Bartholotti

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Coat of arms of Count Bartholotti von Partenfeld

The Bartholotti , later Bartholotti von Partenfeld (also Bartolotti; Bartenfeld, Porthenfeld, Parthenfeldt), come from Veneto , then went to Styria and Carniola . Under Emperor Ferdinand II they came to Austria and were ennobled in 1636 and by Emperor Ferdinand III. In 1653 raised to the rank of imperial knighthood with the title of Partenfeld . In 1704 they became imperial barons and in 1708 they were raised to the status of hereditary barons. In 1729 the brothers Johann Baptist and Johann Horaz received the title of imperial count .

history

The Bartholotti come from the Bergamo area , and the trade then led them to Styria and Carniola . Johann Baptist Bartholotti, the first to come to these countries, made wealth through trade. He and his sons Johann Paul and Carl made sizable loans to Archduke Carl in Steyer and Emperor Ferdinand II. Both brothers and their descendants were given the nobility by Emperor Ferdinand II on November 17, 1636 and by Emperor Ferdinand III. on December 23, 1653 to the rank of imperial knight with the predicate von Partenfeld . The sons of Carl Bartholotti von Partenfeld were accepted into the new Lower Austrian knighthood families in 1693 and 1700, and on August 8, 1704, Emperor Leopold I elevated them to the status of imperial baron. On November 9th, 1729 the brothers Johann Baptist and Johann Horaz of Emperor Karl VI. raised to the rank of imperial count.

Personalities

  • Johann Paul von Bartholotti († April 12, 1636) kk councilor, drink tax, Taz and salt gradient administrator in Bohemia, died without a successor.
  • Carl Bartholotti von Partenfeld († March 9, 1689) imperial court chamber councilor, Lord of Haidersfelden and Veste Thurn (today Unterthurm in Altlengbach ), married to Anna Magdalena von Peverelli.
  • Johann Paul Freiherr Bartholotti von Partenfeld, († November 19, 1723), Carl's eldest son, emperor. real Hofkammerrat, lord of the gentlemen of Alt- and Neulengbach , Raipoltenbach, Plankenberg, Rust, Veste Leitten, etc., remained unmarried.
  • Johann Carl Freiherr Bartholotti von Partenfeld, Carl's second son, kaiserl. real court chamber councilor and court war paymaster, was wealthy in Bohemia. He married Maria Catharina von Orelli, their only daughter Maria Anna Josepha married Franz Anton Graf von Pachta.
  • Johann Baptist Freiherr and then Count Bartholotti von Partenfeld, († 1741), Carl's third son, Kaiser. Hofkammerrat, nope. Regimentsrat and 42 years of salt bailiff in Lower Austria, inherited from his brother's dominions old and Neulengbach etc. He was elevated to the imperial counts 1729th Due to the collapse of the Hauzenberger (1736–1737) Wechselhaus, he had to sell many goods, including the Palais Bartolotti-Partenfeld .
  • Carl Ludwig Freiherr Bartholotti von Partenfeld († 1734), Lower Austrian government councilor and district commissioner of the district above the Vienna Woods , inherited the Alt- and Neulengbach estates from his uncle Johann Paul, etc.
  • Johann Baptist Bartholotti von Partenfeld (1701–1745), imperial hussar chief, set up a free corps in the War of the Austrian Succession at his own expense and then commanded Colonel Menzel's Pandur corps on the Main and Rhine. He died in Mannheim and was buried in the garrison church there. There were no male descendants from the marriage with Elisabeth Catharina Freiin von Mesko.

coat of arms

Barons coat of arms

quartered shield, 1 and 4 in the golden field a simple black eagle with spread wings, paws and a golden crown on its head; Field 2 in blue is in the middle of a silver cup or goblet with a collar on top and a handle on the left. Over and around this cup is a large silver letter C, almost in the shape of a half moon, looped around it. Field 3, also blue, is a sea below, on it a galley with a hood, mast, and taut sails, and a half-white, half-red flag flies in front. The middle shield, which is covered by an open golden crown adorned with precious stones, is a red field with a white crossbar in the middle, depicting the Archducal Austrian coat of arms. The whole coat of arms, however, is covered by a large golden baron crown wound with pearl cords.

Three crowned open helmets, the right and left each with a large plume of yellow, black, white, and blue ostrich feathers on top; On the central helmet stands the double imperial black eagle with a golden crown on its head, wings spread out, but without a sword or scepter. The helmet cover is black and gold on the right and the middle helmet, blue and silver on the left.

literature

  • Franz K. Wissgrill: scene of the rural Lower Austrian nobility from the gentry and knighthood. Volume 1, Vienna 1794, p. 303ff.

Web links

Commons : Bartholotti family  - collection of images, videos and audio files
  • The Bartholotti in Neulengbach
  • Johann Nepomuk Bartholotti, Franz August Xaver von Wasserberg: Political-theological treatise, in which the freedom of conscience… Vienna 1783. ( online in the Google book search)

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Adalbert Kral: The nobility of Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia. Genealogical-Heraldic Repertory…, Prague 1904, p. 8 digitized
  2. link to Wehrbauten.at
  3. Information about Colonel Menzel on bundesheer.at
  4. ^ Johann Heinrich Zedler: Universal Lexicon , 3rd Supplement Volume, column 105, Leipzig, 1752; (Digital scan)