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Susanna Katharina Neuhardt

Susanna Katharina Neuhardt

Female 1692 - 1758  (65 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Susanna Katharina Neuhardt was born on 13 May 1692 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern (daughter of Johannes Georg Neuhardt and Anna Apollonia Rothschmitt); died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.

    Susanna married Johannes Kochert in 1711. Johannes (son of Johannes Kochert and Anna Elisabetha Stöhr) was born on 2 Apr 1683 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern; died on 7 Jan 1730 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Maria Margaretha Kochert was born in 1727 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Johannes Georg Neuhardt was born in 1664 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern (son of Johannes Christoph Neuhardt and Maria Katharina Wagner); died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.

    Johannes married Anna Apollonia Rothschmitt about 1689 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern. Anna (daughter of Johannes Rothschmitt and Anna Sybilla Wagner) was born on 14 Feb 1669 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Anna Apollonia Rothschmitt was born on 14 Feb 1669 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern (daughter of Johannes Rothschmitt and Anna Sybilla Wagner); died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.
    Children:
    1. 1. Susanna Katharina Neuhardt was born on 13 May 1692 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Johannes Christoph Neuhardt was born in 1631 in Rumbach, Pfalz (son of Johannes Christoph Neuhardt and Margaretha Ostertag); died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz.

    Johannes married Maria Katharina Wagner in 1659. Maria (daughter of Hans Wagner and Barbara) was born in 1637 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern; died in 0Nov 1680 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Maria Katharina Wagner was born in 1637 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern (daughter of Hans Wagner and Barbara); died in 0Nov 1680 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.
    Children:
    1. 2. Johannes Georg Neuhardt was born in 1664 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.

  3. 6.  Johannes Rothschmitt was born in 1635 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern.

    Johannes married Anna Sybilla Wagner about 1662. Anna (daughter of Johannes Wagner and Decker) was born in 1641 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Anna Sybilla Wagner was born in 1641 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern (daughter of Johannes Wagner and Decker); died in in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern.
    Children:
    1. 3. Anna Apollonia Rothschmitt was born on 14 Feb 1669 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Johannes Christoph Neuhardt was born in 1599 in Nothweiler, Pfalz (son of Valentin Neuhardt and Barbara Wagner); died in in Rumbach, Pfalz.

    Notes:

    lebt in Rumbach

    BIOGRAPHY: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~harringtonfamilies/120c.htm
    Christoph Neuhart (1599 - 1654), the son of Valentine and Barbara Nauert, brings yet another variant on the spelling of the Neuhart name. This spelling remains the current and most popular version. It was Christoph Neuhart who brought the Ostertag (Ostertag means Easter Day in English) name into our ancestral tree. He married Margaret Ostertag (abt 1605 - aft 1667) who was the daughter of Marzolph (Marx) Ostertag (abt 1560 - 1619). The Ostertag family will be discussed in more detail in the following pages.
    Christoph and Margaret lived through and raised their family in a particularly difficult period. The religious upheavals of the mid-1500s had given birth to several protestant religions in opposition to the parent Catholic church. With the dawning of the new century, there were strong feelings that ranged from the belief that the Catholic church should be unified and restored as the only church in Europe, to, equally strong feelings that the Protestant reforms were the correct interpretation of the Christian faith. By the early 17th century these factions had crystalized their positions and had large followings that reached to high levels in the government. Some were willing to go to war to protect their beliefs.
    While the Thirty-Year Wars that followed may have been originally justified by the participants on religious grounds, it soon became an opportunity to pursue economic and aggressive agendas. For example, Spain who held much of the territory which is now the Netherlands had long sought an overland route between her possessions in Italy and the Netherlands. The lands of our ancestors lay directly in their path.
    In the end, the period between 1618 and 1648 saw several waves of armed forces sweep across Europe with devastating results. Villages and houses in the paths of these armies became the providers of food and supplies needed to keep the armies functional.
    The problem was further exacerbated by the return of the bubonic plague in 1635/36. In this period the county of Wegelnburg lost over 75% of its population, 66% of the residences, 85% of the horses, 82% of the cattle, 83% of the goats and 100% of the sheep. Schoenau where the population was 102 persons in 1634 was reduce to 2 families. At least 62 people were buried in the wake of the Black Death in Rumbach during 1635/36. These burials were found in a concentrated area of the Rumbach cemetery just outside the main entry to the church during the 1957 renovation of the structure. During the hostilities, the Rumbach church was on the village side was hit by cannon fire about November 1635, but this was apparently repaired by 1638.
    The population of the area around Rumbach remained very sparse for the next 50 years, with only 40 families in the County of Wegelnburg in 1676. Then, following the period of the Thirty-Year Wars, there were repeated "Wars of Reunion" which combined with plague and famine kept the population low.
    Book: the book Neuhart Nobility. 3 All known Neuharts descend from a single patriarch, Christophel Neuhart (1599-1654), a resident of Rumbach, Germany. In 1626, he united with Margaret Ostertag (1605-1667), daughter of the village innkeeper, and granddaughter of the town mayor. It is through the Ostertag family that the Neuharts trace descent from royalty. This noble past is described in the 260 pages of Neuhart Nobility, second edition. Over 2,000 regal ancestors appear in this illustrated volume (double the number of forebears in the first edition). These progenitors are depicted on over 200 family charts. What Will You Find? You descend from community leaders, magistrates, and other prominent personages in Alsace-Lorraine, Germany and surrounding areas. Besides several medieval knights, various lords and earls, there are many counts, dukes, monarchs, even emperors among your kinship. You descend from portions of the royal houses of Germany, France, Russia, Poland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Italy, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Austria. You are related by blood to Sir Winston Churchill, Dr. Albert Schweitzer, and to 16 U.S. presidents of royal descent: Washington, Jefferson, Monroe, Adams, Harrison, Buchanan, Lincoln, Grant, Garfield, T. Roosevelt, Taft, Nixon, Reagan, Kennedy and Bush, six first ladies, various reigning monarchs in Europe as well as personages of international acclaim. Seventeen professional researchers (from Germany, France, and the U.S.A.) were involved in this effort. Typed by Ethel C. Phillips and edited by Dennis A. Kastens, 1997, 260 pages. $35.00 (includes postage and handling). Index included.

    Johannes married Margaretha Ostertag on 18 Jul 1627 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern. Margaretha (daughter of Marzolph Ostertag and Barbara Jost) was born in 1605 in Rumbach, Pfalz; died in in Rumbach, Pfalz. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Margaretha Ostertag was born in 1605 in Rumbach, Pfalz (daughter of Marzolph Ostertag and Barbara Jost); died in in Rumbach, Pfalz.
    Children:
    1. Nikolaus Neuhardt was born in 1629 in Rumbach, Pfalz; died in in Rumbach, Pfalz.
    2. 4. Johannes Christoph Neuhardt was born in 1631 in Rumbach, Pfalz; died in in Nothweiler, Pfalz.
    3. Anna Barbara Neuhardt was born on 23 Apr 1633 in Rumbach, Pfalz; died in in Pirmasens, , Pfalz.

  3. 10.  Hans Wagner was born in 1592 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern (son of Wagner); died on 16 May 1642 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.

    Hans married Barbara about 1619. Barbara was born in 1595 in Niederschlettenbach, Pfalz, Bayern. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Barbara was born in 1595 in Niederschlettenbach, Pfalz, Bayern.
    Children:
    1. Barbara Wagner was born on 12 Jun 1635 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.
    2. 5. Maria Katharina Wagner was born in 1637 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern; died in 0Nov 1680 in Nothweiler, Pfalz, Bayern.

  5. 14.  Johannes Wagner was born in 1602 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern.

    Johannes married Decker about 1630. was born in 1609 in Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  Decker was born in 1609 in Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern.
    Children:
    1. 7. Anna Sybilla Wagner was born in 1641 in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern; died in in Rumbach, Pfalz, Bayern.