Christoph Adalbert Putz

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Family coat of arms above the portal of the parish church of Luck

Christoph Adalbert Putz , since 1719 Putz von Breitenbach , Herr auf Luck und Buda (baptized July 3, 1658 in Platten ; † July 13, 1726 in Breitenbach ) was a Bohemian mountain master , mountain clerk , imperial counter-trader, glassworks and inking plant owner who worked in the Knight was raised.

Life

House to the green linden tree in the old town of Prague which owned the plaster from 1715 to 1723

Christoph Adalbert Putz (baptized name: Christophorus ) was the second child and eldest son of the council relative, city treasurer and imperial border customs agent Johann Putz († 1697) and his wife Elisabeth born. Ziegner († 1705) was born in the Bohemian mountain town of Platten in the Ore Mountains . The Catholic family of civil servants only moved here during the Thirty Years' War . His paternal grandfather was captain of the Czernin rule Neudek Georg Putz († 1635). On his mother's side he came from the free glassmaker family of the Ziegner from Schönlind , who were possibly a branch of an old patrician family from Eger .

Like his father, he held the office of customs collector and collector in his hometown. From 1684 he worked as an imperial mountain and counter scribe. On August 12, 1688, he bought the upper inking works in Breitenbach, including glassworks, from the Hofrat von Schlackenwerth Johann Wilhelm von Steinhofer for 1910 florins, under which the blue color works production took a significant upswing and ultimately helped him to reputation and wealth. In 1706 he took over the office of mountain master von Platten from the deposed Franz Weise until he resigned in 1721. The vacant position was filled with Franz Carl Hacker . From 1722 he was the leaseholder of the Plattner mines.

In 1715 he acquired the Luck estate from Baron Wenzel Ignaz Deym von Střítež . In the same year he bought the so-called Haus zur Grüne Linde in Prague's old town (today Melantrichova 472/12) for 4650 gulden, which he sold again in 1723 for 4600 gulden. On June 26, 1719 he received due to his merits (he gained a high reputation as a mountain master through good manners, virtue, reason and skill) from Emperor Charles VI. in Vienna the nobility diploma . From then on he and his family were counted among the knightly families of the Kingdom of Bohemia . The coat of arms and noble title of Breitenbach awarded to him refer to the plant on the Breitenbach .

In 1722 he had the originally Gothic parish church of St. Laurentius in Luck rebuilt in Baroque style at his own expense and put his family coat of arms above the portal. The church was later designated as the family burial place. In 1725 he also bought the neighboring Buda estate from Adam Anton Campanus Ritter von Rösselfeld and combined the property into one rule. He died on July 13, 1726 at the age of 68 on his possessions in Breitenbach. His body was transferred to Luck and buried in the parish church in the family crypt on July 16, 1726, his wife was buried there on June 12, 1742.

After his death, the Luck and Buda estates were initially inherited by his widow Anna Maria, their sons Wenzel Leopold and Franz Anton, and their daughter Eva. The property was divided up in 1727, while his older son Wenzel Leopold received the Luck estate and his younger son Franz Anton the Buda estate. His grandson was the landowner Franz Xaver Putz von Breitenbach , who was raised to the rank of baron in 1767.

Extracts

Extract from the nobility diploma from 1719:

“The good morals, virtue, reason and skill, whose unmistakability Christoph Adalbert Putz, mountain master in our Royal Bohemian Freyen Bergstadt Platten was particularly praised, was also graciously considered, born from honestly well-behaved parents at all times, most of all his grandfather Seeliger the most submissive Faithfulness to our glorious ancestor was shown in the fact that he, as the former chief man on the rule of Neüdeck, in which Swedish troubles had broken off the enemy, but was then captured, suffered and confessed much more than his son, Christoph Adalbert Putz Eheleiblicher Vatter, Johann Putz Seeliger, provided our services for thirty years in a planned mountain town Platten through thirty years, finally when Berg-Zehenter stood up to its end. From then on, however, Christoph Adalbert Putz, who was overruled by Zeügnuss, had been faithfully and diligently unavoided for nine and thirty years in mining functions throughout the area [...] "

family

Christoph Adalbert Putz married Anna Maria Haass in Platten on February 13, 1684 (baptized March 29, 1663 in Platten; † April 9, 1742 ibid). The following children were born from this marriage:

  • Eva Rosina (born January 7, 1685 in Platten), donated 1000 florins to the poor institute of Platten in 1753; ⚭ 1704 in plates Georg Adam Söldner von Söldenhofen, patrician from Eger.
  • Maria Barbara (born April 29, 1687 in Platten, welcomed June 8, 1688 ibid)
  • Wenceslaus (born May 11, 1688 in Platten; † November 28, 1747 in Chiesch), Lord of Luck and Buda; ⚭ Antonia Theresia de Hard.
  • Maria Eleonora (died August 8, 1690 in Platten)
  • Franciscus Antonius (died September 2, 1691 in plates; † May 8, 1742 ibid)

ancestors

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Georg Putz († 1635)
captain of the Neudek rule
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Johann Putz († 1697)
border customs officer on plates
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Eve
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Christoph Adalbert Putz von Breitenbach (1658–1726)
mountain master for plates
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hans Ziegner
glassworks master at Schönlind
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Georg Ziegner Sen.
Glashüttemeister zu Schönlind
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Ursula
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Elisabeth Ziegner († 1705)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Anna († 1667)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

See also

literature

  • Neues Allgemeine Deutsches Adelslexicon Ossa Ryssel , 1867, p. 296.
  • Materials on the diplomatic genealogy of the nobility , 1812, p. 41.
  • Consignation of the collective high nobility of the male sex , 1722, SP

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Walter Kolb: Four hundred years of mining town plates 1532-1932, commemorative publication for the four hundredth anniversary of the mining town plates. Bergstadt Platten 1932.
  2. ^ Mining in Platten- und Gottesgab - a Saxon-Bohemian story, special inventory: MM 0879 - 5/210/2 - 1706
  3. ^ Jiri Cizek: kostel sv. Vavřince, Luka. Retrieved February 7, 2017 .
  4. Kronika farnosti | Porta fontium. Retrieved June 16, 2017 .
  5. Jaroslav Vyčichlo: Luka - kostel sv. Vavřince | Památky a příroda Karlovarska. Retrieved February 7, 2017 .
  6. Luka 01 | Porta fontium. Retrieved February 7, 2017 .
  7. Luka 01 | Porta fontium. Retrieved February 7, 2017 .
  8. Michal Fiala, Tomáš Krejčík, Národní muzeum v Praze: edice . Scriptorium, 2001, ISBN 978-80-86197-32-6 ( google.de [accessed June 17, 2017]).
  9. Johann Gottfried Sommer: The Kingdom of Bohemia: represented statistically and topographically. Elbogner Kreis . Calve, 1847 ( google.de [accessed June 16, 2017]).
  10. Luka 01 | Porta fontium. Retrieved February 8, 2017 .