When my grandfather was a young boy, he liked
to climb out of bed, climb halfway down the stairs and listen in on his family
digging up (and sometimes making up) old stories late at night. Particularly
on the rare occasions that his father's three
brothers or his grandfather were there, the
conversation would turn to family history. And when I was a young boy, staying
with my grandparents, he enjoyed repeating them - as old people do. Strangely
enough, none of it was boring: what to say of his
mother's father, who died on the day of his 50th wedding anniversary,
sitting on a wheelbarrow? Of his father's father,
who time and time again travelled from Germany to his family in the Netherlands
with knickerbockers filled with coffee and sugar without ever being caught
by customs? Or of his death - standing near a hedge relieving the pressure
on his bladder, when a tramcar overran him, his fly still undone? Or of the
horrors of WWII - of special interest to me since I grew up in a village (Renkum)
and a city (Arnhem) still strewn with ruins, bomb craters and bullet holes?
In the early 1980s, my then girlfriend got tired of me repeating these small tragedies and comedies, and gave me a book, an introduction to genealogy. I spent the next ten years in archives. Well, part of it. And of course I had the same interests any other genealogist has, however much he or she may deny it: is there a family crest? The answer, so far, is no - so I invented one for my father’s 70th birthday. Is there nobility in my family? O yes, you bet: the Van den Eyndes of Holland and Zeeland, the Van der Zype family from Ghent, the Pijlijsers from Tilburg and many others, all descending from Charlemagne, through the empress Theophano possibly also from the Persian kings Darius and Xerxes, and through others from the prophet of Islam. So what?
Yet the real fun lay elsewhere: in the reconstruction of biographies. If you're already interested in your family, there is no thrill like discovering that your great-grandfather and his three brothers married on the same day, or to read the newspaper clippings. And nothing as silly as discovering that your great-great-grandmother and one of your best and oldest friends' great-great-grandfather (I won't mention any names, but he owns Tarma) were once neighbours.
Over the years, I collected data on over 20,000 people. Even disregarding links to Charlemagne’s descendants, I traced back ‘normal’ ancestors who lived as long ago as 1250 - although there is so little documentation on them that they are often nothing more than names and approximate dates. By 2005, my very extended family included people from Gelderland, Brabant, Holland, Zeeland, Fryslân (Friesland), Flanders, East-Prussia, the German Rhineland, France, Bavaria, Italy, Spain, Asia Minor, Egypt, Greece, Israel and so on. Some were poor (one even died in the poorhouse), some rich; some heroes, some criminals, one was even an executioner (and barber). They were Catholic, Old Catholic, Dutch Reformed of all flavours, Lutheran, Baptist, Remonstrant, and so on - one (in the 1770s) was even officially "nothing". Some were day labourers, some colonels, cheese traders or manservants. And they all left traces - signatures, buildings, tramways, documents.
Unfortunately, I got a decent job in 1990 and have not found enough spare time (and energy) since then to continue my research in earnest. In the best of years, I have about a week to spend on it - usually with little success, as I've already gone through virtually all of the more easily accessible archives. Lately, that is, for the last five years, I'm focussing on one person only, Peter Wissenburg, of whom all I know with certainty is that he came from Moers in Germany, married in Elden near Arnhem in 1752, and died in the 1770s. I have, I think, identified his father - but the final proof remains missing.
Anyway, I won't bother you with a complete family tree. There is no fun in that. But here are a few of the gems I dug up, or created, in those ten years among the dust:
Probably the best place to start genealogical research on the Internet is Herman de Wit's site:
For a brief version of one of my lines of descent from Charlemagne, see Series 177 on the Charlemagne site:
To contact me on genealogical subjects, please use the email address below. You will have to type it in, because I'm getting too much spam as it is without exposing my email address to robots.
Copyright © 1986-2010 by Marcel
Wissenburg. All rights reserved.
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