In der Maur (also written as In der Mauer, Indermaur, Indermauer) is a Swiss family. Throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance, members of the family held political offices in Berneck, St. Gallen. The In der Maur von Berneck family were first granted a coat of arms in 1478, when Hermann In der Maur was appointed as the Ammann of Berneck of the Abbot of St. Gallen. Members of the family also served as Imperial tax collectors and as clerks of the Court of Berneck. The first member of the family to hold the position of Ammann in Berneck was Ulrich In der Maur in 1435.
A member of the Bernecker branch, Hans Indermaur, settled in Rheineck in 1590, where his descendants were granted fiefdoms. The Indermaur von Rheineck family were granted a coat of arms in 1685, first used by Johann In der Maur, and members of this family served as magistrates and clerks of the Court of Rheineck.
During the Middle Ages the In der Maurs were granted the right to use heraldry. Hermann In der Maur (or Mur) was granted a coat of arms including a green shamrock clover leaf on a golden shield in 1478.[2][3] They were members of the Bürgergemeinde, and therefore part of the Swiss bourgeoisie,[3] Throughout the Middle Ages and Renaissance period, the In der Maurs held administrative roles in the government of Farniwang/Bernang (later called Berneck) as Landamänner (Ammann), or chief magistrates of the rural Landsgemeinde, and as clerks of the court (Gerichtsschreiber).[4][5] They continued having political and economic influence in the region after the Abbey of Saint Gall gained control, having been granted privileges by the Prince-Abbots of St. Gallen. With these privileges, they held the position of Ammann of the Abbot of St. Gall to Bernang.[5][6][7][8] The In der Maurs also served as Imperial tax collectors (Landvogtammaenner) for Bernang on behalf of the Imperial Landvogt.[5] Jakob Indermaur was Seckelmeister (treasury master) in 1699.[3] Johann Indermaur was a court clerk in 1705.[3] Hans Georg Indermaur served as a court clerk from 1805 to 1807.[3] Ulrich In der Maur was appointed as Ammann in 1435.[5] One of his descendants, Hermann In der Maur, was made Ammann in 1458.[3] Another Hermann In der Maur was appointed as Ammann in 1493.[5] Hans Indermaur was made Ammann in 1554.[3] Ulrich In der Maur became Ammann in 1614.[3] Johannes Indermaur was made Ammann in 1719.[3] Josef Indermaur zu Bernang became Ammann in 1741.[3]
In 1609, the Ammann Ulrich Indermaur, along with Thomas Haingler and Georg Schegg as appointed committee members and official representatives of the Court of Berneck, handled a property and inheritance dispute with Count Kaspar zu Hohenems.[4] In 1610 Ulrich Indermaur was part of a group of government officials who made inspections with the local bailiff and Prince-Abbot's ordiners.[4] In 1613, members of the Reichsvogt including Jakob Spengler, Joachim Rütlinger, Otmar Rheiner, Jakob Allgöwer, and Georg Gruber approved an exchange of land and crops between the Hospital in St. Gallen and Bartholome Wettach, another official and resident of Berneck.[4] Ulrich Indermaur collected taxes on the property, including an annual interest of 1 pound, 9 shillings, 10 pfennings, and 2 chickens, as well as a premium of 5 guilders, which went back to the hospital.[4] On 24 February 1615, Ulrich Indermaur served as one of five delegates representing the farms of the Upper Rhine Valley.[4]
In 1612, the Lords of Zürich, supporting Protestantism, selected a local preacher named Heinrich Rauch to fill the post in Berneck.[4] Rauch was presented to Prince-Abbot Bernhard Müller by Baltus Torgler and the Ammann Heinrich Indermaur on behalf of the lords.[4] This offended the Catholic Prince-Abbot, who believed filling the position was his right.[4] He called upon his courtier, Isidor Metzler, a clergyman and doctor of church law, to look into the violation against the Imperial Abbey.[4] Metzler argued that the right to appoint priests and preachers in Berneck was granted solely to the Church in St. Gallen, and that the Abbot had the right to appoint clergy throughout the imperial territory without the approval or recommendations of the lords.[4] After Rauch agreed to keep in line with Church teaching and to preach peace and unity in the community, he was allowed to make his vows to the Prince-Abbot and was granted a fiefdom.[4] On 14 July 1614, the Ammann Ulrich Indermaur signed and presented a request to Prince-Abbot Müller on behalf of the priest Sebastian Roth of Berneck and the local Catholic Church to appoint the clergyman Georg Keizer, the former pastor of Flawil, to a local curatorship and allow him to preach at the early masses.
The In der Maur family owned vineyards in the Rhine Valley. Konrad (Cunradten) Indermaur owned a vineyard that bordered the estate of the Franz family, and the Pfarrpfrund.[4] Ulrich Indermaur owned a vineyard that bordered the vineyards of Hans Curer, Hans Böckhen, and Antoni Frei.[4] A vineyard owned by Bartli Indermaur bordered that of Antoni Frei and Otmar Noll's heirs, near Mühlebach.[4] In 1615 the Ammann of Berneck, Ulrich Indermaur, owned a vineyard called Tannweg that bordered the estates of Rudolf Jäkli, Sebastuan Dierauer, and Kaspar Weber.[4] Jakob Indermaur owned a vineyard that bordered the property of George Seiz and Ulrich Seitz.[4] In 1620, Jakob Indermaur was one of 13 men ordered by the Court of Berneck to ensure streets, paths, and bridges were cleared and cleaned between the vineyards of the Junker Hans Kaspar Rugg von Tannegg, representing his cousin Magdalena Rugg, the Ammann Hans Kaufmann, and Lukas Studach von Altstätten.[4]
Kurtatsch an der Weinstraße, Bavaria, and Liechtenstein
Baron Caspar von Indermaur held the position of Ober Jägermeister (Master of the hunt).[23]
In 1779, Baron Johann Baptist von Indermaur is listed in Des Hohen Erz-Stifts und Churfürstenthums Trier Hof-, Staats- und Stands-Kalender as a court official in Trier.[24]
In 1590 Hans Indermaur, a tanner from Berneck, resettled in Rheineck.[26][7] Indermaur's house was purchased in the 1700s by the municipality of Rheineck and was converted into an orphanage. The building is now a historic landmark and the house's cellar, once used as a tannery, is now a performance venue.[27] As vassals, the In der Maurs were granted fiefdoms and owned vineyards in Berneck and Rheineck.[5] On 19 March 1655, a tanner named Jakob Indermaur von Rheineck was granted a fief near Reben am Schwerzenberg.[28] He was granted another fief, in Strenglen, on 24 June 1689.[29]
The family were granted a second coat of arms in Rheineck, when Johann (Johannes) In der Maur was granted a coat of arms in 1685 depicting a golden lion wielding a blade on a blue shield.[30][31] Johannes Indermaur von Rheineck was given a fief in Pulberstampf on 1 June 1718.[32] Niklaus Indermaur von Rheineck, the son of a former district governor, was granted a fief in Kugelwies on 4 March 1726 by Johann Jakob Ritter von Ackermann.[33][34] Heinrich In der Maur was granted a fief in Strenglen on 10 March 1751.[35] Zacharias Indermaur von Rheineck was granted a fiefdom in Pulverstampfe, near Weissgerberwalke, on 12 June 1763.[36]
In the 1800s, members of the family held government administrative positions as court clerks, scribes, and Bezirksammann (district magistrates).[37][38][39][40]
The Netherlands and United Kingdom
In the middle of the eighteenth century Paulus In der Maur of Berneck (1732–1805) moved from Switzerland to Schoonhoven, South Holland, the Netherlands, thus creating a Dutch branch of the family.[41][8] His descendants later settled in Utrecht, Gouda, Rotterdam, and Dordrecht. This line included two prominent organ builders, Johann Frederik In der Maur (1790–1836) and Johannes Casper In der Maur (1817–1860). Paulus In der Maur's great-grandson, George In der Maur (1831–1889), moved to Batavia, Dutch East Indies (present-day Jakarta, Indonesia), where he married and had seven children.[8][42] Christina Antoinette In der Maur (1866–1914), a daughter of George In der Maur, married Johan de Lannoy, a descendent of Eustachius De Lannoy.[43][44]
Johannes In der Maur of Berneck (b. 1748), son of Herman In der Mauer von Berneck (b. 1719) and Anna Schreiberin, moved with his wife Margaretha Oberhausler from Switzerland to England. They had three children; Herman Indermaur (b. 1776), Anna Regula Indermaur (b. 1778), and Henry Indermaur (1788–1848).[45] The English In der Maur line continued with descendants settling in Middlesex and Somerset. In 1904, John Indermaur and Lancelot Indermaur were included in the Royal Blue Book: Court and Parliamentary Guide, a directory published under the patronage of the Edward VII that listed upper-class London residents.[46] In 1936, M.J. Indermaur served as chairman of the Union Helvetia Club in London.[47]
In 1952, Minnie Rose Carpenter (b. 1919) of Gillingham, the wife of David George Indermaur, departed from Southampton with her daughters Barbara Catherine Indermaur (b. 1944) and Jean Elizabeth Indermaur (b. 1949) to join her husband in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.[48]
20th-century to 21st-century
The Austrian In der Maurs included the nobiliary particlesvon (descending from) and zu (resident at) in their surname as von In der Maur auf Strehlburg und zu Freienfeld, referencing two of their principal estates, Strehlburg and Freienfeld, in South Tyrol.[49] The use of nobiliary particles in the surname was maintained until the nobility was abolished in Austria in 1919 and the use of nobiliary particles in the surname became illegal in Austria.
A restaurant in Rorschach, Zum goldenen Fass, was started by Johann Indermaur of Berneck in 1905 and is still owned and operated by the family.[50] The family has owned the Maienhalde estate, a winery and vineyard in Berneck, for four generations.[51][52] The In der Maurs owned a furniture manufacturing company and warehouse in Goldach for 105 years.[53][54] In 2000 the family sold a kitchen business to Ruedi Kälin, Claude Strickler and Rolf Kurath, who incorporated it into the company ASTOR Küchen AG in Einsiedeln.
^Hannes Obermair (2005). Bozen Süd – Bolzano Nord. Schriftlichkeit und urkundliche Überlieferung der Stadt Bozen bis 1500. Vol. 1. Bozen-Bolzano: Stadtgemeinde Bozen. p. 419 no. 891. ISBN88-901870-0-X.
^von Hye, Franz-Heinz (2010) [1923], Die Wappen des alten Tiroler Adels bis zum Übergang Tirols an Bayern 1805/06 (in German), Innsbruck, Austria: Universitätsverlag Wagner, p. 114, ISBN978-3-7030-0482-7