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Mads Jensen Kofoed

Mads Jensen Kofoed

Mand 1449 - eft. 1481  (> 33 years)

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  • Navn Mads Jensen Kofoed 
    Født 1449  Hasle, , , Find alle personer med begivenheder på dette sted 
    Køn Mand 
    Død eft. 1481  Bornholm, , , Find alle personer med begivenheder på dette sted 
    Person-ID I1401  KaiOve
    Sidst ændret 23 feb. 2022 

    Familie Elisabeth Olufsdatter,   f. 1453, Hasle, , , Find alle personer med begivenheder på dette sted,   d. eft. 1481, Bornholm, , , Find alle personer med begivenheder på dette sted  (Alder > 29 years) 
    Gift ca. 1472  Hasle, , , Find alle personer med begivenheder på dette sted 
    Notater 
    • Referencenr.: 17950
    Børn 
     1. Jens Madsen Kofoed,   f. 1481, Ll. Haslegård, , , Hasle Find alle personer med begivenheder på dette sted,   d. 1519, Bornholm, , , Find alle personer med begivenheder på dette sted  (Alder 38 years)
    Sidst ændret 18 maj 2016 
    Familie-ID F0752  Gruppeskema  |  Familie Tavle

  • Notater 
    • Occupation: Tradesman (Handelsmand)
      Reference: KGD note
      Mads Jensen Kofoed of Hasle is the earliest recorded Kofoed on
      Bornholm. Giessing (published 1786) relates in his pedigree of the
      "Family Kofoed," that the danish Noblemen with the "Koefoed'er" coat-
      of-arms were of mingled blood with the Normans, those people who had


      occupied Normandy. He relates further back: to when King William 1st
      the Conqueror, in 1063, went from Normandy to England, there was
      among the Norman nobility who followed him, one man with the name of
      Arnfred Kofod Also, on an English monastery list are several Danish
      names: Erik, Oluf, Svend of Essex, Ospern and Arnfred Kofod. It is
      related that the Scottish king, Macbeth, agreed to hide Ospern in
      Scotland, and that Svend became part of his royal staff. Arnfred
      Kofod became a faithul servant of King Edward. However, it would be
      impossible to establish any link between this man and the Bornholmer
      family of the same name. The surname Kofoed stems from "KoFod" which
      means "Cow's Foot". The origin of the name is not known, however the


      hypothosis has been put forward that the original Kofod had some sort


      of physical deformity, such as a club-foot. It seems that the old
      Bornholm Kofoed families used the cow-foot as their coat-of-arms;
      from obvious association with their name, rather than through their
      connection to the Duchy of Holstein. There are many myths and errors
      concerning the oldest Kofoed's on Bornholm. The book "P¯ sporet af
      de f?rste Kofod'er" by J?rn Klindt (published 1979) is a scholarly
      examination, which tries to clear up the many errors surrounding this


      families genealogy. J?rn Klindt relates that it is thought that the
      immediately preceading ancestors to the Kofoed'er of Bornholm
      originated from the area around Hamburg, in the Duchy of Holstein. In


      1286 there is mention of a knight, Albertus Koefoed; the Holstein'er
      family attained the right to be armigerous and held various titles of


      knighthood. Every couple of generations the family rose in status to


      near nobility, only to then descended the social ladder; they never
      broke into, and then maintained noble status. The Kofoed'er spread
      east from the Hamburg area to Lübeck, Wismar, etc. along the north
      Baltic coast-line of present day Germany and Poland. They also spread


      up the Jylland peninsula into Schleswig and Danmark.
      Kofod/Kofoed/Koefoed is a family-name that has spread all over
      Danmark. There are numerous Kofoeds listed in the book of Danish
      Knights. The Kofoed'er who settled in Bornholm had attained the
      status of "Frim?nd", this meant that they were "free men" and had no
      over-lord except the King of Danmark, and thus were of the lower
      nobility. It should be noted here that such "frim?nd" would have were


      not of the social class of the true titled nobility, and in fact
      would have been snubbed by that rarified class of people. As free-
      men the Kofoeds were one of the leading families of Bornholm, with
      the right to own property, to engage in business and trade, to hunt
      the forests and make use of the beaches, and were among the island's
      brew-masters. They had the right to exact labour and duties from the


      "bonde" (peasant farmers) who lived and worked on their farms. Of
      course, over the succeeding years not all Kofoed descendants stayed
      amongst the social elite, and they gradually fell to lower social
      classes. To this day on Bornholm the surname "Kofoed" remains a
      prestigious family-name.
    • Referencenr.: 1401