Tschugguel
Tschugguel (also written as Tschuggül) is an Austrian noble family from South Tyrol. The family was granted the right to bear a coat of arms in 1530 and was elevated to the rank of baron in 1705, becoming von Tschugguel zu Tramin.
Tschugguel | |
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noble family | |
Coat of Arms of the Barons of Tschugguel | |
Country | Austria |
Place of origin | South Tyrol, Holy Roman Empire |
Titles | |
Traditions | Roman Catholicism Lutheranism |
History
The Tschugguel family originated near the Ulten Valley on Tschueggsee in South Tyrol. The name, meaning "oak at Tschueggsee", comes from an Austrian legend about a thousand-year-old oak tree. Members of the family settled in Kaltern an der Weinstraße and Tramin an der Weinstraße in the 13th century.
In 1530 the mayor of Tramin an der Weinstraße, Leonhard von Tschugguel, was awarded a coat of arms by Archduke Ferdinand.
On 23 May 1705 Leonhard Ritter von Tschugguel Edler von Tschuegg von Pichelheimb, Graunburg und Mayenfeldt was elevated from knightly rank to baronial rank in the Austrian nobility.[1]
Notable family members
- Baron Albert von Tschugguel, Austrian Court Councilor and deputy imperial postmaster
- Peter von Tramin (Peter Tschugguel), Austrian writer
- Alexander Tschugguel, Austrian Catholic activist
References
- von Müehlfeld, J.G.M. (1822). Österreichisches Adels-Lexikon des achtzehnten u. neunzehnten Jahrhunderts enthaltend alle von 1701 bis 1820 von den Souveranen Österreichs ... in die verschiedenen Grade, des deutsch-erbländischen oder Reichs-Adels, erhobenen Personen. Morschner. Retrieved 2020-01-05.