De Muyser Lantwyck family explained

de Muyser Lantwyck
Coat Of Arms Caption:Blazon

per pale: to dexter, Sable, a seated Argent cat, the head posed of face, the front leg dexter posed on a Gules mouse; to sinister, Argent, a fleur-de-lis Sable, a chief Or with three pals Gules; at the border composed of sixteen pieces of Gules and Argent, the compons of Gules loaded with a sword Argent and garnished Or placed in a bar, the tip down, the compons of Argent charged with a lion issuing Gules, armed and langued Azure..

Motto:Suaviter sed fortiter
Motto Lang:la
Motto Trans:Gentle but strongly
Parent Family:Seven Noble Houses of Brussels
Founded:15th century
Country: Duchy of Brabant

The de Muyser Lantwyck family is an old Belgian family dating back to the beginning of the 15th century, tracing its roots to Jean Moyser, alderman of Vaelbeek (duchy of Brabant), who held lands in Héverlé in 1451, censier of the Groenendael Priory, lord holding the lands and manor of Cockelberg by lease dated 19 June 1438,[1] husband of Aleyde Crabbé.[2] [3]

History

The son of Jean I, Gilles de Muyser, bought, in 1472, the manor of Hoff ten Rode in Bierbeek. His grandson, Jean II de Muyser, is son of Godefroid and brother of Pierre, is cited in 1494 and 1509 in the book of the fiefs of Héverlé as feudataire of Philippe de Croÿ, lord of Héverlé.

He married Ida de Lantwyck, daughter of Wautier before 1500. According to the aforementioned book of fiefs, Jean de Muyser died on 20 July 1531.

His descendants stayed in Vaalbeek, where the family remained, for every generation until the early 18th century, aldermen. These local offices were most likely given to the family as a souvenir of the lordship that was lost by Jean de Muyser's family. Indeed, a charter by Philip the Good dated to 1452 is kept at the Arenberg archives of the university of Louvain, tells us that Wautier de Lantwyck, father of Ida, definitively renounces in 1452, along with his siblings, all rights to the lordship of Vaalbeek that their father Jean was lord of until 1429. This lordship belonged to them through their grandfather, the knight Jean de Lantwyck, who had exchanged it for the lordship of Blanden. We know that the knight of Lanwyck, lord of Blanden, had sold the cense of half of the lordship of Blanden in 1388 to the Parc Abbey, but what happened to the other half remains a mystery.

Members

Between the 15th and 18th centuries, Muyser's family gave two aldermen and a burgomaster to Vaalbeek as well as an alderman to Neervelp :

From the 19th to the 20th century:

From the 20th to the 21st century:

The Seven Noble Houses of Brussels

The Seven Noble Houses of Brussels (French: link=no|sept lignages de Bruxelles, Dutch; Flemish: zeven geslachten van Brussel) were the seven families of Brussels whose descendants formed the patrician class of that city, and to whom special privileges in the government of that city were granted until the end of the Ancien Régime.

The six houses from which the family descend :

Allied families

Authority

Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at ; see its history for attribution.

Further reading


Notes and References

  1. A.G.R., Leenboek van Bierbeek, n° 3364.
  2. Michel de Muyser, Crayon généalogique de la famille de Muyser, article paru dans Le Parchemin, no 250, juillet – août 1987, 52e année, pp. 703–721
  3. Michel de Muyser Lantwyck, Autour du manoir Coeckelberghe à Vaalbeek, article paru dans Le Parchemin, no 430, juillet – août 2017, 82e année, pp. 309–365