Martin Hassenzahl

Brief Life History of Martin

When Martin Hassenzahl was born on 10 August 1656, in Pfungstadt, Darmstadt, Grand Duchy of Hesse, his father, Nicolaus Hassenzahl, was 43 and his mother, Margaretha Hassenroder, was 44. He married Agnes Maria Elisabeth Marsteller on 8 January 1678, in Pfungstadt, Darmstadt, Grand Duchy of Hesse. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 2 daughters. He died on 29 March 1727, in Pfungstadt, Darmstadt, Hesse, Germany, at the age of 70.

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Family Time Line

Martin Hassenzahl
1656–1727
Agnes Maria Elisabeth Marsteller
1657–1733
Marriage: 8 January 1678
Anna Elisabetha Hassenzahl
1678–1751
Johannes Hassenzahl
1681–
Anna Margaretha Hasenzahl
1684–
Johann Georg Hassenzahl
1687–1776

Sources (10)

  • Martin Hasenzohl, "Germany Marriages, 1558-1929"
  • Martin Hasenzahl, "Germany Deaths and Burials, 1582-1958"
  • Martin Hosenzohl in entry for Johann Balthasar Becker and Anna Margretha Hosenzohl, "Germany Marriages, 1558-1929"

Name Meaning

form of the Latin name Martinus. This was probably originally derived from Mars (genitive Martis), the name of the Roman god of war (and earlier of fertility). Martin became very popular in the Middle Ages, especially on the Continent, as a result of the fame of St Martin of Tours . He was born the son of a Roman officer in Upper Pannonia (an outpost of the Roman Empire, now part of Hungary), and, although he became a leading figure in the 4th-century Church, he is chiefly remembered now for having divided his cloak in two and given half to a beggar. The name was also borne by five popes, including one who defended Roman Catholic dogma against Eastern Orthodox theology. He died after suffering imprisonment and privations in Naxos and public humiliation in Constantinople, and was promptly acclaimed a martyr by supporters of the Roman Church. Among Protestants, the name is sometimes bestowed in honour of the German theologian Martin Luther ( 1483–1546 ); Martin was used as a symbolic name for the Protestant Church in satires by both Dryden and Swift. A further influence may be its use as the given name of the civil-rights leader Martin Luther King ( 1929–68 ).

Dictionary of First Names © Patrick Hanks and Flavia Hodges 1990, 2003, 2006.

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