Christian Peintner junior

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Christian Peintner d. J., von Trojensbach since 1707 (* 1652 in Niedervintl ; † 1733 ibid) was a Tyrolean innkeeper, lawyer and customs officer who was raised to the nobility.

Family coat of arms

Life

Troyenbach residence in Niedervintl

Christian Peintner the Elder J. was the youngest son of Christian Peintner the Elder . Ä. from his second marriage to Barbara geb. Proud. After inheriting the property of his deceased father in 1686, he continued his father's business in Niedervintl, where he also held the office of customs officer. In 1704 he acquired the so-called "Küchenmairhof" in Niedervintl. In 1707 he was ennobled with the title "von Trojensbach" by Kaspar Ignaz Graf von Künigl , Prince-Bishop of Brixen . It was one of only 37 increases in status in the Brixen nobility in the period between 1511 and 1801. The predicate referred to his acquired Meierhof in Niedervintl, which received the name "Trojensbach" and was elevated to a noble seat. His grave inscription can be found below his father's tombstone in the old parish church of Niedervintl. His son Anton Peintner, who continued the line, made it possible to build a new parish church in Niedervintl around 1760.

family

Christian Peintner was married to Ursula Kurz († 1737), daughter of Gregor Kurz and Brigitta von Wenzel from Niederdorf . The following children are known:

  • Anton (* 1689; † 1763), postman, lawyer and customs administrator in Niedervintl; ∞ Maria Egger
  • Rosina (* 1691, † July 27, 1767), ∞ Johann Pirchner
  • Barbara († April 5, 1765), Clarissus Ursula Maria in Hall
  • Ursula († July 14, 1767); ∞ Anton Grienpacher
  • Susanna; ∞ Michael Rogen
  • Johanna Helene; ∞ Benedikt Faber
  • Katharina, clarissess Maria Angelika in Brixen
  • Elisabeth, Clarissess Maria Katharina in Hall
  • Anna, Dominican Maria Rosalia in Linz
  • Maria; ∞ Johann Prozer, landlord in Sterzing

literature

  • Manfred Tschaikner : The Rodeneck host family Peintner and their branching to Vahrn, Vintl and Innichen in the 17th and 18th centuries . In: Der Schlern 72 (1998), pp. 379–391.
  • Rudolf von Granichstädten-Czerva: Brixen. Imperial Principality and Court , Austrian State Printing Office in Vienna, 1948

Individual evidence

  1. Contains the district: Pusterthal and on the Eisak, and the one on the Etsch: Volume II . 1847 ( google.de [accessed on May 22, 2018]).