Digging into the ancestry of Anna Katharina Andrae (1742-1816) from Gebroth, we've established that her presumed great-great-grandfather Nikolaus Andrae (or Andreae) was the one who brought this name to Gebroth (where it is present to this day) when he took up the position as a vicar of this remote village in the Hunsrück in 1632. We have found half a dozen other Lutheran priests in his extended family, specifically including both grandfathers of his wife, as well as several ancestors of his daughter in law.
Although some of these in-law ancestries go back to the 15th century, we still don't know who his parents were. I have been following two leads, first geographically, as he was born in Enkirch on the river Mosel, I have been looking at the Andrae and similarly named families there, and then, as he seems to have been well-connected in the Lutheran clergy network, I wondered whether he also came from such a background. And I did find lots of Lutherans with that name. Note that it's not a very common name otherwise, so my suspicion is that it only originated as a family name whent protestant clergymen and teachers latinised their germanic names. I am looking at four separate groups of findings:
1) the Stuttgart/Tübingen clan
The name change is documented for the most prominent Andreae family, which goes back to a smith by the name of Endriss, whose son Jakobus latinised the name to Andreae and founded a whole dynasty of protestant intellectuals with very impressive biographies in Wikipedia:
Jacobus Andreae (* 1528 Waiblingen)
Johannes Andreae (* 1554 Tübingen)
Johann Valentin Andreae (*1586 Herrenberg)
Jacobus Andreae painted by Hans Ulrich Alt, Öl auf Holz, 1590, Sammlung Tübinger Professorengalerie
Each of them had lots of children (20, 8, 9 respectively), some of the sons were also clergymen. My Nikolaus Andrae is about the same generation as Johann Valentin, so could be eg his cousin. I haven't found an obvious connection yet, but it could still happen. Then again, as these men were very famous Lutherans in their time, a young priest from a less eminent family could have adjusted his name to bask in their reflected glory. Latinised names were all the rage at the time, so we find Schmidt turning into Faber, Raabe into Corvinus and Kaufmann into Mercator.
The well-documented members of this dynasty have largely remained rooted in the Wurttemberg region, but the Sponheim county where our Nikolaus was born isn't too far away, so a black sheep needing some a bit of distance from that high-flying family could easily have moved there.
2) the Saxony clan
A bit further afield, we have another dynasty of Lutheran priests in the vicinity of Halle on the river Saale (today's Saxony Anhalt). The nameline documented on Gedbas.de goes back to
Georgius Andrae * around 1500 in Geneva
then the parsons start with
Thomas Andrae + 1575 Halle
Elias Andrae * 1561 Halle
Laurentius Andrae * 1594 Halle and Thomas Andrae * 1598 Halle
There are no other carriers of the name listed in this submission, but the data don't look complete, so there could be other sons, and, again, our Nikolaus could be a cousin to the priests Laurentius and Thomas.
Intriguingly, a Tobias Andreae from Halle studied theology in Heidelberg in 1587, then became a parson in Lorsch, and from 1594 in Dillheim, may have stayed in the Rhine area (Monatshefte für Rheinische Kirchengeschichte 22 (1928)).
3) the Mosel valley clan
A lineage in the Mosel valley goes back to
Johann Andrae who is roughly the same generation as our Nikolaus as he had a child in 1640. Unfortunately no further info about him, apart from many generations of Andrae descendants who largely stayed in the Mosel valley. Can't find any priests among the descendants. Although the name Franz seems to be popular in this family, as it is among the descendants of Nikolaus Andrae in Gebroth.
4) ... and another clan in the Hunsrück area?
Johann Nikolaus Andrae * 1685 in Krummenau is a priest whose family connections are completely obscure - he may very well turn out to be a descendant of our Gebroth vicar but so far nothing links him to the place. He was vicar of Dörrenbach 1708-1728 and married Anna Eva Simon, daughter of the vicar of Kirn, Johann Daniel Simon, in 1710 (O. Penningroth in Monatshefte 1933).
Conrad Andreä was vicar of Winningen (Mosel) 1596-1599 elsewhere: 1586-1597, died of the plague which hit the town in 1597, with 206 casualties. Actually, I like this guy, he's on the right river, at the right time, to be the father of our Nikolaus. Apparently, Winningen was a lutheran enclave in an otherwise catholic region, and widely praised as a model protestant community. Conrad reportedly fought to keep his protestant flock away from the temptations of hitching up with catholics. There are two short (half-page) reports about him (Monatshefte 1909, 225-286; 1933, 275). ,
NB he could be the same person as the husband of Agnes Orth, (V 4 in the massive Orth clan) * …, + …, ∞ … Konrad Andreas, who died after 1586, and was a vicar at Koblenz, very close to Winningen. He could plausibly be a son of the following:
Magister Johannes Andreae vicar of Altenkirchen (Westerwald) 1589–1605 evicted from the town as it becomes a reformed parish on 9.10.1605 and he refuses to adhere to that creed (* 26. Dezember 1532 in Schönbach Dillkreis; † summer 1613 in Kastellaun) There is a lovely biography of him in the Monatshefte für rheinische Kirchengeschichte vol 22 (1928) which I'll translate in a separate entry. From a footnote to that bio, we learn that he had a son:
Emmerich Andreä called Schönbach (after his father's birthplace, which his father had also used after his name sometimes), who was a student in 1583 and a vicar at Bechtheim near Worms in 1618. So he would have been born in the 1560s.
I had this forth section under the headline "strays" initially, but I'm beginning to get a dynasty together here. Johannes's nameless father was also a priest and I am trying to find out if he was the first vicar of Schönbach (which still a Lutheran parish today, so there is a successor).
Note that our Nikolaus Andreae, the stray Nikolaus, the whole clan of the Mosel valley Andrae people under 3) and Konrad could all descend from Johannes A. from Altenkirchen. I'll explore this possibility in the next entry.














