|
|
| Unfortunately the original document was lost
in a fire. A pity |
| indeed. Most certainly I would have liked to see the seals.
But it |
| seems that perhaps there is
still a possibility to see such on a letter |
| from
1252 in which the same knight is mentioned together with his |
| brother Johan ten
Thij. |
|
| However, the same fate happened to a following
document from |
| 1263 in which the village Goor in the Netherlands was granted |
| city-rights. Among the lords of the castle mentioned were the |
| brothers Jacob and
Niclaes ten Thij. |
|
| Still existing, but
unfortunately without the seal, is the
document |
| that is presented
in the background here in a washed fashion. |
| It
here below there is a link to a copy of it. This letter dates
from |
| July
16th
(the birthday of my grandfather, for that matter) of the |
| year 1278. |
|
| In this document
it is stated that
Jacobus ten Thij, lord of the
|
| castle of Goar
(Goor, Netherlands), declares that
he has bought
|
| from the abbey, deanery and convent of Methelen (Metelen in
|
| Germany) the House of Otbertinc in Manhere (Mander, the
|
| Netherlands), but that
in this purchase the guardianship of the
|
| farm is not included; further he
promises that, if the controversies
|
| between him and the count of Thekeneborg
(Tecklenburg
in
|
| Germany) will end up in a war, he will spare the goods and the
|
| men of the
cloister. |
|
| for
full original text click on the document below

|
| |
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