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In this video, we discuss six different families from Switzerland and discuss their "family crests": VISIT US TO GET STARTED: https://coadb.com/which-coat-of-arms-... GENEALOGY & HERALDIC REPORTS: Our ancestral & heraldic research reports trace your family tree (pedigree chart) back several hundred years and will determine whether or not your ancestors were granted or bore a real, documented coat of arms. CONTACT US: Email: [email protected] Phone: 785-324-2529 11AM - 9PM (ET) REPORTS INCLUDE: A family Pedigree Chart created by an expert genealogist that traces your lineage over hundreds of years and gives you the names, dates, and locations of your ancestors. A Coat of Arms Consultation that assesses whether your ancestors had a coat of arms. FRISCHING Blazon: Or a ram passant sable. The von Frisching family is a Bernese patrician family that traces its lineage to a man named Hans Frisching (1486-1559) who was a mounted soldier in the military and a magistrate. He became a butcher by trade and was the first of his family to become a member of the guild known as the Bernese Society of Butchers. He had 13 children with his wife Christina Zehnder and two illegitimate children. Here we see Frisching-Haus in Bern. It was built for (click) Samuel Frisching in 1705. He was the mayor of Bern from 1715-1721. He joined the French Swiss Guard at the age of 20, against his father’s will, and was wounded at the Battle of Gravelingen. And (click) here he is again, although this might be his father. Here we see Colonel Franz Rudolf Frisching (1733-1807) a Bernese magistrate and industrialist, wearing his uniform with his Bernese hound, next to one of the pieces that was manufactured in the factory that he owned. STETTLER As early as 1146, Conrad Stettler appeared as an assessor at a regional court in Worb. Michael Stettler, seen here, was born in 1580 in Bern, the eldest son of a tanner named Hieronymus Stettler who was a member of the towns council. Michael became a notary and later served as Governor of Oron and St. Johannsen. In 1599-1600 he traveled to France, England, and Italy, and wrote poems about them, which his biographer characterized as “extremely clumsy, meaningless rhymes”. He became a historian after this. He married three times and had four children: Anna, Samuel, Hieronymus (Grand Council of Bern) and Michael. Here we see another coat of arms of Stettler blazoned as follows: Sable a bend Or charged with a ram sable. OUGSPURGER Blazon: Azure a unicorn rampant argent. The von Ougspurger or Augsburger family was a Bernese patrician family who obtain citizenship in the city c. 1435. Many members of the family served on the Grand Council, were Baillifs, were Governors, and were Lords of various estates. Next to the coat of arms we see, Rosina Ougspurger (1747-1793). And (click) next we see Philibert Friedrich von Ougspurger (1796–1880). JENNER Blazon: Gules a mullet or in chief, a crescent or in base. Crest – The bust of a man clothed gules holding a mullet. Next to the coat of arms we see a painting of Jennerhaus c. 1850. Early notables of this family include Rudolf Jenner (d. 1555) a member of the Grand Council, Adrian Jenner (d. 1593), a cloth shearer and member of the Groundcouncil, and Abraham Jenner (d. 1632), member of the Grand Council, Small Concil, and Governor of Landshut. The family was ennobled in 1716 by Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI. On the left we see Samuel Jenner (b. 1653), a Swiss architect. On the right we see Johannes von Jenner (b. 1735), a Swiss magistrate who married his distant cousin Marianne Jenner. MAY Blazon: Paly of six azure and or, two lions combatant azure on a chief or. The May family is a Bernese patrician family who were originally named de Madis and were from Lombardy. They came to Bern in the early part of the 15th century. Bartholomäus May (1446-1531) was one of the richest men in all of Bern. In the same year he was elected to the Small Council as the first citizen of Italian descent. He married Katharina von Gasel and had six children with her. He is seen here in a painting by Niklaus Manuel being strangled by a skeleton. Here we see Johann Carl May (1745-1824), and his granddaughter, Julie von May,, a Swiss women’s right activist and chairwoman of the International Women's Association. PYFFER VON ALTISHOFEN Blazon: Or a mill iron Or accompanied by three fleur-de-lis azure. The progenitor of the family was 1483 Johannes Pfyffer, cloth merchant from Rothenburg, who received Lucerne citizenship, and in 1508 he became a member of the Small Council. His grandson, Ludwig Pyffer (1524-1594), seen here, was a Swiss statesmen and military leader who served with the French military where he fought and distinguished himself at the Battle of Dreux. He was knighted by Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian II in 1566. Because of his influence, Pfyffer was called the "Swiss King" by contemporaries.