Van der Bellen family

The Van der Bellen family (also spelled von der Bellen or van der Bellen, Russian: ван дер Беллен, [vɐn dʲɪr ˈbɛlʲɪn], originally Russian: фон дер Беллен, [fɐn dʲɪr ˈbɛlʲɪn],) is a Russian noble family of Dutch patrilineal descent. By intermarriage and cultural assimilation it became part of the Russian-German population in the Russian Empire. Its most famous member is Alexander Van der Bellen, the President of Austria. Family members held high offices in the regional government of the Pskov area in Imperial Russia and the family was recognised as noble by Russian authorities in the early 19th century. After the Russian Revolution, family members fled to Estonia and, following the Soviet invasion of that country, to Germany and Austria.

Van der Bellen
CountryRussian Empire
Current regionGermany, Austria
Earlier spellingsvon der Bellen
von-der-Bellen
Place of originNetherlands
FounderJohann Abraham van der Bellen
Connected membersAleksander von der Bellen
Alexander Van der Bellen
Aleksander von der Bellen, a Russian liberal politician in Imperial Russia

History

The family is descended from Johann Abraham van der Bellen, who moved to the Russian Empire in the 18th century. According to Russian official records, he was born in the Netherlands. In 1787 he volunteered for service with the Military Hospital in Moscow. Around 1793 he moved to Pskov, and became a military doctor. He was involved in the construction of the local hospital and refused to receive any pay for his work. During the 1806–1807 War of the Fourth Coalition, he took responsibility for the care of French prisoners of war and bought medical equipment and housing for them with his own resources. In 1801 he married the Russian-German noblewoman Elisabeth von Römer in Pskov. In the early 19th century the family was recognised as noble in the Russian Empire.[1]

Aleksander von der Bellen, a liberal politician, became head of the Pskov government before the Russian Revolution. After the revolution, he and his sons fled to Estonia. He was the grandfather of the Austrian President and former Green Party leader Alexander Van der Bellen.

During the 19th and early 20th century, the family name was spelled von der Bellen or von-der-Bellen.

gollark: That is an extremely terrible font.
gollark: I mean, there's the issue of... their disregard for human rights? I care about that even if they don't affect other countries too badly directly.
gollark: It works better on philosophers, since you can steal their wallet while they're distracted thinking about it.
gollark: They probably can't/won't eternally torture you, but there's a *possibility* of that infinite harm which is reduced by giving them £100, and if you accept the Pascal's Wager logic you should do that.
gollark: There's actually another similar thing, Pascal's *Mugging*, in which someone comes up to you and says "give me £100 or I will eternally torture you after you die".

References

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