Vierheller Family History & Genealogy
Vierheller Last Name History & Origin
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Name Origin
The name 'Vierheller' has it's origin in the today called 'Vogelsberg' mountain
in the German Land of 'Hesse'. It refers to the 4 Helgen brothers who governed the Land of Hesse in opposition to Bonifatius and the conquest by Charles the Great who
put the Germans into bondage by forcing them to tithe to the Roman-Catholic Church.
'Helg' means 'holy man' ('heilig' in German).From this word the word 'Heliant' was derived which became 'Heiland' in German, which is the German word for Saviour,
Jesus. 'Vier' means 4 in German.
The 4 Helgen (holy men) were early Christians, they had been christianized by Irish
monks, who had been brought to this region by the Frankonian Queen
Brunichilde after the year 600.This was an early Christian free church. Brunichilde had been an Arian Christian visegothic princess, married to the most powerful man at that time, the Frankonian King Siegbert I.
The pope was strongly opposed to her because she had allowed the Christian Frankonian people to celebrate the Easter holidays together with the Jews.
After the murder of Brunhilde (A.D.613) the rulers of Hesse, family offsprings of the 'Staufer' which had come the Hesse with the early Merowingans tried to separate themselves from the Frankonian Kingdom which had been usurpated by the Roman-Catholic Church by then.
(Centuries later another branch of the 'Staufer' became Emperors of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation.The last (Hohen)Staufer was decapitated 1268 in Italy. This comes from disobedience with the interests of the
Vatican.)
This wish of independance of the Vier Helgen in Hesse ended in the year 777 (The Catholics claim it was 778 but nobody knows exactly because even Catholic records about these incidents were written decades after the battles.)
in the double battle of Laisa and Battenfeld
(at Mountbatten near the small town of 'Frankenberg' today.)
when last free Christian resistance tried to survive in alliance with the pagan Saxonians.
Afterwards the surviving remnants of the 4 Helgen lived in their holy place, the highest peak of the Vogelsberg mountain in the village of Breungeshain. Once they had been rulers of the Land of Hesse and the place which is the city of Frankfurt today.
There is a district of Frankfurt called Preungesheim. There are hints that the names of the 2 places (Breungeshain+Preungesheim) refer to the Frankonian Queen Brunichilde who had founded them.
(Brun,Breun and Preun mean 'brown' in ancient German dialects)
The first document about Preungesheim says that the 'Huswert' gave Preungesheim as a gift to the Catholic Church.
The Catholics probably wrote the title deed themselves like they often did. According to the accent of the city of Frankfurt 'Huswert' means 'Hauswirt' which means ’landlord' or ’ house owner' in modern English. Who had been the unnamed landlord of the city which is called Frankfurt today ?
After the defeat of the 4 Helgen the Catholic Church claimed that those early Christians were the devils themselves, like they did everywhere were they destroyed non-catholic Christian communities. Roman-Catholics claimed to have to drive the devil out of these
early Christian churches.They didn't accept other baptizm than Roman-Catholic baptizm. So they forced these already baptized Christians to be baptized by Roman-Catholics again.
The Vatican Catholic Inquisition of today, the so-called Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith still considers the Vierhellers as offsprings of the devil.
Like the pope is the deputy of God on earth, the Vierheller is the deputy of the devil
on earth.
Why is all this hatred against the poor devil Vierheller ?
The Roman-Catholic church wants to present Bonifatius, (Livetime ~673 - ~755,
who lived decades in Fulda in the Land of Hesse) as 'the Apostel of the Germans'.
Fact is that even according Roman-Catholic records Christian faith had already
spread in Hesse before Bonifatius.
All he brought to Hesse afterwards was forcing Christians to pay the tithe to the Roman-Catholic church, which consequently put the people into bondage for Roman-Catholozism. This was the root of all wealth of the Roman-Catholic church, the root of all evil.
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Nationality & Ethnicity
Germany, the Land of Hesse
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Vierheller Death Records & Life Expectancy
The average age of a Vierheller family member is 77.0 years old according to our database of 114 people with the last name Vierheller that have a birth and death date listed.
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