Goudsmit & Goldschmidt -- a geneasequel - Person Sheet
Goudsmit & Goldschmidt -- a geneasequel - Person Sheet
NameSamuel/ Shmuel b’ Isaak Goldschmidt Lemgo Hameln segal
Birthabt 1648, D, Frankfurt?
Death22 Jan 1722, D, Lemgo
BurialLemgo (Ostertorwall)
OccupationBanker, Money Changer, Hoffaktor
Spouses
Birthabt 1650, D, Wesel?
Deathabt 1675, D, Lemgo
BurialLemgo (Kalletal?)
Marriageabt 1664
ChildrenDavid b’ Samuel (Married >) (~1665-1741)
 Nathan b’ Samuel (Married >) (~1665->1711)
Birthabt 1655, D, Wesel ?
Death15 Jul 1713, D, Lemgo
BurialLemgo (Ostertorwall)?
MarriageApr 1677, D, Wesel
Marr Memodeduced form Glikl p.169-170
ChildrenHendl b’ Samuel (~1680-1725)
 Josef b’ Samuel (~1685-~1740)
Notes for Samuel/ Shmuel b’ Isaak Goldschmidt Lemgo Hameln segal
House in Frankfurt: “Wanne”, later “Kamel”
1667 moving with his (first) wife from Fankfurt to his grandfather Jobst Goldschmidt Hameln, who at that moment was living in Hildesheim. They left their young children David and Nathan in Frankfurt, staying with family for their schooling.
1669 moving from Hildesheim to Lemgo in the County [‘Reichsgrafschaft’] Lippe — at intercession of his grandfather obtaining the right of residence:
1669 january 1st: Geleitbrief, “Schutzgeld 6 Reichstalern” — His patrons are the Counts of Lippe-Detmold, three generations from 1669 till 1722 ®24 [cf * NB below] — [also cf ®54 p.491]
— his house: Nicolai-Bauerschaft nr 41 (nowadays Mittelstrasse 7) —
21.4.1675 — official permit to use his house as synagogue for the jewish families in Lemgo and regio, also Brake, Talle,
1677 april — he marries 2nd in Wesel with Sara, seemingly a younger sister of his deceased 1st spouse Fraidche (?) b’ Mordechai Gomperz [cf the Memoires of Glikl Hamel ®23]
[NB: one of his acompanying servants was since 1668 “Ambsel Moyses” (born in Rödelheim near Frankfurt), who became after 9 years an autonomous “Schutzjude” himself, settling first in Werther near Bielefeld, later (1779) in Lage, 7 km southeast of Lemgo — he was the founder of the jewish cemetary in Lage. His tombstone is lost, but fragments of his wife’s stone is are still there[cf Epidat ®30: Friedhof Lage inv.nr. lag-1001] she died 9.9.1715 —
text: “Hier ist geborgen die aufrechte Frau [Gattin] des geehrten Meisters, Herrn Jizchak Moshe Asher Anshel, das Andenken des Gerechten Frau Rivwka Gelle, Tochter des geehrten Herrn Chajim…….” Her husband had died before 1715. On his “Geleitsbrief” his wife had been mentioned as”Kellenheyman aus Bonn” Likely her father has been Chajim b’ Shabtai/Salomon Bonn [cf Epidat: Schabtai ben David buried in Bonn bns-5303]
1686 may 6th: He buys (for “30 Pfund Hutzucker) the land of the jewish cemetary near the town wall, which also earlier was used for burials.
1697 Lemgo, mentioned living with his family (his 2nd wife Sara and her 3 sons and 2 or more daughters)
1712 official title “Hofagent von Lippe-Detmold”
1715 After the death of his 2nd wife he was temporarily living in Frankfurt with his elder son David — House “Kamel” [cf Ele Toldot]
1715-1718 “Stättigkeit” also in Frankfurt; he moves to and fro between Lemgo and Frankfurt.
1717 “Gläubiger der Lippeschen Landkasse”
1722 He was buried in the old jewish cemetery of Lemgo, Ostertorwall. [in the ‘Kristallnacht’ of 1938 all tombstones were destroyed and later in 1940 used as building material for strengthening the townwall]

[NB: * The three ruling sovereigns — belonging to the branche Lippe-Detmold — were : (1) Reichsgraf (Count) Simon Heinrich (1666-1697) and his spouse (Viscountess of Utrecht) Amalia von Dohna-Vianen — (2) Reichsgraf (Count) Friedrich Adolf (1697-1718) and his spouses Johanna Elisabeth von Nassau-Dillenburg and Amalia zu Solms-Hohensolms — (3) Reichsgraf (Count) Simon Heinrich Adolf (1718-1734) and his spouse Johanna Wilhelmine von Nassau-Idstein. — NB: Viscountess Amalia was heiress of Vianen and Ameide, a seigniory situated in the middle of Holland. As her grandson had become seriously pressed for money he sold the seigniory to the Netherlands, after three years negotiating (1725). The mediators in this transaction were a.o. the sons of Samuel Goldschmidt, Isaac and Josef — and especially a second-cousin of their mother: Benedict b’ Loeb Gomperz Nijmegen — cf his record-sheet] —
[NB: he is mentioned in many Archive-records, for example .....1701-1738: (Reference number: Landesarchiv NRW Abteilung Ostwestfalen-Lippe, L 92 X Nr. 342): ....Bitten von Juden um Rückzahlungen und Aufstellung von Auslagen, Enthält: u.a.: Isaac Heine, Bückeburg — Aaron Moses, Detmold — Berendt Hertz, Herford — Samuel Goldschmidt, Lemgo — Isaac Goldschmidt, Lemgo — Jobst Goldschmidt, Isaac Meyer, Michael Isaac, Detmold — Jacob Moses, Detmold — Moses Katzenstein, Blomberg — Moses Jacob, Leer — Hertz Isaac Wallach, Hamburg —… .. — (other example:) ......als Intervenienten Rat Fuchs; die Erben des Juden Goldschmidt, nämlich Levin Goldschmidt; Josef Goldschmidt; Isaak Goldschmidt; Seligmann Abraham; Salomon Moses Öttinger; Nathan Jordan;..... ]
Last Modified 13 Oct 2024Created 18 Nov 2024 by JG
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