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Adolph Schwarzenberg

Adolph Schwarzenberg (18 August 1890 – 27 February 1950) was a notable landowner, entrepreneur and philanthropist. He was the eldest son of Johann (Czech: Jan) and Therese Schwarzenberg, née Trauttmansdorff-Weinsberg. An outspoken opponent of the Nazi regime, his properties were seized by the German Reich and by Third Czechoslovak Republic shortly before the Communist coup of 1948.

Adolph
Prince of Schwarzenberg
Reign1938-1950
PredecessorJohann II Nepomuk
SuccessorHeinrich
Born(1890-08-18)18 August 1890
Hluboká nad Vltavou, Kingdom of Bohemia, Austria-Hungary
Died27 February 1950(1950-02-27) (aged 59)
Bordighera, Italy
SpousePrincess Hilda of Luxembourg
HouseHouse of Schwarzenberg
FatherJohann II Nepomuk, 9th Prince of Schwarzenberg
MotherCountess Therese of Trauttmansdorff-Weinsberg

Early life edit

The first of eight children, Adolph was born into the wealthy and influential Schwarzenberg family and was educated to eventually take over the management of extensive landholdings, real estate and industry, as well as substantial art collections and extensive archives from his father. The family owned numerous noteworthy houses and residences, amongst them Český Krumlov Castle,[1] Hluboká Castle,[2] and Třeboň[3] in South Bohemia, Schwarzenberg Palace (Prague) [cs][4] and Salm Palace [cs] in Prague, as well as Palais Schwarzenberg in Vienna.

He completed a law degree at the Czech University in Prague and fought in the First World War; he later served in the Czechoslovak army.

The First World War brought many changes to the Czech Lands. The First Czechoslovak Republic was proclaimed in its wake, on October 28, 1918; it was to last only 20 years, until the Munich Agreement, which preceded the Second World War and German occupation. As a small successor state to the sprawling Habsburg Empire, Czechoslovakia was home to a variety of ethnicities. The 30-year-old Adolph Schwarzenberg seemed better equipped than his father to deal with these new developments. From 1923 onwards, he took over full responsibility for the running of all family business as his father's plenipotentiary. The land reform threatened to completely eradicate the family's estate. Adolph Schwarzenberg negotiated with the state and managed to safeguard a large part of the original property; the remaining estate still covered some 90.000 ha[5] and most of the important real estate.

Marriage and family life edit

 
Adolph and Hilda Schwarzenberg, 1930s

Adolph Schwarzenberg married[6] Princess Hilda of Luxembourg and Nassau (15 February 1897 – 8 September 1979) in 1930. The couple shared a passion for agriculture, wildlife and botany and spent much of their time at their Stará Obora[7] hunting lodge near Hluboká. They acquired Mpala Farm in Laikipia, Kenya, in 1933. Apart from bringing modern farming methods to the estate, Adolph built a hydroelectric powerstation there (some of the machinery was imported from his native Hluboká) and made exceptional improvements to his workers' living conditions. He also took the protection of wildlife seriously. Adolph later published a report[8] for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on his activities and experience in Kenya. The farm was sold after his death and today is an important biodiversity conservation research center.[9]

Adolph Schwarzenberg inherited the family estates after his father's death in 1938.
The couple had no children, and after his death, the remaining family estates would go to his brother's son Joseph.

German occupation and exile edit

Adolph Schwarzenberg's stance against the Nazis and the Third Reich was clear even before the occupation of the Czech Lands and the outbreak of WWII: in 1937 he invited Edvard Beneš to Český Krumlov castle, where he gave him breakfast, as well as a million[10] crowns, at the time a very considerable sum, for the defense of Czechoslovakia against Germany. He ordered black flags to be flown[10] over his Vienna Palace during the Anschluss and, when Vienna's public gardens were closed to Jews, he had "Jews welcome" signs put up in his palace garden.[10][11][12]

After the German occupation of the Czech Lands, he refused[10] to receive Hitler at Český Krumlov. Neither did he consent to replace his Czech managers with ethnic Germans. He was considered pro-Czech and anti-German by the Nazi administration.[13] All this inevitably made him a target for persecution and arrest.[14] Adolph Schwarzenberg left occupied Czechoslovakia and settled temporarily at his house in Bordighera, Italy. He gave his adoptive son Heinrich responsibility for his property and emigrated via Switzerland to the United States of America. Heinrich Schwarzenberg, representing his adoptive father, proved no more inclined to the new rulers and on 17 August 1940 the Gestapo confiscated all of Adolph Schwarzenberg's property within the reach of the Third Reich.[5] Baldur von Schirach claimed, in the course of the Nuremberg Trials, that the confiscation was caused by Schwarzenberg's refusal to take up arms for Hitler;[15] however, other sources point to Adolph Schwarzenberg's general attitude and actions as a decisive factor.[16] Heinrich Schwarzenberg was arrested on direct orders of Heinrich Himmler[13] and taken to various police prisons before being incarcerated in Buchenwald concentration camp. He was released in 1944 and survived the remainder of the war as a forced labourer.

The entire Schwarzenberg property was placed under the control of the Gauleiter of Oberdonau, August Eigruber. Hermann Göring was also eager to benefit from the estate; a correspondence concerning the fate of the property ensued between various officials including Martin Bormann and Hans Heinrich Lammers, head of the Reichskanzlei. Hitler decided in favour of Gauleiter Eigruber.[5] Eigruber was a major Nazi criminal, who was executed in 1947 for crimes committed at Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp.

The Stará Obora hunting lodge was turned into a sanatorium for German officers. Inmates from Terezín concentration camp were forced to work there under horrendous conditions between 13. April and 25. October 1942.[17] During his stay in the United States, Adolph Schwarzenberg supported the resistance and was an outspoken opponent of the Nazi regime, as confirmed by both Jan Masaryk[18] and Consul General Karel Hudec.[19] He enrolled at Columbia University to study for his second doctorate. His dissertation, a biography of Felix, Prince Schwarzenberg, was published in 1946.[20] Adolph also worked with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, producing the report mentioned above and carrying out various activities in support of the organisation.

Return to Europe and post-war period edit

After the end of the Second World War, Adolph and Hilda Schwarzenberg prepared for their return to Europe. They had spent almost five years in the United States.

They expected to return to Hluboká nad Vltavou and their Stará Obora hunting lodge, but were soon disappointed. National administration had been declared over his Czech estates in Adolph Schwarzenberg's absence and all his Czech property had been confiscated under the so-called Beneš decrees of 1945 by letter of 5 October 1945, notwithstanding the owner's track record of being a loyal Czechoslovak citizen[19] and "passionate anti-Nazi".[18] An appeal against the decree confiscation was lodged by Schwarzenberg's lawyer within the prescribed deadline of two weeks and is still pending after more than 60 years.

Legal controversy edit

In 1946 The Provincial National Committee in Prague compiled a report concerning the question of Adolph Schwarzenberg's property confiscation and stated that the owner could not be considered a traitor or a German and that consequently his property was not subject to the decree in question (No. 12/1945, coll.).[14] Furthermore, it ordered that Schwarzenberg be paid 100 000 crowns to cover his expenses while a conclusion of procedures relating to his property was sought. This, however, did not deter the Czechoslovak government, increasingly under communist influence, from pocketing the estate without any compensation to the owner. In view of the fact that there was no legal basis for expropriating Adolph Schwarzenberg, on July 10, 1947, the Czechoslovak parliament promulgated a special law, 143/1947, coll., later to be known as Lex Schwarzenberg to secure his business assets for the state without giving a reason or offering compensation.[21] This law has proved to be highly controversial as it is a piece of arbitrary ad hominem legislation. As such it contravenes the Czechoslovak Constitution of 1920, which was in force at the time, as well as the current Constitution of the Czech Republic. It also contravenes the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. By the time Lex Schwarzenberg came into effect, however, Czechoslovakia was well on its way to becoming a communist system: Klement Gottwald, who would become the country's Stalinist dictator, had been Prime Minister since 1946. The Communist Party controlled many of the important ministries, while some of the non-communist members of the government, such as Zdeněk Fierlinger, were communists in all but name. The ministries of agriculture and the interior were jointly responsible for the decision concerning Adolph Schwarzenberg's appeal file under the provisions of decree No. 12/1945.

Last years edit

The Czechoslovak authorities' behaviour towards him came as a distasteful surprise to Adolph Schwarzenberg, which is best illustrated by a conversation he had as early as January 1940. On a train to Switzerland, he met an acquaintance, the banker Holzer, director of Escompte Bank in Prague, who engaged him in conversation and wanted to know his motives for leaving the Reich. He explained that since the takeover of the Nazi regime life at home had become an opprobrium, and that he could only live in a free country. He went on to say that Germany would certainly lose the war, and "all that nonsense" of a "New Regime" would finally come to an end; only then would he return to his estates.[5] Holzer promptly reported this conversation to the Sicherheitsdienst.

While Schwarzenberg's predictions concerning the outcome of the war and the long-term prospects of the "Thousand Year Reich" were correct, post-war developments proved his optimism regarding his own return to his home country to be misguided. The communist takeover of February 1948 put an end to all hope for Schwarzenberg to return home or seek redress.

He made his last home in Katsch, a small village in Austria, where he and Hilda once more lived in a hunting lodge, and occasionally spent time at his house in Bordighera, Italy, where he died on 27 February 1950.

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ "State Castle Český Krumlov". www.castle.ckrumlov.cz.
  2. ^ "Hluboká nad Vltavou Castle". www.zamek-hluboka.eu.
  3. ^ CRnet.cz. "Informační servis města Třeboně". itrebon.cz.
  4. ^ "Schwarzenberg Palace - Prague.net". www.prague.net.
  5. ^ a b c d (PDF). Ooegeschicte.at. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-27. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  6. ^ "All sizes - Hochzeitsfoto Hilda von Luxemburg mit Fürst Schwarzenberg - Flickr - Photo Sharing!". www.flickr.com.
  7. ^ http://ftp.czechtourism.com/np/hluboka/hluboka_monuments.pdf[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ . 20 July 2011. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.
  9. ^ "Mpala: Research Centre and Wildlife Foundation". www.mpala.org.
  10. ^ a b c d . 26 May 2003. Archived from the original on 1 May 2006.
  11. ^ Austrian broadcasting (ORF): Hörbilder spezial, 15. 8. 2003: "In memoriam Georg Chaimovicz" (in German)
  12. ^ "Wie die Zeit vergeht" by Georg Markus; Vienna: Althea Signum Verlag, 2009 (in German)
  13. ^ a b "Attempts to achieve restitution and how they were thwarted by public service offices". Retrieved 10 June 2013.
  14. ^ a b "The Provincial National Committee in Prague, No. 447/1946: Prague, 5 March 1946". Restitution.cz. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  15. ^ . Nizkor.org. Archived from the original on 2012-05-14. Retrieved 2012-07-31.
  16. ^ (PDF). Swissbankclaims.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-22. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  17. ^ "Außenkommando České Budějovice (Budweis)" (in German). Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  18. ^ a b "Rehabilitation Denied: The Adolph Schwarzenberg Case | dokuments | Letters". Restitution.cz. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  19. ^ a b "Rehabilitation Denied: The Adolph Schwarzenberg Case | dokuments | Letters". Restitution.cz. Retrieved 2013-10-29.
  20. ^ "Prince Felix zu Schwarzenberg, Prime Minister of Austria 1848-1852" by Adolph Schwarzenberg; New York: Columbia University Press, 1946; reprinted: New York : AMS Press, 1966.
  21. ^ "Rehabilitation Denied: The Adolph Schwarzenberg Case | dokuments | Laws & Decrees". Restitution.cz. Retrieved 2013-10-29.

adolph, schwarzenberg, august, 1890, february, 1950, notable, landowner, entrepreneur, philanthropist, eldest, johann, czech, therese, schwarzenberg, née, trauttmansdorff, weinsberg, outspoken, opponent, nazi, regime, properties, were, seized, german, reich, t. Adolph Schwarzenberg 18 August 1890 27 February 1950 was a notable landowner entrepreneur and philanthropist He was the eldest son of Johann Czech Jan and Therese Schwarzenberg nee Trauttmansdorff Weinsberg An outspoken opponent of the Nazi regime his properties were seized by the German Reich and by Third Czechoslovak Republic shortly before the Communist coup of 1948 AdolphPrince of SchwarzenbergReign1938 1950PredecessorJohann II NepomukSuccessorHeinrichBorn 1890 08 18 18 August 1890Hluboka nad Vltavou Kingdom of Bohemia Austria HungaryDied27 February 1950 1950 02 27 aged 59 Bordighera ItalySpousePrincess Hilda of LuxembourgHouseHouse of SchwarzenbergFatherJohann II Nepomuk 9th Prince of SchwarzenbergMotherCountess Therese of Trauttmansdorff Weinsberg Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and family life 3 German occupation and exile 4 Return to Europe and post war period 4 1 Legal controversy 5 Last years 6 Ancestry 7 ReferencesEarly life editThe first of eight children Adolph was born into the wealthy and influential Schwarzenberg family and was educated to eventually take over the management of extensive landholdings real estate and industry as well as substantial art collections and extensive archives from his father The family owned numerous noteworthy houses and residences amongst them Cesky Krumlov Castle 1 Hluboka Castle 2 and Trebon 3 in South Bohemia Schwarzenberg Palace Prague cs 4 and Salm Palace cs in Prague as well as Palais Schwarzenberg in Vienna He completed a law degree at the Czech University in Prague and fought in the First World War he later served in the Czechoslovak army The First World War brought many changes to the Czech Lands The First Czechoslovak Republic was proclaimed in its wake on October 28 1918 it was to last only 20 years until the Munich Agreement which preceded the Second World War and German occupation As a small successor state to the sprawling Habsburg Empire Czechoslovakia was home to a variety of ethnicities The 30 year old Adolph Schwarzenberg seemed better equipped than his father to deal with these new developments From 1923 onwards he took over full responsibility for the running of all family business as his father s plenipotentiary The land reform threatened to completely eradicate the family s estate Adolph Schwarzenberg negotiated with the state and managed to safeguard a large part of the original property the remaining estate still covered some 90 000 ha 5 and most of the important real estate Marriage and family life edit nbsp Adolph and Hilda Schwarzenberg 1930s Adolph Schwarzenberg married 6 Princess Hilda of Luxembourg and Nassau 15 February 1897 8 September 1979 in 1930 The couple shared a passion for agriculture wildlife and botany and spent much of their time at their Stara Obora 7 hunting lodge near Hluboka They acquired Mpala Farm in Laikipia Kenya in 1933 Apart from bringing modern farming methods to the estate Adolph built a hydroelectric powerstation there some of the machinery was imported from his native Hluboka and made exceptional improvements to his workers living conditions He also took the protection of wildlife seriously Adolph later published a report 8 for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on his activities and experience in Kenya The farm was sold after his death and today is an important biodiversity conservation research center 9 Adolph Schwarzenberg inherited the family estates after his father s death in 1938 The couple had no children and after his death the remaining family estates would go to his brother s son Joseph German occupation and exile editAdolph Schwarzenberg s stance against the Nazis and the Third Reich was clear even before the occupation of the Czech Lands and the outbreak of WWII in 1937 he invited Edvard Benes to Cesky Krumlov castle where he gave him breakfast as well as a million 10 crowns at the time a very considerable sum for the defense of Czechoslovakia against Germany He ordered black flags to be flown 10 over his Vienna Palace during the Anschluss and when Vienna s public gardens were closed to Jews he had Jews welcome signs put up in his palace garden 10 11 12 After the German occupation of the Czech Lands he refused 10 to receive Hitler at Cesky Krumlov Neither did he consent to replace his Czech managers with ethnic Germans He was considered pro Czech and anti German by the Nazi administration 13 All this inevitably made him a target for persecution and arrest 14 Adolph Schwarzenberg left occupied Czechoslovakia and settled temporarily at his house in Bordighera Italy He gave his adoptive son Heinrich responsibility for his property and emigrated via Switzerland to the United States of America Heinrich Schwarzenberg representing his adoptive father proved no more inclined to the new rulers and on 17 August 1940 the Gestapo confiscated all of Adolph Schwarzenberg s property within the reach of the Third Reich 5 Baldur von Schirach claimed in the course of the Nuremberg Trials that the confiscation was caused by Schwarzenberg s refusal to take up arms for Hitler 15 however other sources point to Adolph Schwarzenberg s general attitude and actions as a decisive factor 16 Heinrich Schwarzenberg was arrested on direct orders of Heinrich Himmler 13 and taken to various police prisons before being incarcerated in Buchenwald concentration camp He was released in 1944 and survived the remainder of the war as a forced labourer The entire Schwarzenberg property was placed under the control of the Gauleiter of Oberdonau August Eigruber Hermann Goring was also eager to benefit from the estate a correspondence concerning the fate of the property ensued between various officials including Martin Bormann and Hans Heinrich Lammers head of the Reichskanzlei Hitler decided in favour of Gauleiter Eigruber 5 Eigruber was a major Nazi criminal who was executed in 1947 for crimes committed at Mauthausen Gusen concentration camp The Stara Obora hunting lodge was turned into a sanatorium for German officers Inmates from Terezin concentration camp were forced to work there under horrendous conditions between 13 April and 25 October 1942 17 During his stay in the United States Adolph Schwarzenberg supported the resistance and was an outspoken opponent of the Nazi regime as confirmed by both Jan Masaryk 18 and Consul General Karel Hudec 19 He enrolled at Columbia University to study for his second doctorate His dissertation a biography of Felix Prince Schwarzenberg was published in 1946 20 Adolph also worked with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace producing the report mentioned above and carrying out various activities in support of the organisation Return to Europe and post war period editAfter the end of the Second World War Adolph and Hilda Schwarzenberg prepared for their return to Europe They had spent almost five years in the United States They expected to return to Hluboka nad Vltavou and their Stara Obora hunting lodge but were soon disappointed National administration had been declared over his Czech estates in Adolph Schwarzenberg s absence and all his Czech property had been confiscated under the so called Benes decrees of 1945 by letter of 5 October 1945 notwithstanding the owner s track record of being a loyal Czechoslovak citizen 19 and passionate anti Nazi 18 An appeal against the decree confiscation was lodged by Schwarzenberg s lawyer within the prescribed deadline of two weeks and is still pending after more than 60 years Legal controversy edit In 1946 The Provincial National Committee in Prague compiled a report concerning the question of Adolph Schwarzenberg s property confiscation and stated that the owner could not be considered a traitor or a German and that consequently his property was not subject to the decree in question No 12 1945 coll 14 Furthermore it ordered that Schwarzenberg be paid 100 000 crowns to cover his expenses while a conclusion of procedures relating to his property was sought This however did not deter the Czechoslovak government increasingly under communist influence from pocketing the estate without any compensation to the owner In view of the fact that there was no legal basis for expropriating Adolph Schwarzenberg on July 10 1947 the Czechoslovak parliament promulgated a special law 143 1947 coll later to be known as Lex Schwarzenberg to secure his business assets for the state without giving a reason or offering compensation 21 This law has proved to be highly controversial as it is a piece of arbitrary ad hominem legislation As such it contravenes the Czechoslovak Constitution of 1920 which was in force at the time as well as the current Constitution of the Czech Republic It also contravenes the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights By the time Lex Schwarzenberg came into effect however Czechoslovakia was well on its way to becoming a communist system Klement Gottwald who would become the country s Stalinist dictator had been Prime Minister since 1946 The Communist Party controlled many of the important ministries while some of the non communist members of the government such as Zdenek Fierlinger were communists in all but name The ministries of agriculture and the interior were jointly responsible for the decision concerning Adolph Schwarzenberg s appeal file under the provisions of decree No 12 1945 Last years editThe Czechoslovak authorities behaviour towards him came as a distasteful surprise to Adolph Schwarzenberg which is best illustrated by a conversation he had as early as January 1940 On a train to Switzerland he met an acquaintance the banker Holzer director of Escompte Bank in Prague who engaged him in conversation and wanted to know his motives for leaving the Reich He explained that since the takeover of the Nazi regime life at home had become an opprobrium and that he could only live in a free country He went on to say that Germany would certainly lose the war and all that nonsense of a New Regime would finally come to an end only then would he return to his estates 5 Holzer promptly reported this conversation to the Sicherheitsdienst While Schwarzenberg s predictions concerning the outcome of the war and the long term prospects of the Thousand Year Reich were correct post war developments proved his optimism regarding his own return to his home country to be misguided The communist takeover of February 1948 put an end to all hope for Schwarzenberg to return home or seek redress He made his last home in Katsch a small village in Austria where he and Hilda once more lived in a hunting lodge and occasionally spent time at his house in Bordighera Italy where he died on 27 February 1950 Ancestry editAncestors of Adolph Schwarzenberg16 Joseph II 6th Prince of Schwarzenberg8 Johann Adolf II 7th Prince of Schwarzenberg17 Princess and Duchess Pauline d Arenberg4 Adolf Joseph 8th Prince of Schwarzenberg18 Prince Moritz of Liechtenstein9 Princess Eleonore of Liechtenstein19 Countess Leopoldine Esterhazy de Galantha2 Johann II Nepomuk 9th Prince of Schwarzenberg20 Johann I Joseph Prince of Liechtenstein10 Aloys II Prince of Liechtenstein21 Landgravine Josepha of Furstenberg Weitra5 Princess Ida of Liechtenstein22 Count Franz de Paula Kinsky of Wchinitz and Tettau11 Countess Franziska Kinsky of Wchinitz and Tettau23 Countess Therese Antonia of Wrbna and Freudenthal1 Adolph 10th Prince of Schwarzenberg24 Johann 2nd Prince of Trauttmansdorff Weinsberg12 Ferdinand Joachim 3rd Prince of Trauttmansdorff Weinsberg25 Landgravine Elizabeth of Furstenberg Weitra6 Karl 4th Prince of Trauttmansdorff Weinsberg26 Prince Karl Franz Anton of Liechtenstein13 Princess Anna of Liechtenstein27 Countess Franzisca of Wrbna and Freudenthal3 Countess Therese of Trauttmansdorff Weinsberg28 Marquis Edoardo Pallavicini14 Margrave Alfons of Pallavicini29 Countess Maria Josepha of Hardegg7 Margravine Josephine of Pallavicini30 Friedrich Karl Landgrave of Furstenberg Weitra15 Landgravine Gabriele of Furstenberg Weitra31 Princess Maria Theresia of SchwarzenbergReferences edit State Castle Cesky Krumlov www castle ckrumlov cz Hluboka nad Vltavou Castle www zamek hluboka eu CRnet cz Informacni servis mesta Trebone itrebon cz Schwarzenberg Palace Prague net www prague net a b c d Oberosterreichische Heimatblatter PDF Ooegeschicte at Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 27 Retrieved 2013 10 29 All sizes Hochzeitsfoto Hilda von Luxemburg mit Furst Schwarzenberg Flickr Photo Sharing www flickr com http ftp czechtourism com np hluboka hluboka monuments pdf permanent dead link Description A Kenya farmer looks at his colony 20 July 2011 Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Mpala Research Centre and Wildlife Foundation www mpala org a b c d Waiting for the logical second 26 May 2003 Archived from the original on 1 May 2006 Austrian broadcasting ORF Horbilder spezial 15 8 2003 In memoriam Georg Chaimovicz in German Wie die Zeit vergeht by Georg Markus Vienna Althea Signum Verlag 2009 in German a b Attempts to achieve restitution and how they were thwarted by public service offices Retrieved 10 June 2013 a b The Provincial National Committee in Prague No 447 1946 Prague 5 March 1946 Restitution cz Retrieved 2013 10 29 Trials of German Major War Criminals Volume 14 Nizkor org Archived from the original on 2012 05 14 Retrieved 2012 07 31 Swiss Banks Holocaust Proposal Elisabeth von Pezold 20 1 2004 PDF Swissbankclaims com Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 22 Retrieved 2013 10 29 Aussenkommando Ceske Budejovice Budweis in German Retrieved 2013 10 29 a b Rehabilitation Denied The Adolph Schwarzenberg Case dokuments Letters Restitution cz Retrieved 2013 10 29 a b Rehabilitation Denied The Adolph Schwarzenberg Case dokuments Letters Restitution cz Retrieved 2013 10 29 Prince Felix zu Schwarzenberg Prime Minister of Austria 1848 1852 by Adolph Schwarzenberg New York Columbia University Press 1946 reprinted New York AMS Press 1966 Rehabilitation Denied The Adolph Schwarzenberg Case dokuments Laws amp Decrees Restitution cz Retrieved 2013 10 29 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adolph Schwarzenberg amp oldid 1206780039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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