Curtius baronets


The Curtius Baronetcy of Sweden was a title in the Baronetage of England, created on 2 April 1652 for William Curtius, "Resident to the King of Sweden".
Curtius was a diplomat representing the House of Stuart during the Thirty Years' War and the exile of Charles II, and head magistrate for two of the Electoral Palatinate districts for many years.
Curtius was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1667, and was England's Resident Ambassador to the Holy Roman Empire from 1664 until 1677.
The second baronet was Karl Wilhelm ; his son Carl August Adolf von Curti was the third.
The baronetcy became extinct in 1823 with the death of the fourth baronet, Wilhelm Adam. The :de:Curti-Schloss|Curti-Schloss was inherited by Julianne von Curti, and then by her children of her marriage into the Von Gall family.

Curtius Baronets, of Sweden

On his death in 1678, Sir William was succeeded as Baronet by his son, Sir Charles William Curtius, who lived until 1733. Sir Carl was also appointed as Oberamtmann of Umstadt, from 1681 to 1691.
on the armorial bearings of all English Baronets.
Sir Charles petitioned the English Parliament to pay the substantial fees promised Sir William by "Kings Charles the First, and Second". The petition sought "for a Debt incurred upon the Account of Publick Service by his Father Sir Wm. Curtius, that to the Amount of Fourteen thousand Two hundred Fifty-five Pounds, as appears by the Accompt signed by his late Majesty King Charles the Second; who was pleased to grant him a Privy Seal for Two thousand Pounds; but only Five hundred Pounds, Part thereof, was paid." The petition was unsuccessful.
Since 1785, the church in the village of Wald-Amorbach, Breuberg has rung its bells at 10am daily in the "Curti-Peal" for the salvation of the von Curti family. The peal was established by Carl August Adolf von Curti's widow, Erhardine Catharina Louise von Wahl, when she gave the Curti forest to Gross-Umstadt.
Wilhelm Adam von Curti was declared bankrupt in 1790. His estate at that time included feudal leases in six towns: Groß-Karben, Klein-Karben, Kaichen, Kloppenheim, Burggräfenrode and Dortelweil, Kurpfalz.
The baronetcy became extinct in 1823 with the death of Wilhelm Adam, the last male descendant.