Scholz, Wörfel, Heidrich, Grützner, Erben, Kieswetter are all German names. Their meanings are Scholz: short for Schultheis since 1300 meaning Village Elder, mayor, or Jury foreman. Wörfel: a name frequent in Franken in the Kulmbach area from where these people probably wandered into Bohemia. It means "Würfel" (dice) and is related to gambling. Heidrich: Heidenrich, Heinrich, a common German first name used in the crusades because Heide is an unbeliever and the ending rich denoted a "power above", in other words: One who is mightier than the heathens. Note that this word written as Haide - with an A means a meadow. Grützner: Is definitely a Silesian surname, also written in old records of 1348 as Grüczener. Grütze means groats, a grain. A Grützner could mean a miller, or one who sells it. Erben: this word literally means: Inheritors (plural). The name appears for the first name as a surname on the upper Rhine in the Strassburg, Alsace-Lorraine area in 1100. Later, they applied this surname to anyone who inherited substantial assets from their families. Kieswetter: this name originated in Silesia and Saxony. It means to "foretell the weather" and is listed in the Gudrunlied paragraph 903: as "Fruote bi dem lufte kiesen do began" Look up Gudrunlied in your encyclopaedia!!! Here you can see where English and German were both still Germanic languages, until English developed under the influence of Roman occupation.We find this name later at Görlitz, Silesia 1310, and 1370 at Dresden, there is a recording of Henslein Herdegen der Kysewetter in 1422 at Bamberg, and it is found as Kisswetter or Küsswetter at Vienna. Smahal is a Czech name. Aida