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Welcome! This website was created on Apr 19 2007 and last updated on Jan 02 2024.

There are 9019 names in this family tree. The earliest recorded events are the births of ,, , , ,, Ruben , ,, , and ,, Emanuel (Menachem) in 1675. The most recent event is the death of Putter, Richard in 2023.The webmaster of this site is Jeff Marx. Please click here if you have any comments or feedback.

About The Hiegentlich Family Tree
The branches of the Hiegentlich Family Tree derive from Israel Emanuel (Eliezer Menachem) (c.1700-1766) and his wife, Annigje Rubens(c.1710->1772).  They lived in Hardenberg and Heemse, Overjissel, Netherlands.

The descendants of their six children include the ANSPACHER, BROMET, de BRUIN, de VRIES, ENGERS, HART, HIEGENTLICH/HIEGENLICH, OUDGENOEG, SCHAAP, TURKSMA, and van COEVORDON  families.

Data on the first and second generations of this family was compiled from research done by Rabbi Jeffrey Marx  and Dr. Lars Roobol that appeared in their article, "De eerste Joden in Heemse en Hardenberg" (The First Jews  of Heemse and Hardenberg), Gens Nostra, Vol. 67, Number 10, October, 2012.  Data for the third and  succeeding generations was taken from family charts found on MyHeritage.com, Genii.com, and Ancestry.com.  In addition, a number of other major sites were utilized as well as numerous family trees supplied by individuals.  Among them were:

1.  Ron Van Der Horst's Family Database
 2.  Levie Kane's Dutch Jewish Genealogical Collection  (www.levie-kanes.com) 3.  Benno Schulenberg's Coevorder Stambomen (home.zonnet.nl/coevorderstambomen) 4.  Ina Bollegraaf's Genealogy van Familie Bollegraaf (www.mh-tempel.NL) 5.  David Kaplan's family research (Davida30@hotmail.com) 6.  Michel Meijer's Meijer-Frank  Family Tree (www.tribalpages.com/tribes/leb83) 7.  The Digital Monument to the Jewish Community in the Netherlands     (www.joodsmonument.nl)
 8.  AKEVOTH (Previously the Genealogical Department of the Center for Research     on Dutch Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem)  Northern Database     (http://shum.huji.ac.il/~dutchjew/genealog/ndbeli/index.htm) or     (http://dutchjewry.org/)
 9.  Yad Vashem's Central Database of Shoah Victims Names (www.yadvashem.org) 10. Jewish Agency's Search Bureau for Missing Persons, Pinkas Hanitzolim,     Register of Jewish Survivors, Jerusalem, 1945 
 11. JewishGen's Family Tree of the Jewish People (www.Jewishgen.org) 12. Resistance Museum Friesland, Holland
     (http://www.verzetsmuseum.nl/GB/General.htm)
 13. Historie Joods Gronigen (www.historiejoodsgroningen.nl/index_e.php) 14. Stamboom Oudgenoeg (http://home.planet.nl/~oudge002)
 15. Anspacher and Cohn family research in the U.S. by Jeff Marx(Rabjamarx@aol.com).       Anspacher and Cohn family research in Germany by Jens Muller-Koppe, Historical      Research Services (HRS.hist.de)
 16. Helga Schulz's Genealogical Home Page (www.helgaschulz.nl/)  17. Willem Hubert's Meijer Family Site
     (http://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom_huberts/I1233.php) 18. WWW.Genlias.nl
 19. Esther van Rem's Tree of van Rems-Dijkstra family
     (http://esthervanrems.tribalpages.com/)
 20. Jan Meulmeester's Kroonenburg family on (http://www.Geneanet.com) 21. The Genealogy Page of Jorge Heredia and Heleen Sittig
     (http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~herediasittig/index.html) 22. Yotam Hulata's Genealogical Site
     (http://www.myheritage.com/site-22094291/hulata-web-site) 23. Jeff Nyveen's family tree (http://www.geni.com/profile/index/6000000000351505252#/tab/overview) 24. Henoch Wajsberg's family tree:  (http://www.geni.com/family-tree/index          /6000000003793039552#6000000003793039552) 
 25. Max Van Dam’s Stambomen van Nederlands Joodse families (www.maxvandam.info/)  26. Vivette Kadey's Bermel database at Geni.com
 27. Silvia Gruenebaum's database at www.Myheritage.com

PLEASE NOTE: this database does not distinguish between circa dates and precise dates.  Years which  appear on this database that are not accompanied by a month and day, cannot be assumed to be the precise  dates.  They may only be the approximate ones.    Though the data used for the first and second generations of  the family comes from primary documents and has been carefully researched, data for generations three and  following has been taken from sites that, for the most part, did not provide documentation for their data.   Accordingly, the information in this database for the later generations should be used with some caution.
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