Bartholomäus I of Tinti

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Bartholomäus I Imperial Baron of Tinti , Lord and Farmer in Tyrol (born September 24, 1661 in Chiuduno ; † April 28, 1757 in Gundelhof , Vienna ) was Imperial Court Chamber Councilor and Chamberlain, as well as high official of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation .

Life

Coat of arms of the Tinti family

Bartholomäus I. Tinti was born in Chiuduno in 1661 as the son of Carlo Tinti and his wife Grata Maria Finazzi. From 1680 he lived in Vienna and quickly gained honor and wealth. From 1703 he was Imperial Real Court Chamber Councilor, Chamberlain, Director of the Silesian Salt Office (from 1711), Lord and Farmer in Tyrol (1711), Councilor of the Ministerial Office Deputation (from 1734) and Royal Portuguese Envoy to the Imperial Court in Vienna (1709-1725). Bartholomäus I von Tinti came from an old noble family. It was built by Emperor Joseph I in the kingdom knighthood collected (1707). Emperor Charles VI. raised him to the rank of baron of the Holy Roman Empire in 1725 .

Tinti acquired the rule of Enzersdorf an der Fischa in 1707 , as the patronage holder of the parish church Enzersdorf an der Fischa , a new, extended baroque nave was built in 1714/1715, the rectangular portal of the western front has a Tinti heraldic cartouche flanked by two angels over a cornice. In 1713 he acquired Plankenstein Castle and in 1723 the Vienna Palais Porcia , which he sold to the imperial court of ärar in 1750 . Bartholomäus I Baron von Tinti died in 1757 at the age of 96 in the Gundelhof in Vienna and was buried in St. Stephan with a "night funeral, first class with torches and bells".

Individual evidence

  1. Walter v. Hueck: Genealogical handbook of the nobility, Freiherrliche Häuser Volume XVI. CA Starke Verlag , Limburg an der Lahn 1992, ISBN 3798007004 , pp. 525-533
  2. ^ Tiroler Matrikelstiftung (formerly Tiroler Adels-Matrikel-Genossenschaft) , Innsbruck 1992, page 12 and page 97
  3. Rudolf v. Granichstaedten-Czerva, Schlernschriften 131, Wagner, Innsbruck 1954
  4. Entry about Plankenstein on Burgen-Austria
  5. ^ Church archive St. Stephan