of the house of Bylandt were known by the name of Doys, and were already noble ("Uradel"). The first documented member of this name is Wilhelmus dictus Doys (1260) who died in the Battle of Worringen. Doys is mentioned in 1275 as being the owner of Castle Scate, then a fiefdom of the Counts (and later Dukes) of Cleves. Doys son Dietrich became the first person to use "de Bylandt" as his house name (1294). From then on all descendants used the name Bylandt. Following that period, the Bylandt family became steadily more powerful and acquired vast amounts of land. The title Marshal of the County of Cleves also stayed in the family for a long time. In 1500, the three cadet branches formed. The first branch, Bylandt-Well, became the owners of Gut in Geldern but soon died out. The second, Bylandt-Rheydt, inherited Rheydt, later calling themselves Baron of Rheydt, and gained control of much land, including land in Austria, the Netherlands and Germany. They were later granted the title of Freiherr. The third cadet branch, Bylandt-Halt-Spaldorf, gained control of the Castles of Halt and Spaldorf in Westphalia and also became Freiherren.

Famous scions

Coat of arms

Shield: in gold a black cross. This coat of arms is depicted in the medieval Gelre Armorial (folio 90r).[1]

Literature

  • Balk, L.Inventaris van de familie-archieven van Bylant-Halt en van Bylandt-Rheydt (1329–1970) ('s-Gravenhage, 1983). (in Dutch).
  • Otto Hupp. Münchener Kalender 1931. (München/Regensburg, 1931). (in German).
  • Vorsterman van Oijen, A.A.Genealogie van het geslacht van Bijlandt.('s-Gravenhage, 1891) (in Dutch).
  • Nederland's Adelsboek 80 (1989), pp. 599–632 (in Dutch).
  • Detlev Schwennicke, Europäische Stammtafeln Band XVIII (1998) Tafel 48–53.

References

  1. |Gelre Armorial folio 90r.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.