Maria Agnes Bauer

Brief Life History of Maria Agnes

When Maria Agnes Bauer was born on 31 January 1801, in Lustnau, Tübingen, Württemberg, Germany, her father, Joseph Bauer, was 27 and her mother, Maria Agnes Braun, was 27. She married Gottfried Ezel on 7 May 1820. She died on 14 April 1845, in Akkerman, Bessarabia, Russian Empire, at the age of 44.

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Family Time Line

Johann Georg Roth
1804–1840
Maria Agnes Bauer
1801–1845
Marriage: 27 April 1830
Carl Friedrich Roth
1830–
Johann Georg Roth
1832–1906
Christian Jakob Roth
1834–1911
Johanson George Roth
1835–1873
Maria Karolina Roth
1836–
Marie Caroline Roth
1837–

Sources (26)

  • Maria Agnes Bauer, "Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1500-1971"
  • Maria Agnes Ezel in entry for Johann Georg Roth, "Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1500-1971"
  • Maria Agnes Lauer, "Germany Marriages, 1558-1929"

World Events (6)

1812

Napoleon's army occupies Moscow but is then driven out of Russia.

1812

Treaty of Bucharest grants Russia control of eastern Moldova or Bessarabia, the area between the River Prut and the west bank of the Dniester. The Ottoman Empire gains control of western Moldova.

1813 · Germans defeat Napolean in Leipzig

On Oct 19, 1813, Germany defeats Napolean. The commanding officer for the Allied side was Prince Karl Phillipp Schwarzenberg.

Name Meaning

Some characteristic forenames: German Kurt, Hans, Otto, Erwin, Fritz, Helmut, Heinz, Manfred, Franz, Gerhard, Johannes, Wolfgang.

German and Jewish (Ashkenazic): status name for a peasant or nickname meaning ‘neighbor, fellow citizen’, from Middle High German (ge)būr, Middle Low German būr, denoting an occupant of a būr, a small dwelling or building. This word later fell together with Middle High German būwære, an agent noun from Old High German būwan ‘to cultivate’, later also (at first in Low German dialects) ‘to build’. The precise meaning of the Jewish surname, which is of later formation, is unclear. This surname is also found in France (Alsace and Lorraine), the Netherlands, Denmark, Hungary, Poland, Czechia, Slovakia, Croatia, and Slovenia, often as a translation into German of corresponding Slavic status names or surnames.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

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