"Naan has nothing to do with us. He is not related to us", said Marie to
my father.
My father was
Martin Kuldkepp, farmer, and assistant
at the Department of Economics and Geography of Tartu University, chief
editor at the newspaper "Tartu Postimees" and later editor at
Välis-Eesti in Sweden. Later he quit the jounalist profession to
become a builder of small houses and a businessman in Sweden.
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Marie was the sister of my grandfather
Mart and the conversation took place at
Väiksevälja, Pärassaare in the 1930's.
Naan was a person who had lived 250
years earlier at Pärassaare! Naan died in 1703 and among other
things, he had helped the well-known Suure-Jaani vicar, Magnus de
Moulin (vicar from 1690-1710) to hide in the deep forests in times of
trouble.
My father was amazed and amused at how such a thing could be remembered
and how it could be of such importance in people's memory.
When he lived at Pärassaare in the 1930's, he heard many old
legends, which he found amusing and interesting. Later he told many of
them to me in Sweden in the 60's and 70's. I was as fascinated as my
father.
During the war, my father lost his job at "Tartu Postimees". (That
story is also interesting but will not be told here). For a period, he
had nothing to do. He rememberd what Marie had said and decided to
investigate the archives to find out the truth about the roots of the
Kuldkepp family. He was successful, but unfortunately, the resulting
material got lost during the war.
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Surroundings of the village Pärassaare near the northern part of
the Kuresoo bog on the map of Liivimaa from 1839.
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In the 60's and the 70's father was in contact with his old friend
Prof. Leo Tiik at the Tartu University. In 1973 Prof. Tiik agreed to
help father redo some of the family research that had got lost during
the war. That material became the foundation of the
database presented on this web-site.
In 1980 we started collecting more material and writing to relatives.
Many persons helped us more than we ever dreamed about. In this context
I would like to thank among others Piret Põldmäe for her
archive efforts,
Ella Kipper,
Salme Laanoja,
Juta Veemers,
Linda Laprik and many others. I would
like to give my special thanks to Juta Veemers for her efforts in
publishing her father's,
Jüri Kuldkepp,
"Mälestusvihikud" (Memorial notes).
It is still possible to read most of the old stories thanks to
Jaan Kuldkepp, who wrote the
"Kuldkeppide kroonika" (Chronicle of the
Kuldkepp's). I will publish the chronicle on this website together with
links to the family database to get a better understanding of the
chronicle.
Now, in 1998, since I have time and resources, I have begun researching
the archives to give a more complete view of the Kuldkepp's family
tree. I have got great help in this renewed effort from Prof.
Paul Kuldkepp in Tartu and again,
Ella Kipper.
The material on this web site has been published with the best of
intentions, but since many people have contributed and nobody is free
from making mistakes, please quote the material with this in mind.
If you quote something, please don't forget the site
http://www.aai.ee/~kuld and the
people that made it possible.
The material in the database is of various quality. I have divided it
into 3 categories:
-
All people born/married having the name Kuldkepp. My goal is to
build a complete Kuldkepp family tree. I'm really trying hard to make
this material correct.
-
Other people mentioned in the Jaan Kuldkepp's chronicle or
Jüri Kuldkepp's memorial notes. This material is of the second
priority and of various quality.
-
Other people related to the Kuldkepp family. The material has to
be handled with care, but real effort has been taken when it comes to
the ancestors of famous people.
Finally I would like to quote the author of the Kuldkepp's chronicle, Jaan
Kuldkepp:
"The recorder of the following stories has not aimed at any other goals
besides saving these fascinating stories, heard in his childhood and
later from older relatives, in the form as close to the original as
possible, for future generations."
This work and website is dedicated to the memory of my father Martin
Kuldkepp.
|
Stockholm, Sweden, in 1998 |
Andrus Hans
Kuldkepp |