The sun was well below the horizon when the 35 year old man woke, dressed and went out to complete his morning farm chores in the cold brisk January air. He would soon depart his house in southwest Bohemia to go to the village in which he was born. At 35 years old, he moved to his current village of Dolni Chrastany, Bohemia, when he married his wife eight years earlier and took over her family's farm. He was going back to his home village of Ratiborova Lhota to sign as a witness on the purchase of his ancestral farm and homestead in Ratiborova Lhota by his youngest brother, Johann. Overtime, Frantisek, my third great grandfather, would benefit financially from the sale of the family farm to his younger brother, Johann, as payments were equally distributed among the family members. Johann would be taking over the farm which had been in the family since at least 1585, which is as far back as records that mention names go. The family was following long-held and established traditions regarding inheritance, or farm purchases.
Traditions held strong in this very rural area of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Nothing was very easy living and farming in the foothills of the Bohemian Mountains. Travel was difficult, one's livelihood was weather dependent, soils were poor, they lived on the edge of poverty, there was the strong hand of the manorial authorities (for Ratiborova Lhota, they were in the Krumlov domain), but community and family ties were strong. They persevered. The story of the Havel family in Bohemia follows the course of history in Southwest Bohemia. History is comprised of many individual stories, of this is just one of the Havel family.
Franz and Johann's father, Matheus, died on August 30, 1802, just eleven days shy of his 62nd birthday. Johann Havel was 27 years old at the time, and working on the family farm. Matheus was near an age when a farmer would have retired. When Matheus acquired the farm from his father in 1766 he was the youngest surviving male, he started making payments to his mom and three aunts and uncles in 1767. He made his final payment twenty years later on 29 March 1787. His debt in taking on the farm was the 154 Schock Meissen, but increased to or 161 when he decided to buy a cow and an old chest of "inferior condition." The thing is, value of the farm holding was generally consistent throughout time. Mathias was aided in payments, several years later, by a his wife's brother having married his sister. This allowed his wife's share of the inheritance to the sister being written off.
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Detail of Ratiborova Lhotka Village Havel House is center of three farmsteads at bottom At time of mapping, Johann Mika owned the farm, nephew of Johann Havel https://ags.cuzk.gov.cz/archiv |
Inheritance was influenced by a number of factors, time of death, farm holding sale, and number of children who may have predeceased the farm owner. Death was a constant companion for our ancestors, and it would alter the timing of farm takeovers, and who received payments. While the farm often went to the youngest male, if there were males, payments was always made to other heirs. We can see this all the way back to the earliest land registers. Having the youngest male or child made sense since that child would be near or at the age of taking over the farm at the time of the father or stepfather's retirement. A single parent did not long last in this era as it was common that a farm required two to run, the man doing the field work and the required robot labor, while the spouse took care of the children, garden, and the smaller animals in the barnyard. This is why there are many second marriages within a few months when a spouse has died. The matchmakers were kept busy.
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Signature page of 1804 agreement Notice XXX's as signatures, due to them being illiterate Trebon Archives, Land Register Ord 197 img 305 |
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Part of Land Reg Ord 50, img 20 Shows children of Havel. Jakub is listed first, identified as son and farm owner |
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Translation of the above portion of image 20, Ord 50 |
But, that is far in the past. I have not located any record that Mathias had a will stipulating who took over the farm. The sequence of events seem to suggest he did not. When Frantisek made his way to Ratiborova Lhota to meet his brother and a few others to appear before Adalbert Hauser the District court clerk in January 1804, to sign their XXX's, and to witness Johann sign with XXX's, as receiver of the farm, the property distribution and value had already been agreed upon on 21 Sept 1803, and is recorded in the land registers. Because all heirs agreed to the distribution, it seems that there was no will, as a will would have made such agreement unnecessary. The four month time lag may have been normal, or it may have been related to Johann needing to come up with the 70 florian Rhenish for down payment, and 19 florian Rhenish land tax for the current year. Our ancestors were not wealthy and would have spent time accumulating savings by being rather parsimonious in nature. A florian saved is a florian earned. The terms of the 1803 agreement required 7 Rhenish until fully paid off. Johann made his first payment in 1806. That agreement also stipulated taxes, in-kind contributions, and robot labor required of Johann.
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Land Register, 1803 Inheritance Distribution agreement Image of document and translation Document image is from Ordinal 233 image 91, Trebon Archives Translation by Richard D' Amelio |
The tradition of two persons, generally husband and wife, operating a farm was required, since a poorly managed farm could be taken away by the manorial authorities and given to someone else. They did not own the property outright, rather their tenancy functioned more as a long term lease. The estates were overbearing, and undertook functions of landlords and local governments. Having a holding taken away could quickly lead to a downward spiral for the family unit. Practical considerations outweighed legal rights in this inheritance practice.
The land register has an insert page which records the payments Johann made to family members. From that spreadsheet, names at the top and years along the X axis, we can see that Johann made payments of 7 RG in 1813 and 1815 to Frantisek, my third great grandfather, and a final payment to pay off his share of over 36 RG in 1818. Franz was made whole.
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Payment log, Trebon Archives Land Register Ord 139 img 73 |
The Havel farm in Ratiborova Lhota was one below the average farm size and was noted as a 1/4 farm. While their holding totaled about 35 acres, when one deducts the woodlands, meadows and unclassified property, there remains about 20 acres of arable land. However, the arable land was farmed in a system of three, as a conservation method, where one-third of tillable land was fallow every year. Hence, every year about six or seven acres of production land was lost, meaning the farmer and family subsistence was based on about 13-14 acres.
Many such small farmers often had secondary occupations, and for the Havel family that was the weaver craft. Records indicate that in 1656 Georg Havel, Johann's great grandfather, was "learning the weaver craft". Records show that his son Simon and Simon's son Mathias, and Mathias' son Mathias (father of Johann) all learned the weaver craft. It is possible that Georg learned the craft from an extended family member.
The passing of the farm to the youngest son continued beyond 1804. My 2nd great grandfather, Josef Havel (born 1808) took over the Dolni Chrastany farm of his father Franz in 1846. Joseph and family immigrated to the US in 1868. While the Jefferson County farm Joseph bought did not go to a son, it did go to a daughter and her husband, although not the youngest as the one who purchased the farm was the only one to remain in Wisconsin, as all other family members moved to Iowa. When Martin Havel, my great grandfather, retired from farming in Manly, IA, the home farm was purchased by my grandfather, Rudy in Dec 1912. Rudy was the youngest of three sons, born to Martin and Amelia. He would later acquire future land purchased by is father, Martin.
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Martin Havel Family, Manly, IA c 1894 Youngest son Rudy is to left Source: David Dixon |
The idea of the youngest being able to take on a farm makes practical sense, the older son/daughter will need to generally be out on his own, while the youngest is generally ready when the father and mother look to retire from farming. Thus, we see that while farm locations varied, there were still ties to tradition. One could say traditions die hard, but I think it is more practical implications, in this instance Frantisek, Johann's older brother, already had a farm in Dolni Chrastany. If nothing else, the long line of farming ancestors were practical, which played into the inheritance of the farm.