fbpx
Wikipedia

Schönborn family

The House of Schönborn [ˈʃøːnbɔrn] is the name of an ancient noble and mediatised formerly sovereign family of the former Holy Roman Empire.

Schönborn
Mediatised Holy Roman noble family
Current regionSchönborn, Franconia
Founded1275 (1275)
FounderH. von Sconenburne
Current headPhilipp
Final rulerMelchior Friedrich
Estate(s)
List
Cadet branches
List
  • Schönborn-Buchheim
  • Schönborn-Wiesentheid

Various members of the family have held high offices of the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire over the course of centuries, including as bishops, prince bishops, cardinals and prince-electors. In addition to several family members having been elected rulers of ecclesiastical principalities — the Electorate of Mainz, the Princely-Bishopric of Würzburg, the Princely-Bishopric of Worms, the Princely-Bishopric of Speyer, the Electorate of Trier, and the Princely-Bishoprice of Bamberg — the family possessed a fief in Franconia that held imperial immediacy as a county within the Holy Roman Empire, the state of Schönborn.

The House of Schönborn, especially its ruling prelates of the Roman Catholic Church, were among the most important builders of Southern German baroque architecture. The family gave the name Schönbornzeit (Age of the Schönborns) to an era (1642–1756), sometimes nostalgically remembered in the popular consciousness as an era of prosperity. Today, the term Schönbornzeit denotes a particular style of Rhenish and Franconian baroque.

History edit

Early history edit

The Schönborn family first appeared in the Rheingau region with H. von Sconenburne in 1275. Their original seat was Schönborn in the County of Katzenelnbogen. A secondary source of 1670 mentions an earlier Eucharius von Schönborn of the mid 12th century, however without documentary proof. The lion in their coat of arms may derive from the Katzenelnbogen as well as from the nearby Diez counts whose vassals they were. By the end of the 14th century, the family had split into three branches one of which extinguished soon. The elder branch resided at Schönborn and held the office of Burgmann at Burgschwalbach, a castle built between 1354 and 1371 by count Eberhard V. of Katzenelnbogen. Gilbrecht of Schönborn was mentioned there in 1373. They were also Burgmanns at Hahnstätten in the County of Nassau. Several of them became abbots, one a grand bailiff of the Knights Hospitaller. The younger branch were vassals in the Westerwald region, in the service of the Barony of Westerburg, the Electorate of Trier, the Electorate of Mainz and the county of Wied.

In the 16th century many younger sons of the family became Domherren (canons), leading to the extinction of both branches, with the exception of a side line of the younger branch that had received the fiefs of Freienfels (near Weinbach) and Eschbach (near Weilmünster).

Later history edit

 
Archbishop Johann Philipp von Schönborn (1605–1673)

Johann Philipp von Schönborn of Eschbach, son of a minor nobleman in the employ of the then Lutheran counts of Wied, became a Catholic priest in the impoverished times of the Thirty Years' War. He was admitted as a minor canon by the cathedral chapter of Wurzburg. At the time, the family consisted only of his brother and himself. These two brought the family to power and fame, founding new branches that were to become widely known throughout Europe.

Johann Philipp became a priest at Wurzburg Cathedral at the age of 16, translated to Mainz Cathedral in 1625, and to Worms Cathedral in 1630. He became a provost and, in 1642, was elected prince-bishop of Wurzburg. His ruthless prosecution of the Counter Reformation eliminated Lutheranism from the territory he controlled. His diplomatic skills made him an important mediator during the negotiations that ended the Thirty Years' War in 1648. As a result, he was additionally elected Archbishop of Mainz in 1647, thus also ruler of the Electorate of Mainz and archchancellor of the Holy Roman empire. In 1663, he also received the princely-bishopric of Worms. He was an effective administrator of his principalities and was able to bring about economic recovery. He fortified the city of Mainz and founded hospitals and high schools. His court was a center of German politics in the post-war era. Johann Philipp was the first of six members of the Schönborn family who, in the course of more than three generations, were to rule over eight of the most prestigious ecclesiastical principalities of the Holy Roman Empire.

He made his brother Philip Erwein (1607–1668) a Vogt in the Electorate of Mainz where the latter acquired the castles of Gaibach in 1650, of Geisenheim in 1654 and of Heusenstamm (where he built a new castle) in 1661. In 1635, he married Maria Ursula von Greiffenclau-Vollraths, a close relative of the late archbishop and elector of Mainz Georg Friedrich von Greiffenklau; the couple had 12 children. In 1663, Philip Erwein became a baron. The family thus shifted its focus from its regions of origin, which had become predominantly Protestant, to the Catholic ecclesiastical principalities of the empire.

 
Arms of the Schönborn family at the Schönborn Palace in Prague

Philip Erwein's son, Lothar Franz von Schönborn, also became a prince-bishop of Wurzburg in 1693 and an elector-archbishop of Mainz in 1695. The latter's brother Melchior (1644–1717) acquired the fief of Reichelsburg (near Aub) from the prince-bishop of Wurzburg in 1671, giving him access to the Franconian Circle of the imperial knights.

In 1701, Melchior's son, Rudolf Franz (1677–1754), married Eleonore von Hatzfeld, widow of the Count von Dernbach, who had left her the Herrschaft Wiesentheid in Franconia, a small imperial state raised to a county in 1701. Thus, the family obtained imperial immediacy for the first time, and since the counts of Schönborn bear the prefix Illustrious Highness. She inherited the Austrian fiefs of Arnfels and Waldenstein in Carinthia from her first husband. Melchior then bought some further estates in Austria in 1710, Göllersdorf with Mühlberg and Aspersdorf in Lower Austria, from the Counts of Buchheim. In 1717, his estate was partitioned into the states of Schönborn-Wiesentheid and Schönborn-Heusenstamm, both retaining immediacy. Heusenstamm was inherited by Schönborn-Wiesentheid in 1801. The state of Schönborn-Wiesentheid was mediatised in 1806.

In 1726, Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, granted Palanok Castle with Mukacheve, Chynadiyovo and 200 villages in the Kingdom of Hungary (today part of the Ukraine), to Elector Lothar Franz, after the latter had sent him troops to defeat Francis II Rákóczi, whose property it had been. The estate, one of the largest in Eastern Europe, remained in the family well into the 20th century.

 
Ecclesiastical lands in the Holy Roman Empire, 1780

In 1743, members of the family ruled the following states, all sovereign princely-bishoprics within the Holy Roman Empire: Bamberg, Würzburg, Konstanz, Speyer, Worms and Trier, while the archdiocese and electorate of Mainz (and thus archchancellorship of Germany, a position that two Schönborns had held shortly before) were held by a close relative, Johann Friedrich Karl von Ostein. Not only were important parts of Southern Germany under their control, but also quite wealthy regions. The Schönborns were not restricted to ruling these territories. They followed through, over several generations, with one of the most ambitious building programs of the 18th century, including churches, monasteries, ecclesiastical residences, schools and hospitals. Again, in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries, two Schönborns rose to become archbishops and cardinals.

At the end of the 18th century, three brothers, who were great-grandsons of Rudolf Franz (1677–1754), established the three extant branches of the family:

Rulers of Schönborn edit

Lords of Schönborn (1385–1663) edit

  • Gerard (1385–1416)
  • Gerard (1416–1460)
  • John II (1460–1490)
  • John IV (1490–1529)
  • George II (1529–1560)
  • Philip (1560–1589)
  • George IV (1589–1613)
  • Philip Erwin (1613–1668), since 1663 Baron

Barons of Schönborn (1663–1701) edit

  • Philip Erwin (1663–1668)
  • John Erwin (1668–1705), since 1701 Count, jointly with:

Counts of Schönborn (1701–1717) edit

  • John Erwin (1701–1705)
  • Melchior Frederick (1705–1717)
Divided between the lines Heusenstamm and Wiesentheid.

After German Mediatisation edit

  • Hugo, Count 1772–1817 (1739–1817)[citation needed]
    • Franz Philipp, Count of Schönborn-Buchheim (1768–1841)
      • Schönborn-Buchheim Line
    • Franz Erwein, Count of Schönborn-Wiesentheid (1776–1840)
      • Schönborn-Wiesentheid Line
    • Friedrich, Count 1817–1849 (1781–1849) Bohemian Line

Counts of Schönborn-Buchheim edit

After German Mediatisation edit

  • Franz, 1st Count 1817–1841 (1768–1841)
    • Erwein, 2nd Count 1841–1844 (1791–1864) – resigned rights to his brother in 1844
    • Karl, 3rd Count 1844–1854 (1803–1854)
      • Erwein, 4th Count 1854–1903 (1842–1903)
        • Friedrich Karl, 5th Count 1903–1932 (1869–1932)
          • Georg 6th Count 1932–1989 (1906–1989)
            • Friedrich Karl, 7th Count 1989–present (born 1938) ∞ Isabelle d'Orleans, Princess of France
              • Damian, Hereditary Count of Schönborn-Buchheim (born 1965)
              • Count Vinzenz (born 1966)
                • Count Philipp (born 2003)
                • Count Clemens (born 2005)
                • Count Alexander (born 2010)
              • Count Melchior (born 1977)
                • Count Theodor (born 2015)

Counts of Schönborn-Heusenstamm (1717–1801) edit

 
Heusenstamm Castle, built in 1661 for Philipp Erwein von Schönborn

Schönborn-Heusenstamm was a German statelet ruled by the Schönborn family located in the south of modern Hesse, Germany. Schönborn-Heusenstamm was a partition of Schönborn, and was inherited by Schönborn-Wiesentheid in 1801.

  • Anselm Francis (1717–1726)
  • Anselm Posthumous (1726–1801)

Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid (1717–1806) edit

 
Wiesentheid Castle, built in 1701 for Rudolf Franz Erwein von Schönborn

Schönborn-Wiesentheid was a County in Lower Franconia, the northwestern Region of modern Bavaria, Germany, comprising various isolated districts spanning from the Regnitz River to the Main River east of Würzburg. Schönborn-Wiesentheid was a partition of Schönborn, and inherited the other line of Schönborn-Heusenstamm in 1801. Schönborn-Wiesentheid was mediatised to Bavaria in 1806.

  • Rudolph Francis Erwin (1717–1754)
  • Joseph Francis Bonaventura (1754–1772)
  • Damian Hugo Erwin (1772–1806)

After German Mediatisation edit

  • Franz, 1st Count 18..-1840 (1776–1840)[citation needed]
    • Hugo, 2nd Count 1840–1865 (1805–1865)
    • Klemens, 3rd Count 1865–1877 (1810–1877)
      • Arthur, 4th Count 1877–1915 (1846–1915)
        • Erwein, 5th Count 1915–1942 (1877–1942)
          • Karl, 6th Count 1942–1998 (1916–1998)
            • Filipp, 7th Count 1998–2004 (born 1954) – renounced his title in 2004
            • Paul, 8th Count 1998–present (born 1964)
              • Franz, Hereditary Count of Schönborn-Wiesentheid (born 1990)
              • Count Alexander (born 1991)
              • Count Johannes (born 1991)
              • Count Georg (born 1995)
              • Count Michael (born 1997)

Prelates of the family edit

 
Altarpiece of 1745 at Gaibach Church: Three generations of the Schönborn family

This family counts several prelates of the Roman Catholic Church:

Baroque architecture edit

 
Balthasar Neumann (1687–1753), architect to 4 Schönborn bishops

The House of Schönborn, especially its ruling prelates of the Roman Catholic Church, were among the most important builders of Southern German baroque architecture. While the private estates, at a large part still today owned by the family, were of more modest size, sometimes of elder origin, churches, monasteries, ecclesiastical residences and hospitals built by the Schönborn bishops were of immense grandness and splendor. Financing these was only possible with flourishing economies, which the Schönborn bishops did their best to uphold and enhance. Court architect Balthasar Neumann was responsible for many of these buildings, others were Johann Dientzenhofer, Maximilian von Welsch and Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt. The family gave the name Schönbornzeit (Age of the Schönborns) to an era (1642–1756), sometimes nostalgically remembered in the popular conscience as an era of prosperity. Today, the term Schönbornzeit denotes a particular style of Rhenish and Franconian baroque.[1]

The ecclesiastical residences were owned by the church, and continued to be inhabited by successive bishops, while the private estates remained inheritance of the family. They were mostly acquired by the ruling prelates' brothers. Of the grand bishops' palaces, only Weissenstein Palace at Pommersfelden continues to be privately owned by the family, as it was built, from 1711, with an initial amount of 100.000 guilders which were personally granted to elector Lothar Franz by Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, in reward of his services and his continuous political support. It contains the largest private baroque art collection in Germany.

Private residences edit

  • Burg Schönborn (built around 1100)
  • Burgschwalbach castle (a fief of the County of Katzenelnbogen, administrated in the Middle Ages by the Lords of Schönborn)
  • Freienfels castle near Weinbach, 1466–1687 owned by the family
  • Schloss Gaibach (near Volkach), since 1650 to this day owned by the Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
  • Schloss Geisenheim, since 1652 to this day owned by the Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
  • Schloss Heusenstamm (built from 1661)
  • Schönborner Hof in Mainz (built from 1668)
  • Schönborner Hof in Aschaffenburg (built from 1673)
  • Schloss Wiesentheid, from 1701 to this day owned by the Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid and serving as their private residence
 
Weissenstein Palace at Pommersfelden, Franconia (Bavaria)
  • Weissenstein Palace at Pommersfelden (built from 1711–18 for Lothar Franz von Schönborn), still owned by the Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid. The palace which is open to the public contains the largest private Baroque art collection in Germany, containing over 600 pictures. Baroque and Renaissance artists represented include Peter Paul Rubens, Albrecht Dürer, Titian, Rembrandt, Anthony van Dyck and Artemisia Gentileschi.[2] It also houses a collection of 17th–19th century musical manuscripts and prints, the "Musical Collection of the Counts Schönborn-Wiesentheid", mainly acquired by Count Rudolf Franz Erwein von Schönborn (1677–1754), a talented amateur cellist who had ordered original cello compositions from various composers including Platti and Vivaldi. This is called the "elder repertoire" and consists of 147 prints and 497 mss.[3] Its contents are listed with RISM. The "younger repertoire" was acquired by the cellists grandson resp. grand-grandson, Hugo Damian Erwein (1738–1817) and Franz Erwein von Schönborn (1774–1840). It consists of 141 prints and 98 mss. The whole library has been microfilmed.[4][5]
 
Schönborn Palace in Göllersdorf, Lower Austria

Churches edit

More than 100 churches were built during the rule of Schönborn bishops, many of them by their famous court architect Balthasar Neumann, among them:

Ecclesiastical and official residences edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Franck Lafage, Les comtes Schönborn, 1642–1756, L'Harmattan, Paris, 2008, vol. 1, p. 14.
  2. ^ "Schloss-Weissenstein Art Collection". Gemeinnützige Stiftung Schloss Weissenstein in Pommersfelden. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
  3. ^ "Schönborn-Wiesentheid". 古楽亭日乗. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  4. ^ "DMgA – home". www.dmga.de. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  5. ^ "Handbuch der historischen Buchbestände in Deutschland, Österreich und Europa (Fabian-Handbuch): Musikaliensammlung (Wiesentheid)". fabian.sub.uni-goettingen.de. Retrieved 1 March 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website of the Count of Schönborn (Franconian branch of Schönborn-Wiesentheid)
  • Genealogy from 1284
  • History of the County of Katzenelnbogen and the First Riesling of the World

49°57′26″N 7°28′26″E / 49.9572°N 7.4740°E / 49.9572; 7.4740

schönborn, family, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, june, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Schonborn family news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The House of Schonborn ˈʃoːnbɔrn is the name of an ancient noble and mediatised formerly sovereign family of the former Holy Roman Empire SchonbornMediatised Holy Roman noble familyCurrent regionSchonborn FranconiaFounded1275 1275 FounderH von SconenburneCurrent headPhilippFinal rulerMelchior FriedrichEstate s List Schonborn Palace Prague Schloss GaibachSchloss WeissensteinPalais Schonborn BatthyanySchonborn Palace Karpaty uk Chynadiieve Castle uk Among others see Private residencesCadet branchesList Schonborn BuchheimSchonborn WiesentheidVarious members of the family have held high offices of the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire over the course of centuries including as bishops prince bishops cardinals and prince electors In addition to several family members having been elected rulers of ecclesiastical principalities the Electorate of Mainz the Princely Bishopric of Wurzburg the Princely Bishopric of Worms the Princely Bishopric of Speyer the Electorate of Trier and the Princely Bishoprice of Bamberg the family possessed a fief in Franconia that held imperial immediacy as a county within the Holy Roman Empire the state of Schonborn The House of Schonborn especially its ruling prelates of the Roman Catholic Church were among the most important builders of Southern German baroque architecture The family gave the name Schonbornzeit Age of the Schonborns to an era 1642 1756 sometimes nostalgically remembered in the popular consciousness as an era of prosperity Today the term Schonbornzeit denotes a particular style of Rhenish and Franconian baroque Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Later history 2 Rulers of Schonborn 2 1 Lords of Schonborn 1385 1663 2 2 Barons of Schonborn 1663 1701 2 3 Counts of Schonborn 1701 1717 2 4 After German Mediatisation 3 Counts of Schonborn Buchheim 3 1 After German Mediatisation 4 Counts of Schonborn Heusenstamm 1717 1801 5 Counts of Schonborn Wiesentheid 1717 1806 5 1 After German Mediatisation 6 Prelates of the family 7 Baroque architecture 7 1 Private residences 7 2 Churches 7 3 Ecclesiastical and official residences 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 Notes 11 External linksHistory editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Schonborn family news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early history edit The Schonborn family first appeared in the Rheingau region with H von Sconenburne in 1275 Their original seat was Schonborn in the County of Katzenelnbogen A secondary source of 1670 mentions an earlier Eucharius von Schonborn of the mid 12th century however without documentary proof The lion in their coat of arms may derive from the Katzenelnbogen as well as from the nearby Diez counts whose vassals they were By the end of the 14th century the family had split into three branches one of which extinguished soon The elder branch resided at Schonborn and held the office of Burgmann at Burgschwalbach a castle built between 1354 and 1371 by count Eberhard V of Katzenelnbogen Gilbrecht of Schonborn was mentioned there in 1373 They were also Burgmanns at Hahnstatten in the County of Nassau Several of them became abbots one a grand bailiff of the Knights Hospitaller The younger branch were vassals in the Westerwald region in the service of the Barony of Westerburg the Electorate of Trier the Electorate of Mainz and the county of Wied In the 16th century many younger sons of the family became Domherren canons leading to the extinction of both branches with the exception of a side line of the younger branch that had received the fiefs of Freienfels near Weinbach and Eschbach near Weilmunster nbsp Schonborn nbsp Burgschwalbach nbsp Freienfels nbsp EschbachLater history edit nbsp Archbishop Johann Philipp von Schonborn 1605 1673 Johann Philipp von Schonborn of Eschbach son of a minor nobleman in the employ of the then Lutheran counts of Wied became a Catholic priest in the impoverished times of the Thirty Years War He was admitted as a minor canon by the cathedral chapter of Wurzburg At the time the family consisted only of his brother and himself These two brought the family to power and fame founding new branches that were to become widely known throughout Europe Johann Philipp became a priest at Wurzburg Cathedral at the age of 16 translated to Mainz Cathedral in 1625 and to Worms Cathedral in 1630 He became a provost and in 1642 was elected prince bishop of Wurzburg His ruthless prosecution of the Counter Reformation eliminated Lutheranism from the territory he controlled His diplomatic skills made him an important mediator during the negotiations that ended the Thirty Years War in 1648 As a result he was additionally elected Archbishop of Mainz in 1647 thus also ruler of the Electorate of Mainz and archchancellor of the Holy Roman empire In 1663 he also received the princely bishopric of Worms He was an effective administrator of his principalities and was able to bring about economic recovery He fortified the city of Mainz and founded hospitals and high schools His court was a center of German politics in the post war era Johann Philipp was the first of six members of the Schonborn family who in the course of more than three generations were to rule over eight of the most prestigious ecclesiastical principalities of the Holy Roman Empire He made his brother Philip Erwein 1607 1668 a Vogt in the Electorate of Mainz where the latter acquired the castles of Gaibach in 1650 of Geisenheim in 1654 and of Heusenstamm where he built a new castle in 1661 In 1635 he married Maria Ursula von Greiffenclau Vollraths a close relative of the late archbishop and elector of Mainz Georg Friedrich von Greiffenklau the couple had 12 children In 1663 Philip Erwein became a baron The family thus shifted its focus from its regions of origin which had become predominantly Protestant to the Catholic ecclesiastical principalities of the empire nbsp Arms of the Schonborn family at the Schonborn Palace in PraguePhilip Erwein s son Lothar Franz von Schonborn also became a prince bishop of Wurzburg in 1693 and an elector archbishop of Mainz in 1695 The latter s brother Melchior 1644 1717 acquired the fief of Reichelsburg near Aub from the prince bishop of Wurzburg in 1671 giving him access to the Franconian Circle of the imperial knights In 1701 Melchior s son Rudolf Franz 1677 1754 married Eleonore von Hatzfeld widow of the Count von Dernbach who had left her the Herrschaft Wiesentheid in Franconia a small imperial state raised to a county in 1701 Thus the family obtained imperial immediacy for the first time and since the counts of Schonborn bear the prefix Illustrious Highness She inherited the Austrian fiefs of Arnfels and Waldenstein in Carinthia from her first husband Melchior then bought some further estates in Austria in 1710 Gollersdorf with Muhlberg and Aspersdorf in Lower Austria from the Counts of Buchheim In 1717 his estate was partitioned into the states of Schonborn Wiesentheid and Schonborn Heusenstamm both retaining immediacy Heusenstamm was inherited by Schonborn Wiesentheid in 1801 The state of Schonborn Wiesentheid was mediatised in 1806 In 1726 Charles VI Holy Roman Emperor granted Palanok Castle with Mukacheve Chynadiyovo and 200 villages in the Kingdom of Hungary today part of the Ukraine to Elector Lothar Franz after the latter had sent him troops to defeat Francis II Rakoczi whose property it had been The estate one of the largest in Eastern Europe remained in the family well into the 20th century nbsp Ecclesiastical lands in the Holy Roman Empire 1780In 1743 members of the family ruled the following states all sovereign princely bishoprics within the Holy Roman Empire Bamberg Wurzburg Konstanz Speyer Worms and Trier while the archdiocese and electorate of Mainz and thus archchancellorship of Germany a position that two Schonborns had held shortly before were held by a close relative Johann Friedrich Karl von Ostein Not only were important parts of Southern Germany under their control but also quite wealthy regions The Schonborns were not restricted to ruling these territories They followed through over several generations with one of the most ambitious building programs of the 18th century including churches monasteries ecclesiastical residences schools and hospitals Again in the 19th 20th and 21st centuries two Schonborns rose to become archbishops and cardinals At the end of the 18th century three brothers who were great grandsons of Rudolf Franz 1677 1754 established the three extant branches of the family Franz Philipp 1768 1841 founded the Austrian branch Schonborn Buchheim until today owning the Gollersdorf and Weyerburg estates and Palais Schonborn Batthyany in Vienna Franz Erwein 1776 1840 founded the Franconian branch in Bavaria Schonborn Wiesentheid until today owning the castles at Wiesentheid Pommersfelden Gaibach Geisenheim and the wine estates Hallburg near Volkach and Hattenheim and formerly also owning property in Bohemia and Friedrich 1781 1849 founded the Bohemian branch Schonborn residing at Schonborn Palace Prague today the U S embassy and until 1945 at Skalka Castle Czech Republic Rulers of Schonborn editLords of Schonborn 1385 1663 edit Gerard 1385 1416 Gerard 1416 1460 John II 1460 1490 John IV 1490 1529 George II 1529 1560 Philip 1560 1589 George IV 1589 1613 Philip Erwin 1613 1668 since 1663 BaronBarons of Schonborn 1663 1701 edit Philip Erwin 1663 1668 John Erwin 1668 1705 since 1701 Count jointly with Counts of Schonborn 1701 1717 edit John Erwin 1701 1705 Melchior Frederick 1705 1717 Divided between the lines Heusenstamm and Wiesentheid After German Mediatisation edit Hugo Count 1772 1817 1739 1817 citation needed Franz Philipp Count of Schonborn Buchheim 1768 1841 Schonborn Buchheim Line Franz Erwein Count of Schonborn Wiesentheid 1776 1840 Schonborn Wiesentheid Line Friedrich Count 1817 1849 1781 1849 Bohemian Line Erwein Count 1849 1881 1812 1881 Karl Count 1881 1908 1840 1908 Johann Count 1908 1912 1864 1912 Karl Johann Count 1912 1952 1890 1952 Hugo Damian Count 1952 1979 1916 1979 Philipp Count 1979 present born 1943 Count Christoph Archbishop of Vienna and cardinal born 1945 Count Michael born 1954 Count Heinrich 1910 1991 Count Alexander born 1938 Count Damian born 1987 Count Zdenko 1879 1960 Count Zdenko 1917 1993 male heirs exist Franziskus von Paula 1844 1899 was a Czech Roman Catholic bishop of Ceske Budejovice and later archbishop of Prague and cardinal Counts of Schonborn Buchheim editFrancis George 1682 1756 After German Mediatisation edit Franz 1st Count 1817 1841 1768 1841 Erwein 2nd Count 1841 1844 1791 1864 resigned rights to his brother in 1844 Karl 3rd Count 1844 1854 1803 1854 Erwein 4th Count 1854 1903 1842 1903 Friedrich Karl 5th Count 1903 1932 1869 1932 Georg 6th Count 1932 1989 1906 1989 Friedrich Karl 7th Count 1989 present born 1938 Isabelle d Orleans Princess of France Damian Hereditary Count of Schonborn Buchheim born 1965 Count Vinzenz born 1966 Count Philipp born 2003 Count Clemens born 2005 Count Alexander born 2010 Count Melchior born 1977 Count Theodor born 2015 Counts of Schonborn Heusenstamm 1717 1801 edit nbsp Heusenstamm Castle built in 1661 for Philipp Erwein von SchonbornSchonborn Heusenstamm was a German statelet ruled by the Schonborn family located in the south of modern Hesse Germany Schonborn Heusenstamm was a partition of Schonborn and was inherited by Schonborn Wiesentheid in 1801 Anselm Francis 1717 1726 Anselm Posthumous 1726 1801 Counts of Schonborn Wiesentheid 1717 1806 edit nbsp Wiesentheid Castle built in 1701 for Rudolf Franz Erwein von SchonbornSchonborn Wiesentheid was a County in Lower Franconia the northwestern Region of modern Bavaria Germany comprising various isolated districts spanning from the Regnitz River to the Main River east of Wurzburg Schonborn Wiesentheid was a partition of Schonborn and inherited the other line of Schonborn Heusenstamm in 1801 Schonborn Wiesentheid was mediatised to Bavaria in 1806 Rudolph Francis Erwin 1717 1754 Joseph Francis Bonaventura 1754 1772 Damian Hugo Erwin 1772 1806 After German Mediatisation edit Franz 1st Count 18 1840 1776 1840 citation needed Hugo 2nd Count 1840 1865 1805 1865 Klemens 3rd Count 1865 1877 1810 1877 Arthur 4th Count 1877 1915 1846 1915 Erwein 5th Count 1915 1942 1877 1942 Karl 6th Count 1942 1998 1916 1998 Filipp 7th Count 1998 2004 born 1954 renounced his title in 2004 Paul 8th Count 1998 present born 1964 Franz Hereditary Count of Schonborn Wiesentheid born 1990 Count Alexander born 1991 Count Johannes born 1991 Count Georg born 1995 Count Michael born 1997 Prelates of the family edit nbsp Altarpiece of 1745 at Gaibach Church Three generations of the Schonborn familyThis family counts several prelates of the Roman Catholic Church Johann Philipp von Schonborn 1605 1673 Prince elector and Archbishop of Mainz Bishop of Wurzburg and Worms His contemporaries gave him the honourable titles of the Wise the German Solomon and the Cato of Germany Lothar Franz von Schonborn nephew of the above was Prince elector and Archbishop of Mainz 1695 1729 and Bishop of Bamberg 1693 Damian Hugo Philipp von Schonborn Prince Bishop of Speyer 1719 1743 and of Konstanz 1740 and was also a cardinal He did much for the Diocese of Speyer and was conspicuous for his culture learning and piety Franz Georg von Schonborn Prince elector and Archbishop of Trier 1729 1756 and Bishop of Worms 1732 Both Frederick the Great and Maria Theresa praised him as an excellent ruler Johann Philipp Franz von Schonborn Bishop of Wurzburg 1719 1724 Friedrich Karl von Schonborn 3 March 1674 26 July 1746 was Bishop of Bamberg and Wurzburg 1729 1746 He was born at Mainz He spent most of his time at the Imperial court in Vienna serving as Vice Chancellor of the Holy Roman Empire from 1705 to 1734 The last three prelates were brothers and nephews of Lothar Franz Franziskus von Paula Graf von Schonborn 24 January 1844 6 June 1899 Born in Prague he became Archbishop of Prague in 1885 and was created cardinal in 1889 Christoph Cardinal Schonborn b 1945 is the current update Archbishop of Vienna nbsp Johann Philipp von Schonborn 1605 1673 Prince elector and Archbishop of Mainz Bishop of Wurzburg and Worms nbsp Lothar Franz von Schonborn 1655 1729 Prince elector and Archbishop of Mainz 1695 1729 and Bishop of Bamberg 1693 nbsp Johann Philipp Franz von Schonborn 1673 1724 Bishop of Wurzburg 1719 1724 nbsp Friedrich Karl von Schonborn 1674 1746 Bishop of Bamberg and Wurzburg 1729 1746 Vice Chancellor of the Holy Roman Empire nbsp Cardinal Damian Hugo Philipp von Schonborn Prince Bishop of Speyer 1719 1743 and of Konstanz 1740 nbsp Franz Georg von Schonborn Prince elector and Archbishop of Trier 1729 1756 and Bishop of Worms 1732 Prince provost of Ellwangen nbsp Cardinal Franziskus von Paula Graf von Schonborn 1844 1899 Archbishop of Prague 1885 nbsp Christoph Cardinal Schonborn born 1945 Archbishop of ViennaBaroque architecture editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Schonborn family news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Balthasar Neumann 1687 1753 architect to 4 Schonborn bishopsThe House of Schonborn especially its ruling prelates of the Roman Catholic Church were among the most important builders of Southern German baroque architecture While the private estates at a large part still today owned by the family were of more modest size sometimes of elder origin churches monasteries ecclesiastical residences and hospitals built by the Schonborn bishops were of immense grandness and splendor Financing these was only possible with flourishing economies which the Schonborn bishops did their best to uphold and enhance Court architect Balthasar Neumann was responsible for many of these buildings others were Johann Dientzenhofer Maximilian von Welsch and Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt The family gave the name Schonbornzeit Age of the Schonborns to an era 1642 1756 sometimes nostalgically remembered in the popular conscience as an era of prosperity Today the term Schonbornzeit denotes a particular style of Rhenish and Franconian baroque 1 The ecclesiastical residences were owned by the church and continued to be inhabited by successive bishops while the private estates remained inheritance of the family They were mostly acquired by the ruling prelates brothers Of the grand bishops palaces only Weissenstein Palace at Pommersfelden continues to be privately owned by the family as it was built from 1711 with an initial amount of 100 000 guilders which were personally granted to elector Lothar Franz by Charles VI Holy Roman Emperor in reward of his services and his continuous political support It contains the largest private baroque art collection in Germany Private residences edit Burg Schonborn built around 1100 Burgschwalbach castle a fief of the County of Katzenelnbogen administrated in the Middle Ages by the Lords of Schonborn Freienfels castle near Weinbach 1466 1687 owned by the family Schloss Gaibach near Volkach since 1650 to this day owned by the Counts of Schonborn Wiesentheid Schloss Geisenheim since 1652 to this day owned by the Counts of Schonborn Wiesentheid Schloss Heusenstamm built from 1661 Schonborner Hof in Mainz built from 1668 Schonborner Hof in Aschaffenburg built from 1673 Schloss Wiesentheid from 1701 to this day owned by the Counts of Schonborn Wiesentheid and serving as their private residence nbsp Weissenstein Palace at Pommersfelden Franconia Bavaria Weissenstein Palace at Pommersfelden built from 1711 18 for Lothar Franz von Schonborn still owned by the Counts of Schonborn Wiesentheid The palace which is open to the public contains the largest private Baroque art collection in Germany containing over 600 pictures Baroque and Renaissance artists represented include Peter Paul Rubens Albrecht Durer Titian Rembrandt Anthony van Dyck and Artemisia Gentileschi 2 It also houses a collection of 17th 19th century musical manuscripts and prints the Musical Collection of the Counts Schonborn Wiesentheid mainly acquired by Count Rudolf Franz Erwein von Schonborn 1677 1754 a talented amateur cellist who had ordered original cello compositions from various composers including Platti and Vivaldi This is called the elder repertoire and consists of 147 prints and 497 mss 3 Its contents are listed with RISM The younger repertoire was acquired by the cellists grandson resp grand grandson Hugo Damian Erwein 1738 1817 and Franz Erwein von Schonborn 1774 1840 It consists of 141 prints and 98 mss The whole library has been microfilmed 4 5 nbsp Schonborn Palace in Gollersdorf Lower AustriaGollersdorf estate Austria since 1710 owned by the Counts of Schonborn Buchheim Weyerburg castle Austria since 1714 owned by the Counts of Schonborn Buchheim Palais Schonborn Batthyany Vienna since 1740 owned by the Counts of Schonborn Buchheim Palais Schonborn Laudongasse Vienna Schonborn Palace Prague sold by the Bohemian branch in 1919 since then embassy of the United States Skalka Castle near Vlastislav Litomerice District Czech Republic owned by the Bohemian branch until expropriation by the communists in 1946 place of birth of Christoph Cardinal Schonborn Chynadiyovo Castle Ukraine nbsp Gaibach castle nbsp Geisenheim castle nbsp Schonborner Hof Mainz nbsp Schonborner Hof Aschaffenburg nbsp Hallburg castle nbsp Gollersdorf manor Austria nbsp Weyerburg castle Austria nbsp Palais Schonborn Batthyany Vienna nbsp Schonborn Palace Prague nbsp Skalka Castle BohemiaChurches edit More than 100 churches were built during the rule of Schonborn bishops many of them by their famous court architect Balthasar Neumann among them Wurzburg Residence court chapel Basilica of the Fourteen Holy Helpers Court chapel of Meersburg Residence Pilgrimage church of the Holy Trinity at Gossweinstein St Mauritius Wiesentheid St Cacilia Heusenstamm Basilica of St Paulinus Trier St Laurence at Dirmstein St Peter at Bruchsal Prum Abbey new buildings from 1748 nbsp Court chapel of Wurzburg Residence nbsp Basilica of the Fourteen Holy Helpers nbsp Basilica of the Fourteen Holy Helpers nbsp Court chapel of Meersburg nbsp Holy Trinity church at Gossweinstein nbsp St Mauritius Wiesentheid nbsp St Cecilia Heusenstamm nbsp St Paul at Trier nbsp St Paul Trier nbsp St Laurence Dirmstein nbsp St Michael Hofheim nbsp St Peter at Bruchsal nbsp St Rochus Hospital Mainz nbsp Prum Abbey nbsp Wurzburg Cathedral with adjacent Schonborn burial chapelEcclesiastical and official residences edit Fortress of Mainz and Mainz Citadel built between 1655 and 1675 for Johann Philipp New Residence in Bamberg built from 1697 for Lothar Franz Favorite Palace in Mainz built from 1700 for Lothar Franz The Federal Chancellery of Austria built 1717 1719 for Vice Chancellor Friedrich Karl von Schonborn Blauer Hof Laxenburg 1710 1720 for Friedrich Karl Wurzburg Residence built from 1719 for Johann Philipp Franz von Schonborn accomplished under Friedrich Karl Bruchsal Palace built from 1720 for Damian Hugo Imperial Chancellory Wing of the Hofburg Palace in Vienna 1723 30 under Vice Chancellor Friedrich Karl von Schonborn Schloss Werneck built from 1733 for Friedrich Karl Schloss Philippsburg Dicasterial Building Koblenz 1738 1749 for Franz Georg Neues Schloss Meersburg completion of the palace from 1740 for Damian Hugo Schloss Schonbornslust at Koblenz Kesselheim 1748 1752 for Franz Georg Gallery edit nbsp The New Residence of the Bishops at Bamberg built 1697 1703 for Lothar Franz von Schonborn nbsp Favorite Palace at Mainz built 1700 1722 for Lothar Franz nbsp Schloss Weissenstein at Pommersfelden built 1711 1718 for Lothar Franz to this day a private residence of the Counts of Schonborn Wiesentheid nbsp Wurzburg Residence built 1719 1744 for Johann Philipp Franz von Schonborn and Friedrich Karl von Schonborn nbsp Bruchsal Palace built from 1720 for Damian Hugo Philipp von Schonborn nbsp Werneck Palace built 1733 1745 for Friedrich Karl von Schonborn nbsp Philippsburg Palace at Koblenz built 1738 1749 for Franz Georg von SchonbornSee also editAnna Sophia van Schonborn Franziskus von Paula Graf von Schonborn Gregor Graf von Schonborn WiesentheidNotes edit Franck Lafage Les comtes Schonborn 1642 1756 L Harmattan Paris 2008 vol 1 p 14 Schloss Weissenstein Art Collection Gemeinnutzige Stiftung Schloss Weissenstein in Pommersfelden Retrieved 22 July 2014 Schonborn Wiesentheid 古楽亭日乗 Retrieved 1 March 2022 DMgA home www dmga de Retrieved 1 March 2022 Handbuch der historischen Buchbestande in Deutschland Osterreich und Europa Fabian Handbuch Musikaliensammlung Wiesentheid fabian sub uni goettingen de Retrieved 1 March 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to House of Schonborn Official website of the Count of Schonborn Franconian branch of Schonborn Wiesentheid Genealogy from 1284 History of the County of Katzenelnbogen and the First Riesling of the World49 57 26 N 7 28 26 E 49 9572 N 7 4740 E 49 9572 7 4740 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Schonborn family amp oldid 1207476260, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.