This site was created using MyHeritage.com. This is a great system that allows anyone like you and me to create a private site for their family, build their family tree and share family photos. If you have any comments or feedback about this site, please click here to contact me. The site was last updated on Apr 24 2012, and it currently has 9 registered member(s). If you wish to become a member too, please click here. Enjoy! Cornelis KNOETZEN van Fuhnen (Fyn), Denemarke x Dirkje HELM(ES) sy was gedoop 18 Januarie 1682, dogter van Hans Helm & Geertruy WILLEMSE 8 Kinders b1 Johannes = 07.05.1692 (hierdie datum is verdag want die Paarl se doopboek is verlore)x Catharina GROBBELAAR b2 Gertruida = 11.11.1697 b3 Catharina = 12.07.1704 b3 Geertruy = 11.07.1706 x 1715 Johann GROBBELAAR, xx 3 Jun 1736 Jan Jurgen Herman b4 Maria (Knudsen) = Nov 1708 x Aug 1731 Balthasar ROELOFS, xx Conrad Wansenberg b5 Elisabeth * 25.05.1711 = 00.07.1711 x 07.08.1740 Nicolaas PILJE (Pillier) b6 Aletta (Alida) = 20.08.1713 x 22.05.1735 Claas(z) CLAASEN (Claasz) b7 Wilhelmina = 09.02.1716 x 1733 Jan (Johan) NIEUWENHUYS b8 Gerrit * 1718 x Anna Maria MINNIE
Knoesen is a Dutch rendering of the Danish surname “Knoetzen”, which was introduced to South Africa in the late seventeenth century by one “Cornelius Knoetzen”, a native of the Danish island of Fyn who arrived in the Cape sometime prior to 1691. In that year, Knoetzen was married to Dirkje Helmes, with whom he eventually had eight children. Some of the South African families which now bear the surname Knoesen may be descended from “Thomas Knoetzen”, who hailed from the same Danish island and migrated to South Africa in 1769. He was married, on 26 June 1775, to the former Maria Jacoba Grundlingh, who bore him eight children. Although the majority of early Cape settlers were of Dutch, German or French provenance, there were a number of Scandinavians among those pioneers and most of them modified their surnames to make them appear more “Dutch”. The surnames “Knoetzen, Knoetsen, “Knudsen” and “Knudzen”, originated as pabronymic names based upon the personal name “Knud”, which can be rendered from the Old Horse as “bold” or “daring”. This personal name was a prestiguous and highly favoured one in Denmark and Northern Germany during the medieval period, owing chiefly to the renown of “Knud (or Tanube) the Great”, a tenth and eleventh century king of Denmark, Norway and England. He completed the conversion of the Danes to Christianity, and was the subject of a well-known anecdote, wherein he was said to have stood at the shore and commanded the waves to recede, his purpose being to illustrate to his courtiers the limits of a king’s power. The “-sen” suffix is common in padronymic names which developed in Denmark and Norway, as well as, to a lesser extent, in Holland and northern Germany. The arms on the right are based on those found on a wax impression in the Cape Archive, made in 1764 by the seal of the widow Dirkje Knoetzen. |