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Blandina Kierstede

Female - 1702


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Blandina Kierstede (daughter of Hans Kierstede and Sara Roeloffse); died in 1702 in New York.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 2AFC245DDDF24E6E8FB8B47D66F399801C0D

    Blandina married Living in 1674. [Group Sheet]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Hans Kierstede was born about 1612 in Maegdenburg, Prussia; died on 1 Oct 1671.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: FED519B11FE04FB48B16A2357E9EDAAEBB2F

    Hans married Sara Roeloffse in 1642 in New Amsterdam (NY). Sara (daughter of Roelof Jansen and Anneke Jans) was born before 1626 in Masterlant, Holland; died in 1693. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Sara Roeloffse was born before 1626 in Masterlant, Holland (daughter of Roelof Jansen and Anneke Jans); died in 1693.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: BD123789D96140F6B527DBD32D84A95C3F3A

    Children:
    1. Roeloff Kierstede and died.
    2. Hans (Jan) Kierstede died about 1692 in New York City.
    3. Living
    4. 1. Blandina Kierstede died in 1702 in New York.
    5. Jochem (John) Kierstede and died.
    6. Lucas Kierstede and died.
    7. Catharyn Kierstede and died.
    8. Jacob Kierstede and died.
    9. Rachel Kierstede and died.
    10. Jacobus Kierstede, Dr. was born on 28 Nov 1663 in New Amsterdam (NY); died before 1702.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Roelof Jansen was born about 1602; died before 1639 in New Amsterdam (NY).

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 9DEE499E820F4EE196521EE9571C23EBA288

    Roelof married Anneke Jans on 18 Apr 1623 in Dutch Reformed New Church, Amsterdam, Netherlands. Anneke (daughter of Johan and Trijntje Roelofs) was born in 1604 in Flekkeroy, Vest Agder, Norway; died in 1663 in Beverwyck, New Netherlands; was buried in 1663 in Middle Dutch Cemetary, Beaver St, Albany, NY. [Group Sheet]


  2. 7.  Anneke Jans was born in 1604 in Flekkeroy, Vest Agder, Norway (daughter of Johan and Trijntje Roelofs); died in 1663 in Beverwyck, New Netherlands; was buried in 1663 in Middle Dutch Cemetary, Beaver St, Albany, NY.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 7FDBADD717EE4590AB5E98C4236F30442301
    • Immigration: 1630, New Amsterdam (NY)

    Notes:

    According to the NYGBR v. 104, Anneke's proper Norwegian name was "Anneke Johansdatter", but this was transliterated to "Anneke Jans" by the Dutch.

    Mr. Leo van de Pas of Perth Western Australia, a seasoned researcher and author on author on the subject of royal ancestry, writes:

    A few years ago I have produced a book (for sale via Heraldry Today in England) covering the first six generations of descendants of William the Silent. Also I have a book published
    in 1933 to celebrate the 400th birthday of William the Silent, this book has 'chapters' on all aspects of William the Silent's life. Each chapter is written by a different scholar. One fascinating sections tells, almost day by day, where he was during his life.

    William the Silent did marry four times and did have an affair (natural relationship) with Eva Elincx and by her produced a son, Justinus van Nassau. William the Silent, had he had more illegitimate children, would have brought them up, given them the name van Nassau, and
    they would have been known. He lived a very public life and he was not ashamed of his one bastard and would not have been had there been more.

    His son, Maurits, had eight illegitimate children by six different women, all are known and recorded. His other son, Frederik Hendrik, had one illegitimate son whose line still exists today.

    Anneke Jans had nothing whatsoever to do with the House of Nassau!
    -------------
    Other modern researchers have weighed in on this issue, including William Addams Reitwiesner and John Steele Gordon. The text below was taken from a discussion on the Anneke Jans saga:

    There was a recent article in the New England Historic Genealogical Register addressing the later court cases regarding the famous inheritance. Basically, following the death of Anneke Jans,her estate was sold by her heirs, except that one of her sons had d.v.m., and his children were not included in the sale. Thus, many (many) years later, the sale was challenged because all of the legal heirs had not consented. It was ruled that the challenge came well after the expiration of the statute of limitations for such action, and the suit was rejected. After this, the lawyers took over, and many of then financed careers based on appeals and new suits challenging this decision (the last of which, in the 1930s, went all the way to the Supreme Court).

    It is likely that this inheritance served as the basis for the later rumors regarding the Webber inheritance. Anneke was thought to be a Webber, sister of Wolfert Webber, ancestor of a large family in New York (and later, Indiana). This turns out not to be the case (Anneke's
    parentage has been demonstrated by research in Holland. She was born at a Dutch settlement in what is now Denmark. She was confused with another woman, Anneke Webber, who is distinct from the one married to Bogardus). The two of them, and the mysterious inheritance came to be associated with the King of Holland, and they came to be called illegitimate grandchildren (not much different than the various obscure immigrants who get assigned as Pilgrims who were on the ship under assumed name). The "inheritance" scam was reinvented in the form of the will of Wolfert, which left all of his property to the xth generation (I have seen both 5th and 7th - the number seemed to expand as the number of generations removed grew). "This will is about to be opened,and so we are raising a collection to hire a researcher in Holland to prepare the necessary documentation." This message, funnelled through the Webber Family Association, went out to Webbers across the country in 1878, and there is no telling how much money was raised. (I have heard tales of similar scams being run on other families by dutch
    "researchers".)

    This story was shown to be completely untrue more than seventy years ago. Her name was actually "Anneke Jans", not Webber.

    See the series of articles by John Reynolds Totten in the *New York Genealogical and Biographical Record*, vol. LVI, no. 3 (July 1925), pp. 201-243 and vol. LVII, no. 1 (Jan. 1926), pp. 11-54.This goes into the immediate descendants of Anneke Jans and examines the alleged William the Silent descent. A later set of articles by George Olin Zabriskie, also in the NYGBR, vol. 104,no. 2 (April 1973), pp. 65-72 and vol. 104, no. 3 (July 1973), pp. 157-164, adds more information. Since Anneke Jans was actually born in the village of Flekkeroy on the island of Flekkeroyin Vest Agder, Norway (four miles south of Kristiansand), you'll find more information in John O. Evjen, *Scandinavian immigrants in New York* [reprinted Baltimore: Genealogical, 1972], pp.91-101.

    According to "Mother of Churches" by Clifford Morehouse, a history of Trinity Church, The farm was originally the property of Annetke Jans, wife of the manager for the first Van Rensselaer, by whom she had 3 daughters and a son. He died and she married the Rev. Everardus
    Bogardus in 1637, and had four more children by him. He was lost at sea in 1647 and she then moved to Albany. When she died in 1663, she directed in her will that the farm be sold and that the proceeds be "divided principally among the four children of her first husband." The farm was bought by Gov. Francis Lovelace. Unfortunately for Lovelace, when New York was seized by the Dutch in a wholly unexpected attack in 1673, Lovelace, who hadn't even been in the city at the time, was the designated fall guy. He was ordered home, clapped in the Tower where he soon died, and his estates were seized. Thus did the Queen's Farm come to the Crown.

    One of the heirs, Cornelius Bogardus, had not signed the deed of sale to Lovelace, which was the basis of the suit in 1833. The court ruled that the alleged defect was insufficient to cloud the title, but that in any case, under the doctrine of laches ("equity aids the vigilant and not those who slumber on their rights") rendered the case moot. That seems reasonable. The rights--such as they were--had been slumbered upon for 170 years.

    But the court ruled (cheerfully violating another legal principal that cases settled on procedural grounds should not have their substance addressed) that even if the suit had been timely, it would not have succeeded.

    Please note that 1833, eight years after the Erie Canal caused New York to begin exploding in its growth, was just at the time when those 275 acres were becoming worth millions. The smell of money, it seems, wakes up the soundest sleeper.

    Birth:
    ||Flekkeroy is four miles south of Kristiansand. Her birth date is not well-established, with the year ranging from 1604 to 1608.

    Died:
    ||(Some show Albany, NY; her death is shown by sources as either February or March 1662/63, and some give a precise March 19)

    Children:
    1. Catrina Roeloffse was born in 1623 in Masterlant, Holland; and died.
    2. 3. Sara Roeloffse was born before 1626 in Masterlant, Holland; died in 1693.
    3. Sytie Roeloffse was born in 1627 in Maseterlant, Holland; and died.
    4. Jans Roeloffse was born in 1634 in New Netherland; and died.


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Johan was born about 1565; and died.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 3E983235EB8940E59BBB50C7C67F5DF2D7A2

    Johan married Trijntje Roelofs about 1586. Trijntje was born about 1566; died before 1648 in New Amsterdam (NY). [Group Sheet]


  2. 15.  Trijntje Roelofs was born about 1566; died before 1648 in New Amsterdam (NY).

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 24CFC69081774FD48283FE169164F590F729

    Children:
    1. 7. Anneke Jans was born in 1604 in Flekkeroy, Vest Agder, Norway; died in 1663 in Beverwyck, New Netherlands; was buried in 1663 in Middle Dutch Cemetary, Beaver St, Albany, NY.