I belong here! Right here! Some people have gone to great lengths to drive me out of my home – and Lane County! They knew I was working on my autobiography. John The Fate of Franciscan Property In Jerusalem Posted on December 16, 2017 by Royal Rosamond Press Heather and Eutrophia Posted on December 26, 2014 by Royal Rosamond Press Around 2:30 P.M. on Christmas Day, I opened my computer and showed Marilyn my post ‘Christmas with Eutrophia’. No sooner did she see the top photo, Mariliyn says; “She looks like Heather.” Marilyn and I were high school sweethearts. She came over so I would not spend Christmas alone. I now explained how I had a real change of heart after I noticed how much my daughter looked like my grandmother’s sister we Presco Cildren never got to meet, because her husband, John Kelly, shot his beautiful wife dead with a shotgun. Mary Magdalene Rosamond raised the two sons of Eutrophia Maude Wieneke, along with her four beautiful daughter, June, Bonnie, Rosemary, and Lillian the daughters of the writer, Royal Rosamond. It was Lillian who told me about Eutrophia whom I never knew existed. John had been wounded in WW1, and supposedly had a plate in his head that caused him to become homicidal. But, if you look at the photos of the Kellys, it is clear they hate each other, and Eutrophia is afraid of John. She has the look of condemned woman. I will speculate what may have really happened in my book. But, what is clear, Eutrophia has chosen the wrong man who can barely feed his family. Eutrophia looks hungry. I suspect my grandfather has arranged for her to model for, food! Royal knew some famous photographers. In April of 2000 I had a dream. My beautiful angel introduced a beautiful young woman to me; “This is your daughter!” I called up my best friend, Michael Harkins, who does PI work, and he agreed to help me find my daughter that a seer said I had in 1987. A week later I got a call from a woman; “My name is Patrice. You probably don’t remember me. I have something important to tell you.” “I know. We have a daughter!” I interrupted. “How did you know?” “My angel told me.” Patrice Hanson did not hear “My” because she is a big believer in angels, and has them all over her house. This would be a point of contention over whose angel appeared to me in my dream. In 1993, I began my autobiography ‘Bonds With Angel’ in hope the rent in Christine’s and my relationship could be repaired. The Angel in my book is the one Christine and Vicki saw in their bedroom when they were ten and six. I now believe that Angel is Eutrophia. For an hour my dear friend and I talked about the bad choices women make, and they get stuck. They grow to hate the men they once loved. I told Marilyn I am going back into therapy next week because I had come to hate my daughter for the bad choices she made, especially in the bonds Heather made with men. When I showed her the photo of a young Holly Hunt, Marilyn exclaimed; “She looks like me!” I suspect Holly is part Native American, as is Marilyn, thus those cheekbones. Marilyn and I talked about how her mother got stuck, along with her and I when we were sixteen and seventeen. Marie was going to call the police if I ever saw her daughter again. Because of Eutrophia, who lost her life because she made a bad choice, I have found forgiveness for Heather, and am doing my best to see her world view, her story. I video-taped my dear friend’s advice to me. She has been on my side, forever. She offered to defend me from Belle and her gang. She grew up with Christine and knows all about the family art. When I got sober I did work with incest survivors that helped Marilyn and her kindred. I wanted to help Rena, whom I wish the best on this day. Below is a video of M and I playing with my new toy. Below is a photo of Mary Magdalene Rosamond raising six children by herself. She made hats. She died never seeing or speaking to the father of her children in over thirty years. Before Mary died, Rosemary said she wanted to speak to me at her death bed. I wondered what family secret she would lay on me that would even make my life even more complex. However, I believe I know ‘The Secret’. It has to do with the little girl you see standing on the car. Who is she? Where is she? Look at the group photo below. I have been placed in the middle, a place of honor. I have just come back from New York where I lived for nine months. That is Mary standing on the far left, beholding her extended family, her tribe. If she had not stepped in, then the offspring of Eutrophia, would not exist. Harold, Bob, Eddie, Margaret, Edra, Collen, Miesha, Kelly. The only ambition my mother had for me was to be a Franciscan Monk. However, when she told me this when I was fifteen, I felt it was what Mary wanted me to become. I now get it. I was Mary’s favorite. I lived with her for about six months when I was seven. What Mary is beholding in her family reunion, is not a Presco, or a Rosamond, but, a Wieneke. I am the family historian, and family genealogist, who is carrying a spiritual issue. I have got my offspring back. I own the end of my story ‘Capturing Beauty’. When I arrived home, my mother told me Marilyn called four days earlier. She wanted to see me before she sailed for France. Heather Marie Hanson was conceived on Christmas Eve, 1983, and born on Rosemary’s birthday. If my famous sister had not died, and a website made to sell her beautiful women, Heather and I would never have met. Eutrophia, and her cousin Phillipine, were models. I did a watercolor of Heather. She modeled for me. I captured her beauty. Jon Presco Copyright 2014 https://www.youtube.com/embed/A5AaVBTyWgU?feature=oembed https://rosamondpress.com/2014/12/25/christmas-with-eutrophia/ http://youtu.be/1coq8-h1T14 Bertel Thorvaldsen The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is a service-oriented, globally-connected Christian church. To welcome them as new members of the Springfield Area Chamber of Commerce, we recently spoke with their Springfield Stake Communications Director, David Willis, to find out more about them and the organization. https://www.alamy.com/berlin-mitte-dorotheenstadt-protestant-cemetery-burial-ground-family-stuttmeister-tomb-with-bronze-sculpture-image229593918.html Wawel Cathedral, Kraków, Poland (1833; mounted in 1835) St. Petri Church (Church of Norway), Stavanger, Norway (1853) Koranda Congregation Chapel (Evangelical Church of Czech Brethren), Plzeň, Czech Republic Church of the Transfiguration of The Lord (Old Catholic Church of the Czech Republic), Varnsdorf, Czech Republic[3] St. John United Lutheran Church (1926; originally a Danish-speaking congregation) in the Phinney Ridge neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, U.S. St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, Houston, Texas, U.S. Trinity Lutheran Church in Galesburg, Illinois, U.S. (a wood carving by Meyer in Oberammergau, Germany) Önsta Gryta Church (Church of Sweden) in Västerås, Sweden (2009; six feet tall; 30,000 white Lego pieces)[4] In front of the Church of Peace, a Protestant church in Potsdam, Germany (1845–1854) In front of the Cathedral Church of the Advent (Episcopal) in Birmingham, Alabama, U.S. Elders Wyatt Smith and Joshua Obrist stand in front of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ward in Dahlem, Berlin. Photo by Ken Chitwood BERLIN — A tireless desire to share their message with the people of Berlin — and Germany as a whole — has helped the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ mission in Berlin persevere over the years, up to the present day. Despite criticism, shrinking numbers and the challenges of working in a diverse metropolitan area considered the atheist capital of Europe, numerous young church members fulfill their mission in Berlin and believe the city is rich with opportunity. https://religionunplugged.com/news/2022/5/13/mission-berlin-the-church-of-jesus-christ-of-latter-day-saints-and-its-nearly-170-years-in-germanys-capital-city https://springfieldbottomline.com/2023/11/new-member-profile-the-church-of-jesus-christ-of-latter-day-saints/embed#?secret=Orr7cJZyBS#?secret=BA1bSfgF80 Berlin, Mitte. Dorotheenstadt Protestant cemetery & burial ground. Family Stuttmeister tomb with bronze sculpture Captions are provided by our contributors. RMID:R9EWAP IMAGE DETAILS Contributor:Eden Breitz / Alamy Stock Photo File size:3.7 MB jpeg Releases:Model – no | Property – noDo I need a release? Dimensions:5564 x 3709 px | 47.1 x 31.4 cm | 18.5 x 12.4 inches | 300dpi Date taken:9 August 2018 Location:Dorotheenstadt Cemetery, Chausseesstr.,Mitte,Berlin More information: Berlin, Mitte. Dorotheenstadt Protestant cemetery & burial ground. Family Stuttmeister tomb with bronze sculpture Established in the eighteenth century on land donated by Prussian King Frederick II, Frederick the Great. There were originally four cemeteries on this land and two still exist – the French cemetery and the Dorotheenstadt cemetery. The Dorotheenstadt cemetery was established jointly by the two Protestant parishes in the early 1760s – the Dorotheenstadt and Friedrichswerder Parishes. The graveyard has listed landmark status and houses the graves and honorary graves of several prominent people and a collective monument honouring the Resistance fighters killed during the Nazi regime. Add PhotosRequest Photo Added by Searching for Stuttmeisters Added by Searching for Stuttmeisters See 1 more https://82f9198f62f5f7c665f3d748b68a34a0.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html Victor Emanuel “Felix” Stuttmeister BIRTH20 Dec 1860 Berlin, GermanyDEATH10 Nov 1899 (aged 38) Zehlendorf, Steglitz-Zehlendorf, Berlin, GermanyBURIAL Dorotheenstädtisch-Friedrichwerderscher Friedhof I Berlin-Mitte, Mitte, Berlin, Germany Show MapGPS-Latitude: 52.5284611, Longitude: 13.3842246MEMORIAL ID195886845 · View SourceSHARESAVE TO SUGGEST EDITSTOGGLE DROPDOWN MEMORIAL PHOTOS 4 FLOWERS 1 Family Members Parents Hermann Johannes Stuttmeister1826–1890 Henriette Theodore “Emma” Pöhlig Stuttmeister1834–1899 Siblings Agnes Emma “Hedwig” Stuttmeister1856–1908 Johanna Stuttmeister1859–1912 Friedrich Heinrich “Hugo” Stuttmeister1861–1914 Flowers Pause Animations In their memory http://theoltmans.com/images/Ancestors_of_Murray_Oltman_and_Ralph_Oltman.pdf https://www.e-yearbook.com/yearbooks/University_California_Blue_Gold_Yearbook/1887/Page_1.html Toggle the table of contents Christus (statue) Size of this preview: 396 × 599 pixels. Other resolutions: 159 × 240 pixels | 317 × 480 pixels | 893 × 1,350 pixels. Original file (893 × 1,350 pixels, file size: 295 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) Coordinates: 55°40′46″N 12°34′23″E From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia For the statue of Jesus in Indianapolis, Indiana, see Christus (Indianapolis). The original white Carrara marble statue, completed in 1833, in the Church of Our Lady in Copenhagen, Denmark Christus is an 1833 white Carrara marble statue of the resurrected Jesus by Bertel Thorvaldsen located in the Church of Our Lady, an Evangelical Lutheran Church of Denmark in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was commissioned as part of a larger group, which includes 11 of the original 12 apostles and Paul the Apostle (instead of Judas Iscariot). The statue has been widely reproduced; images and replicas of it were adopted by the leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in the 20th century to emphasize the centrality of Jesus in its teachings. Original sculpture[edit] The Church of Our Lady was destroyed by fire in September 1807 from bombardment by the British Royal Navy during the Battle of Copenhagen in 1807, part of the Napoleonic Wars. When the church was being rebuilt, Thorvaldsen was commissioned in 1819 to sculpt statues of Jesus and the apostles, a baptismal font, other furnishings, and decorative elements. A plaster cast model was supplied for the church’s consecration on June 7, 1829, with the finished white Carrara marble statue replacing it in November 1833.[1] The statue is 11-foot-4-inch (3.45-meter) tall.[2] The inscription at the base of the sculpture reads “Kommer til mig” (“Come unto me”) with a reference to the Bible verse Matthew 11:28, in which Jesus is depicted with His hands spread, displaying the wounds in the hands of His resurrected body. The original plaster cast model is on display in the Thorvaldsen Museum in Copenhagen, Denmark. Sites of replicas[edit] Churches[edit] Wawel Cathedral, Kraków, Poland (1833; mounted in 1835) St. Petri Church (Church of Norway), Stavanger, Norway (1853) Koranda Congregation Chapel (Evangelical Church of Czech Brethren), Plzeň, Czech Republic Church of the Transfiguration of The Lord (Old Catholic Church of the Czech Republic), Varnsdorf, Czech Republic[3] St. John United Lutheran Church (1926; originally a Danish-speaking congregation) in the Phinney Ridge neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, U.S. St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, Houston, Texas, U.S. Trinity Lutheran Church in Galesburg, Illinois, U.S. (a wood carving by Meyer in Oberammergau, Germany) Önsta Gryta Church (Church of Sweden) in Västerås, Sweden (2009; six feet tall; 30,000 white Lego pieces)[4] In front of the Church of Peace, a Protestant church in Potsdam, Germany (1845–1854) In front of the Cathedral Church of the Advent (Episcopal) in Birmingham, Alabama, U.S. Loviisan kirkko (Church in Loviisa, in Finland. Protestant [Lutheran] Church) Cemeteries[edit] Oakwood Cemetery in Huntsville, Texas, U.S. (bronze) Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California, U.S. (1947; The Court of the Christus on Cathedral Drive)[5] Forest Lawn Cypress cemetery, Cypress, California, U.S. (1959; The Garden of Faith on Sunset Drive) Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills cemetery, Hollywood Hills, California, U.S. (The Court of Remembrance) Forest Lawn Covina Hills cemetery, Covina Hills, California, U.S. Luisenfriedhof I cemetery, Berlin, Germany (bronze) Luisenfriedhof III cemetery, Berlin, Germany The Haggenmacher family tomb at the Farkasréti Cemetery, Budapest, Hungary (1919) Hospital[edit] Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. (1896; Christus Consolator)[6] LDS Church use[edit] Stephen L Richards, an apostle and first counselor to church president David O. McKay in the First Presidency, purchased a replica of the Christus the late 1950s and gifted it to the church. It was completed by the Rebechi Aldo & Gualtiero studio and made from white Carrara marble from Pietrasanta, Tuscany, Italy in April 1959. It arrived in Salt Lake City, Utah in June 1959. It was placed in the unfinished North Visitors’ Center on Temple Square in Salt Lake City in 1962, and was unveiled in 1967. It is 11-foot-0.25-inch (3.36-meter) tall and weighs 12,000 pounds. In preparation for the demolition of the North Visitors’ Center, the replica was removed in November 2021 and placed in storage for conservation. Its final home has not yet been disclosed. In December 2019, another replica (8-foot-tall) was placed across the street in the Conference Center. A second Christus replica was sculpted by the Rebechi Aldo & Gualtiero studio to be displayed in the LDS Pavilion at the 1964 New York World’s Fair. It was an exact duplicate of the Salt Lake City replica being 11-foot-0.25-inch (3.36-meter) tall and weighing 12,000 pounds. Its display “was intended to help visitors understand that Latter-day Saints are Christians”.[7] After the World’s Fair ended on October 17, 1965, the replica was shipped from New York to the Los Angeles California Temple visitors’ center on November 21, 1966. The church commissioned the Rebechi Aldo & Gualtiero studio to sculpt a third replica of the Christus statue for the Expo 1970 in Osaka, Japan. It was 9’6” tall and weighed 10,000-11,000 pounds. After the expo ended on September 13, 1970, it was stored in a warehouse in Japan for six years. It was then shipped from Japan to New Zealand in March 1977. The renovated Hamilton New Zealand Temple visitors’ center reopened with it inside on August 4, 1977. Since then, the church has created replicas of the statue and displayed them in temple visitors’ centers at the Laie Hawaii, Mexico City Mexico, Washington D.C., Oakland California, St. George Utah, Idaho Falls Idaho, Nauvoo Illinois, Palmyra New York, London England, Portland Oregon, Paris France, São Paulo Brazil, Provo City Center,[7][8] and Rome Italy temples, with the statue in Rome also accompanied by replicas of Thorvaldsen’s twelve apostles.[9] Replicas are also displayed in the visitors’ centers in Nauvoo, Illinois, the Hill Cumorah in Palmyra, New York, and Independence, Missouri. Other replicas are displayed in the church’s meetinghouses in Hyde Park in London, Garðabær, Iceland (2000), and Copenhagen, Denmark. On April 4, 2020, church president Russell M. Nelson announced a new symbol for the church, featuring an image of the Christus as the central element, placed above the church’s name.[10] The church uses the image on its webpages and in other official publications.[8] Image gallery[edit] The original plaster cast model of Christus (1822) by Thorvaldsen in Thorvaldsen Museum in Copenhagen, Denmark Marble replica (1959) in the North Visitors’ Center on Temple Square in Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. This facility was demolished in November 2021. Replica (1896) in the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. Belmont Legacy of Carl Janke Posted on September 11, 2011 by Royal Rosamond Press Months after my sister’s death I went to the Sacramento Library and looked at microfish about a legal battle between the heirs of Carl Janke’s estate in Belmont that appeared in the San Francisco Call. I lost the copy I made of that article that I am certain mentioned William O. Stuttmeister, and the sisters of Augusta Stuttmeister-Janke. Carl’s sons did not want Minni and Cornillia, to have anything, and one brother (or cousin) took their side, and was cut out. This has to be William, or W. JANKE. “The bride was attended by Miss Alice Stuttmeister, a sister of the groom, and Miss Minnie Janke, a sister of the bride, as bridesmaids, and Dr. Muldownado and Wm. Janke, a cousin of the bride, were groomsmen.” When Victor Presco turned twenty-one, the the Janke spinsters offered him a moving company in San Francesco. Apparently they saw him as the heir to the Stuttmiester legacy, and the Hope of a return to former glory because they had no children. How about their brother, William? Rosemary said this; “Your father was a made man.” Two days ago, in an e-mail, my cousin Daryl Bulkley confirmed my suspicions that ‘Stuttmeister’ was not the original name of the folks from Berlin. I suspect they were a branch of the Glucksburg family who became Calvinist Evangelicals, and perhaps Rosicrucians. In the top photo we see Minni and Corniallia Janke in the family vault that William Stuttmeister purchased for $10,000 dollars to put the reains of the Jankes and Stuttmeisters in after they were evicted from the Oddfellow cemetery. That William Ralston was a Oddfellow that put up a large sum of money to establish the Oddfellows in Germany – and perhaps elsewhere – makes me wonder about his alleged suicide by plunging into the bay. I am reading articles on the internet about the Oddfellows being the founders of the Welfare State in America, where being charitable to the poor, the infirmed, and the widows, was paramount. They also paid much attention to burying their dead, which suggests they believed in a different hereafter. As a theologian I have pointed out the strange raising of the dead in Matthew 27:53 at the very moment of Jesus’ alleged death. I suspect Judas was given thirty pieces of silver to purchase Jesus’ tomb, and Jesus was about to practice the ancient Judaic ritual called of the RESUSCITATION, where the soul of the diseased enters the body of another. I believe this is why those who take the Nazarite Vow are bid to keep their distance from the dead. That the Oddfellows titled women as Rebekahs, suggests they are Rechabites, who have been associated with the Nazarites who composed the first Christian church called “The Church of God”. That Jesus came to be seen as God “the Father” is a usurption that began with Paul of Tarsus. That the fall of the Oddfellows in the Bay Area happened overnight, and all traces of their demise, all but disappeared, tells me there was a real Judas and purge. That Daryl pointed out in her research that we knew next to nothing about the Stuttmeisters, whose tomb was lost until seven years ago, tells me William Stuttmeister retired to the Geronimo Valley a disillusioned man, who played a rare violin, and left his Stuttmeister-Janke legacy to his housekeeper. And then he is dead, his remains put in the vault that I went to visit with my daughter and grandson. Before I left for California I told my friend Joy Gall, that I wanted a AA coin to put in this tomb in honor of Christine Rosamond Benton whose funeral fell on he first sober birthday in AA. As I lined up to view my sister in her casket, I did consider the Nazarite Vow I took in 1989. As fate would have it, I ended up putting this coin in William Oltman Stuttmeisters crypt because there was an opening made by the earthquake of 1989. On this coin is an Angel. In 1992 I began a biography of my family called ‘Bonds With Angels’. It begins with an account of the Blue Angel that appear at the foot of Christine’s bed that woke her and Vicki, who crawled into Christine’s bed and beheld her. Vicki was six years of age, and is clean and sober this day. The Nazarite Vow bids one to not ingest alcohol, not get drunk, so that the Holy Spirit may speak through you, use you as a Horn of Power to broadcast the Word of God. When I entered the tomb of my ancestors and sat down on the marble bench, I noticed the letter A made of brass lying behind the faux fern plant. I picked it up. It was the A in JANKE that had come lose in the earthquake. I looked up at the stained glass window and read; “In loving memory of my beloved wife, Augusta Stutteister,” Was Augusta the Angel that came to visit my sisters? May our bonds with Angels continue – forever more! Amen! Jon Presco Daily Alta California, Volume 42, Number 14175, 24 June 1888 STUTTMEISTER-JANKE. One of the most enjoyable weddings of the past week took place at Belmont, Wednesday morning last, the contracting parties being Miss Augusta Janke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. August Janke of Belmont,and Dr. Wm. Stuttmeister of San Francisco. The house was handsomely decorated with a rich profusion of ferns and flowers, and at the appointed hour was filled with the relatives and intimate friendsof the contracting parties. At 11 o’clock the wedding march was played and the bridal party entered the parlor. The bride was attended by Miss Alice Stuttmeister, a sister of the groom, and Miss Minnie Janke, a sister of the bride, as bridesmaids, and Dr. Muldownado and Wm. Janke, a cousin of the bride, were groomsmen. The Rev. A. L. Brewerof San Mateo performed the beautiful and impressive ceremony under an arch composed of flowers and greens very prettily arranged, after which the guests pressed forward and offered their congratulations. The bride was attired in a very pretty and becoming costume of the crushed strawberry shade, and wore a corsage bouquet of orangeblossoms. She carried a handsome bouquet of white flowers. After the guests had paid their compliments the bride and groom led the way to the dining-room, where the wedding dinner was served and the healthof the newly married pair was pledged. The feast over, the guests joined in the dance, and the hours sped right merrily, interspersed with music singing and recitations, until the bride and groom took their departure amid a shower of rice and good wishes. Many beautiful presents were received. Dr. and Mrs. Stuttmeister left Thursday morning for Santa Cruz and Monterey, where they will spend the honeymoon. On their return they will make their home in Belmont. 1911: Dr. Willian O. Stuttmeister was practicing dentistry in Redwood City, CA. (Reference: University of California, Directory of Graduates, 1864-1910, page 133).Records from Tombstones in Laurel Hill Cemetery, 1853-1927 – Janke– StuttmeisterMina Maria Janke, daughter of William A, & Cornelia Janke, bornFebruary 2, 1869, died March 1902.William August Janke, native of Hamburg, Germany, born Dec. 25,1642, died Nov. 22, 1902, son of Carl August & Dorette Catherine Janke. Frederick William R. Stuttmeister, native of Berlin, Germany, born1612, died January 29, 1877.Mrs. Matilda Stuttmeister, wife of Frederick W.R. Stuttmeister, born1829, died March 17, 1875, native of New York.Victor Rudolph Stuttmeister, son of Frederick W.R. & MatildaStuttmeister, born May 29, 1846, died Jan. 19, 1893, native of NewYork. http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/daughters-of-the-americanrevolution- california-s/records-from-tombstones-in-laurel-hill-cemetery- 1853-1927-gua/page-6-records-from-tombstones-in-laurel-hillcemetery- 1853-1927-gua.shtml Copyright 2011 Wieneke Posted on December 10, 2021 by Royal Rosamond Press Here is the Wieneke family. My mother’s mother was born, Mary Magdalene Wieneke. VRR Heather and Eutrophia Posted on December 26, 2014by Royal Rosamond Press Around 2:30 P.M. on Christmas Day, I opened my computer and showed Marilyn my post ‘Christmas with Eutrophia’. No sooner did she see the top photo, Mariliyn says; When my sister Christine was nine, and my sister Vicki, was five, they saw a blue angel standing at the foot of Christine’s bed. I just found this photo of an angel over the head of Mother Dominica, the cousin of my grandmother, Mary Magdalene Rosamond. And angel appeared above me just before I died. The fight I have with Patrice Hanson, is, she claims the light that surrounded OUR daughter, came from her mother that was like a guardian angel. Wrong! This angel and light comes from the Wieneke family who entered the Order of Saint Francis. That angel guarded MY daughter from the fake father, Randal Delpiano. Why wasn’t there an angel to protect Patrice’s two sons – that I took in to get them away from Randall? This alleged angel-mother did not stop her daughter from bonding with a criminal. Heather can keep this angel and light, as long as she admits it comes via her real father, and HIS family! The Order is always looking for new members amongst the Wieneke and Starks, because Nuns and Fathers do not produce children. Heather was a candidate – before she was born! John Gregory Presco https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/10495293/person/130185419690/story https://rosamondpress.com/2014/12/26/heather-and-eutrophiak Wieneke and StarkTop to bottom: Phillipine Wieneke (Mother Dominica), Anna Marie (Wieneke) Stark, Rose Elizabeth Wieneke (Sister Callistus), Theodore Stark About 1940 BurialDubuque, Dubuque, Iowa, USABonding With The SisterhoodPosted on March 25, 2017by Royal Rosamond Press Above is a photo of the Wieneke farm in Iowa. Here Sisters of the Order of Saint Francis were grounded in America after they were forced to flee Germany due to Bismark’s Kulturkampf. This is a story of how a religious order was helped by an American family who had immigrated from Germany fifty years before. The Wieneke family was given credit for preparing the way for Saint Francis, and, Jesus Christ. They were seen as Saints.https://www.youtube.com/embed/TwDV1C5UZvM?version=3&rel=1&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&fs=1&hl=en&autohide=2&wmode=transparentLast night I read this book again, online. I was hoping John Stark would have posted the rest of the book on ancestry.com. He has not. I tried to get him to give this book to the Sister’ of Briarcliff. John said the book contained accounts that ranged “from the reidulous to the sublime”. You are going to have to cut and past this to url.file:///C:/Users/jongr/Downloads/Mother%20Mary%20Dominica.pdfPhillipine was a muse to an artist. Her brother studied at Louvain. There is a missing chapter on the “Family Grotto”. I suspect there were sightings here. Please, John, publish the rest of this book! Members of the Wieneke came in close contact with the Order of Saint Francis that was forced to flee Germany. It appears they were The Keepers of The Miriam Cult. They wanted to spread the Devotion of Mary in America. The Wieneke Family were chosen to be The Messengers. They spoke German in their homes, as did the Sisters. Below is Father John, and his three sisters born from the same womb. My mother wanted me to become a Franciscan Monk. Her mother, Mary Magdalene Rosamond, said I was destined for the church. These are her cousins, and the sibings of Eutropia.The name Philippine is a German. In German the meaning of the name Philippine is: loves horses.There is a scene of the Wienekes taking the Sisters to church in their horse and wagon. This is the opening scene to a movie. I see the rolling hills of golden grass. The camera come closer in this Western secene, and everyone is speaking German. That John Kelly came home severely wonded in his fight with the secular evil in Germany, was very important. These Sisters knew their flock, and shen they did not hear from John and Eutropia, they sent an emisary to Ventura By The Sea. This is a Papal Emisary, as you shall read in my newspaper…………..Royal Rosamond Press.My sisters awoke to see a Blue Angel standing at the foot of their bed. There was a High Mass held in the Wieneke home to honor the dying mother who had given birth to the first American Sisters of the Order of Saint Francis. The term “papal rank” is used.https://rosamondpress.com/2016/05/09/bonding-with-a-blue-angel/Jon PrescoPresidentCopyright 2017https://rosamondpress.com/2017/02/08/the-franiscan-family-of-mary-magdalene-rosamond/https://www.youtube.com/embed/TgyPRoWIa5c?version=3&rel=1&showsearch=0&showinfo=1&iv_load_policy=1&fs=1&hl=en&autohide=2&wmode=transparent http://www.catholicnews.com/services/englishnews/2016/health-care-is-a-right-not-a-privilege-pope-says.cfm Wieneke Born In Verl and Detmold Germany Posted on June 6, 2018 by Royal Rosamond Press The Wieneke family has it roots in Verl and Detmold Germany. Members of the Wieneke family are buried here, and still live here. There is a riding club here. Lara Roozemond live 130 miles away. I had a dream about DNA. Will another Roozemond marry a Wieneke? Look at all the cousins I have in Detmold! https://www.dasoertliche.de/?cmd=cmd_map&page=78&action=59&context=11&queryString=sim%3d%26form_name%3dsearch_nat%26kw%3dWieneke%26ci%3dDetmold%26kgs%3d05766020%26zvo_ok%3d%26recFrom%3d%26rci%3d1%26atfilter%3d%26buc%3d%26bname%3d%26quarterfilter%3d%26orderby%3dname%26ttforderby%3drel%26radius%3d5%26cx%3d%26cy%3d Did William Morris look at Hermann when he wrote ‘The House of Wolfings’? Sound like Lara playing the piano, in hope one day her hero will come. ANSWER! Yes he did! I will never be that lonely again! My Pre-Raphaelite hero, William Morris, based much of his material on the battle Teutoburg Forest. Everyone in the region owes me a debt of gratitude for raising them up, and giving the Protection of Hrosmund!William Morris as Inspiration for Tolkien’s Literary Arthttps://crisismagazine.com/opinion/william-morris-as-inspiration-for-tolkiens-literary-art/embed#?secret=bVugWkt3PM#?secret=VBn653qGPH I spent eight hours yesterday looking for actors to play Frodo Pharamond and Rosamond. Lara Roozemond is – the one! When my professional people approach her, how can she turn them away. She will be famous – if she does! John G. Presco Copyright 2018 braskewitz@yahoo.com However, The House of the Wolfings had a far more profound effect on The Lord of the Rings. Morris showed Tolkien how to link reality and fiction without inflicting the horrors of allegory on the hapless reader. Many readers interpret The Lord of the Rings as the history of an alternate world—but this interpretation is mistaken. The tale of Frodo and his companions—along with all the voluminous associated materials—is really an alternate history of our own world. In this particular, Tolkien is following the clear example of William Morris. In The House of the Wolfings, Morris retells from an alternate point of view the story of the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. We all recall the accounts in Tacitus and Suetonius. Arminius, a warrior of the Cherusci who had served as a Roman legionary, leads his own people and Germanic allies against three Roman legions under Publius Quintilius Varus. Taken by ambush, the Romans are—incredibly—defeated. Indeed, they are wiped out. It is the most devastating military defeat ever suffered by Augustus Caesar, arguably the greatest and most influential statesman of all time. Suetonius tells how he reacted: Quintili Vare, legiones redde! (“Quintilius Varus, return my legions!”) The practical effect was to establish the boundary of the Roman Empire at the Rhine . https://youtube.com/watch?v=YLjlA85cnoE%3Fversion%3D3%26rel%3D1%26showsearch%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26fs%3D1%26hl%3Den%26autohide%3D2%26wmode%3Dtransparent https://youtube.com/watch?v=Q0ggmF9Le-I%3Fversion%3D3%26rel%3D1%26showsearch%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26fs%3D1%26hl%3Den%26autohide%3D2%26wmode%3Dtransparent The monument commemorates the Cherusci war chief Arminius (in German, Hermann) and the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in which the Germanic warriors under Arminius defeated three Roman legions under Varus in 9 AD. At the time it was built, the location of the statue was believed to have been very near the actual site of the battle, though it is now considered to be more likely that the battle actually took place near Kalkriese, a considerable distance to north west of the monument. Upon hearing of the defeat, the Emperor Augustus, according to the Roman historian Suetonius in De vita Caesarum (“The Lives of the Caesars”), was so shaken that he stood butting his head against the walls of his palace, repeatedly shouting:“Quintili Vare, legiones redde!“ (‘Quintilius Varus, give me back my legions!’)The legion numbers XVII and XIX were not used again by the Romans (Legio XVIII was raised again under Nero, but finally disbanded under Vespasian). This was in contrast to other legions that were reestablished after suffering defeat. Another example of permanent disbandment was the XXII Deiotariana legion, which may have ceased to exist after incurring heavy losses when deployed against Jewish rebels during the Bar Kokba revolt (132–136 CE) in Judea. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detmold https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermannsdenkmal https://www.dastelefonbuch.de/Suche/Wieneke/Detmold https://www.dasoertliche.de/Themen/Wieneke/Detmold.html https://www.facebook.com/reitervereinverl/ Frank Wieneke U.Kirchstr.12, 33415 Verl , Kaunitz Tel. 05246 93 5 1 12 Wieneke Hugo hairdresserKir c hstr .1 2, 33 4 1 5 Ve r l, K aun z Tel. 05246 3 5 57 Henrich Wieneke Vital Events (2 of 2 timeline events) Birth05 Sep 1734Verl, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, GermanyDeath21 Sep 1767Verl, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Joan Otto Wieneke Vital Events (2 of 2 timeline events) Birth14 Sep 1704Sende, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Gerd Heinrich Junkerzufeuerborn Vital Events (2 of 2 timeline events) Birth04 Jun 1717Verl, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Franz Henrich Lukewille geb Berenbrinker Vital Events (2 of 2 timeline events) Birth30 Jan 1745MarriageAugust 1772 to Anna Elisabeth StutewilleVerl, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Anna Elisabeth Stutewille Vital Events (3 of 3 timeline events) Birth8 Sep 1735Sende, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, GermanyMarriageAugust 1772 to Franz Henrich Lukewille geb BerenbrinkerVerl, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Anna Maria Catherina Kleineschallau Vital Events (3 of 7 timeline events) Birth9 September 1804Verl, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, GermanyMarriage15 Nov 1825 to Heinrich WienekeVerl, Gütersloh, North Rhine-Westphalia, GermanyDeath15 February 1884Clinton Township, Linn, Iowa, USA Marianna Heil Vital Events (3 of 15 timeline events) Birth1 Oct 1852Chicago, Cook, Illinois, USAMarriage14 Apr 1868 to John Conrad WienekeLinn, Iowa, USADeath8 February 1923 BELOW: Mary Magdalene Wieneke and her husband Royal Rosamond, and two of their four daughter, Bertha Mae and June Anna Margaretha Junkerzufeuerborn (born Ottovordemgentschenfelde) was born in 1720, at birth place. Anna married Gerd Heinrich Junkerzufeuerborn. Gerd was born on June 4 1717, in Verl, Gutersloh, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. They had one daughter: Elisabeth Wieneke (born Junkerzufeuerborn). Anna passed away at death place. Elisabeth Wieneke (born Junkerzufeuerborn), born 1747 Elisabeth Wieneke (born Junkerzufeuerborn) was born on month day 1747. Elisabeth married Henrich Wieneke. Henrich was born on September 5 1734, in Verl, Gutersloh, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. They had one son: Jodocus Hermann Wieneke. Jodocus Hermann Wieneke, Circa 1768 – 1840 Jodocus Hermann Wieneke was born circa 1768, at birth Anna Margaretha Junkerzufeuerborn (born Ottovordemgentschenfelde) was born in 1720, at birth place. Anna married Gerd Heinrich Junkerzufeuerborn. Gerd was born on June 4 1717, in Verl, Gutersloh, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. They had one daughter: Elisabeth Wieneke (born Junkerzufeuerborn). Anna passed away at death place. Elisabeth Wieneke (born Junkerzufeuerborn), born 1747 Elisabeth Wieneke (born Junkerzufeuerborn) was born on month day 1747. Elisabeth married Henrich Wieneke. Henrich was born on September 5 1734, in Verl, Gutersloh, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. They had one son: Jodocus Hermann Wieneke. Jodocus Hermann Wieneke, Circa 1768 – 1840 Jodocus Hermann Wieneke was born circa 1768, at birth place, to Henrich Wieneke and Elisabeth Wieneke (born Junkerzufeuerborn). Henrich was born on September 5 1734, in Verl, Gutersloh, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. Elisabeth was born on April 23 1747. Jodocus married Anna-Margaretha Wieneke (born Lukewille). Anna-Margaretha was born in 1774, in Sende, Gutersloh, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. They had 6 children: Heinrich Wieneke, Anna Catharina Wieneke and 4 other children. Jodocus passed away on month day 1840, at age 72 at death place. Jodocus Henricus Wieneke was born on month day 1823, to Joseph Heuerling Wieneke. Joseph was born in 1789. Jodocus had one brother: Franz Wieneke. Jodocus married Angela Maria Wieneke (born Kampmeier). They had 5 children: Henrich Georg Wieneke, Johann Joseph Wieneke and 3 other children. Jodocus passed away. The name Verl was first mentioned in the expression ‘Henricus de Verlo’, which can be found in a charter from 1264. The designation probably relates to the farm estate Meier zu Verl, which belonged to a group of four estates that presumably came into existence around the turn of the first millennium. Some earlier documented references to estates in this area can be dated back to the year 1188. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lszv–GjqTA Junker (German: Junker, Scandinavian: Junker, Dutch: Jonkheer, English: Yunker) is a noble honorific, derived from Middle High German Juncherre, meaning “young nobleman”[1] or otherwise “young lord” (derivation of jung and Herr). The term is traditionally used throughout the German-speaking, Dutch-speaking and Scandinavian-speaking parts of Europe. https://youtube.com/watch?v=bP14pHjDryI%3Fversion%3D3%26rel%3D1%26showsearch%3D0%26showinfo%3D1%26iv_load_policy%3D1%26fs%3D1%26hl%3Den%26autohide%3D2%26wmode%3Dtransparent https://www.cnn.com/2016/08/12/health/men-banking-sperm/index.html Meier Frank u. Wieneke U.Kirchstr. 12, 33415 Verl, Kaunitz Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist http://grabsteine.genealogy.net/indilist.php?nachname=WIENEKE&b=W Hänschen’s Reisedienst Inh. Rolf WienekeNiemeierstr. 22, 32758 Detmold, Jerxen-Orbke E-MailWebwww.haenschen.de1 Bewertung1Jetzt bewerten(0 52 31) …›gratis anrufen(0 52 31) …span.c200:after { content: “(0 52 31) 96 44-0”; } Tel.span.c201:after { content: “(0 52 31) 96 44-44”; } FaxÄnderung meldenÖffnungszeitenZugehörige Einträge einblendenZugehörige Einträge ausblenden Mietbusse32758 DetmoldRufnummer…›gratis anrufenspan.c20000:after { content: “(0 52 31) 96 44-55”; } Tel. Reiseanmeldungen32758 DetmoldRufnummer…›gratis anrufenspan.c20100:after { content: “(0 52 31) 96 44-33”; } Fax4 Meyer-Wieneke A.Lübecker Str. 11, 32760 Detmold, Diestelbruch Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …span.c300:after { content: “(0 52 31) 51 98”; } Tel.5 Schomann-Wieneke Beratungs- und Verwaltungs GmbHGehrenkampstr. 21, 32760 Detmold, Spork-Eichholz E-MailWebwww.schomann-dach.deJetzt bewerten(0 52 31) …›gratis anrufenspan.c400:after { content: “(0 52 31) 3 08 05 63”; } Tel.Änderung meldenÖffnungszeiten6 Wieneke DorotheaAnnastr. 10, 32756 Detmold, Innenstadt Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …span.c500:after { content: “(0 52 31) 2 00 62”; } Tel.7 Wieneke Fritz u. GiselaBad Meinberger Str. 63, 32760 Detmold, Diestelbruch Blumengrüße versenden mit EurofloristE-Mail(0 52 31) …span.c600:after { content: “(0 52 31) 5 94 48”; } Tel.8 Wieneke GerhardKarl-Wehrhan-Str. 36, 32758 Detmold, Heidenoldendorf Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …span.c700:after { content: “(0 52 31) 6 97 69”; } Tel.9 Wieneke GregorHeimstättenstr. 11, 32758 Detmold, Jerxen-Orbke Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …span.c800:after { content: “(0 52 31) 3 87 31”; } Tel.10 Wieneke H.Bielefelder Str. 436, 32758 Detmold, Pivitsheide Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 32) …span.c900:after { content: “(0 52 32) 8 90 11”; } Tel.11 Wieneke HansHiddeser Str. 149, 32760 Detmold, Hiddesen Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …span.c1000:after { content: “(0 52 31) 8 94 44”; } Tel.12 Wieneke KarolaHahnbergstr. 3, 32760 Detmold, Heiligenkirchen Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …span.c1100:after { content: “(0 52 31) 4 63 40”; } Tel.13 Wieneke Marc u. AlexandraJahnstr. 14, 32760 Detmold, Hiddesen Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …span.c1200:after { content: “(0 52 31) 30 12 86”; } Tel.14 Wieneke Peter u. Gilhaus GabrieleSchützenberg 27 C, 32756 Detmold, Innenstadt Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …span.c1300:after { content: “(0 52 31) 3 95 98”; } Tel.15 Wieneke PetraFelsenweg 5, 32760 Detmold, Diestelbruch Blumengrüße versenden mit Euroflorist(0 52 31) …(0 52 31) …span.c1400:after { content: “(0 52 31) 5 97 80”; } Tel.span.c1401:after { content: “(0 52 31) 57 02 98”; } Tel/Fax16 Wieneke Ralf u. BärbelSandstr. 109, 32758 Detmold, Pivitsheide
Here lies the hoarded love the key
To All the treasure that shall be
Come fated heart the gift to take
And smite the sleeping world awake.”
Here is a video that contains a photo of Mother Mary Dominica Wieneke, Major Superior of the Sisters of Saint Francis of Dubuque. Her cousin, Mary Magdalene Wieneke-Rosamond, was my grandmother, the mother of Rosemary Rosamond.
Above is an amazing photo of the groundbreaking ceremony for Briar Cliff College that is located on the Missouri River overlooking the states of South Dakota and Nebraska. I might do a painting of this scene because more than likely there are more than twenty of my kindred in it. My grandmother Mary is above in white.
Look at those beautiful children who want their shot at life even though they know they are crippled. They are filled with hope. How can anyone who claims they are…
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