Coreth to Coredo and Starkenberg / Rumo

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coat of arms of the imperial counts Coreth zu Coredo and Starkenberg 1766 and 1772
Coat of arms of the imperial lords and noblemen of Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo 1745

The imperial counts of Coreth zu Coredo, barons of Starkenberg and imperial lords and noblemen of Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo are a very old noble family who came to Tyrol from Italy (in the 12th century). You were u. a. personal adviser and educator of various Habsburg emperors and archdukes. The imperial line also became the titular successor of the Lords of Starkenberg , an old Tyrolean ministerial family, who died in 1452 . The baronial line comes from the same castle in Coredo ( Castel Coredo ) as that of the imperial counts. The baronial line completely rebuilt the dilapidated master palace in Coredo, which burned down in 1611, and sold it to the count's line around 1790.

history

Coredo today
Interior view of the castle in 1912
San Giusto Cathedral in Trieste

The family is named after the original ancestral castle Coredo, or after the common dialect Coreth on the Nonsberg in Tyrol , which Zecho von Coredo had built in 1150. The same was already regarded in the year 1185 in such a way that two descendants of the same, Oluradin and Bertold, in the fief investiture which had been granted by the Prince-Bishop of Trento Albert I in 1185 to the Counts Ulrich and Arnold von Eppan over the castles Valvenstein and Arsio, appear as witnesses. Odoricus (Odorich, Ulrich) von Coredo was appointed governor of Trento by Meinhard Count of Tyrol and Duke of Carinthia in 1295 . In an act from 1308 stored in the imperial archive in Innsbruck, it is referred to as nobilis et potens miles Dominus Odoricus, filius quondam Domini Friederici de Coredo . And so, according to a document from 1314 in the Princely Archive of Trento about the return of the Fiemme Valley to the Hochstift Trento, he is listed as one of the first witnesses to this act with several of the oldest and most distinguished families of Tyrol. It also appears in the first matriculation recorded in the year 1300 about the Tyrolean families. The same Ulrich (Odoricus) von Coredo was one of the most prominent personalities at the court of Count and Duke Mainrad and his sons from 1284 to 1326 and appears on almost all important documents. He also owned the castles Flavon, Cronmetz and Valer and is (1296) the first known burgrave of Tyrol, which office he holds several times; In 1295 he appears as captain of Trent. In 1300 as captain of Trient and the Nons- and Sulzthales, and in 1312 he was named among those procurators to whom the reign in Tyrol was transferred.

Friedrich von Coredo, a son of Odorich, signed 1303 in letters as a knight and also in a document from 1345, which was also in the above-mentioned Innsbruck archive, called nobilis miles Dominus Federicus de Coredo filius quondam nobilis et potentis militis Odorici de Coredo . Bragherius von Coredo (* 1538; † 1591) was the builder of the castle "Braghèr", today "Brughier" near Coredo in the Non Valley from the Coredo-Valer branch.

Gumpolino, a descendant of Bragherius, had, along with other children, a son Mugone and a daughter Faidia, who was married to Heinrich, a son of Simon von Thunn-Belvesio (Mrs. Tono Rospazio), on April 21, 1286 in Bragher Castle. But when Mugone died leaving four underage children (Nicolo, Bertolo, Ella and Giuliana), a certain Bertoldo (lawyer in Tres), as guardian and trustee of the minors, sold all of their rights, property and possessions in the castle hill and castle Bragher on June 21, 1321 to Simon von Thunn-Belvesino. In the following year (August 1, 1322), Hermann, son of Bragherius, who left no heirs, sold all of his possessions at Bragher Castle to Simon von Thunn-Belvesino. So the entire Bragher estate came into the possession of the Lords of Thunn, who have held it continuously since then and live in Bragher Castle.

In the 15th century, this house was on the verge of extinction, because Peter von Coredo (* 1370) from the line of Bragher Castle, who had as his wife the heiress Catharina de Corredo of the line from Coreth Castle (Coredo-Valer), which was thus extinct in the male line, was left alone, and fathered only one son, Anton von Coredo-Bragher (* 1420; † 1471). The latter was a prince-bishop massar and, after the Coredo-Valer tribe died out, was enfeoffed for life with the Coredo castle (1424), in which the family had fief shares before. The same Anton also ensured that the baronial and counts tribe continued to flourish, as his wife Petronelle von Ortenburg gave birth to four sons (Niklaus, Peter, Michael and Tomeo). Niklaus becomes the progenitor of the baronial line and Peter of the count's line, for which the family subsequently divided in the 18th century.

Michael von Coredo played an outstanding role in the Nonsberge in the 15th century. As a loyal supporter of Duke Friedrich IV. (Tyrol) he was feuded by Peter von Spaur in 1419, had to flee, his castle in Coredo was taken from him, but after the ruling of 1420 it was put back. Later he was a loyal servant of the bishops and, because of his faithful service, was named "Familiaris Episcopi" and given new fiefs.

In 1525 the storm started again, but Coredo managed to hold it. It received 25 servants as a crew. It was now always the residence of the episcopal captains: 1540 of Ulrich von Spaur, 1554 of Friedrich von Heydorf, then until 1663 of the Lords of Arz, then of Count Nicolaus von Lodron.

In 1611, a conflagration broke out in Coredo, which burned Coredo Castle (which in the meantime also bore the name Vigilienburg Castle) and the associated church. The ruin was left to decay and what little was left was looted.

The knightly imperial nobility confirmation and coat of arms improvement (with that of the Starkenberger) as de Coret took place in Augsburg on September 5, 1555 for Anton de Coredo, his brother sons and others, then another knightly imperial nobility confirmation and coat of arms improvement in Vienna on May 25, 1564, due to the Death of Emperor Ferdinand I only took place there, on December 12, 1567.

The most outstanding of Anton's sons was Nikolaus von Coreth (* 1538, † 1591), noble lord and knight, advisor to Karl Archduke of Austria (palatinat ad personam), educator of the sons of Emperor Maximilian II and as Nicoló III. Bishop of Trieste .

Johann Baptist von Coreth (* 1549; † June 22, 1616), knight and noble lord, canon in Brixen and Trient, advisor to the bishop, ordered in his will that the "ruined Coredo Castle on Nons" should be bought, built and again should be made a Trientine fief. Before he became Canon of Bressanone and Trento, he was married to Juliana Di Grotta de Grumes (episcopal nobility), who was a great niece of Canon Paulus Grotta. She was distinguished by beauty, spirit and virtue, but she died as the last victim of the plague in 1575. The two tombstones with the coats of arms are in the Dome of Trento. One of his sons was Niklaus von Coreth († 1646), who was married to Regina Anna von Spaur, Pflaum and Valör (* 1538). His son Ludwig Gaudenz, Imperial Knight and Noble Lord (* 1629; † 1715) was married to Countess Barbara Maria von Arz († August 1738). His son Kaspar formed the extinct line of Cembra.

Maximilian Ernst (* 1622; † August 1680 in Linz ) performed important services as a secret trainee lawyer for the Upper and Upper Austrian Lands in Vienna, and suggested the services offered to him by the Elector of Bavaria and the Duke of Savoy because of his excellent knowledge , considerable honorary positions. His son was the later government chancellor of Innsbruck, Johann Engelhard, first baron of Coreth. For this Maximilian and his brothers Maximilian and Johann Baptist as well as their relatives Johann Franz, Ludwig, Gaudenz, Friedrich, Johann Gaudenz and Johann Caspar, the knighthood was confirmed with "Knight and Noble Lord of Coreth" and the improvement of the coat of arms in Vienna on September 17, 1675.

The baron class with "well-born" and improved coat of arms came from Emperor Leopold I with a diploma from March 15, 1698 in Vienna and the title Imperial Barons and Panierherren von Coreth, Herr zu Starkenberg, Coredo and Kolbenthurm for Johann Franz Edler Herr von Coreth, kk  Privy councilor and president of the chamber in the family, later on October 3, 1729 the confirmation of the baron status on October 3, 1729 for Maximilian Ernst, Baron von Coreth.

The (erbländ.-Austrian) old imperial barons and pennants with "well-born" and Improvement of the coat of arms and the privileg de non usu came on April 28, 1745 (Kath - Vorarlberg, Tyrol) for Johann Joseph (* 1699; † 1782) noble gentlemen and countrymen in Tyrol from Coreth to Coredo and Rumo into the family and became part of the Tyroleans Registered nobility register with the baron class. Description of the coat of arms and historical note in the year 1863, p. 120. The same Johann Joseph was raised to Count von Starkenberg in 1760. The von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo family were also the owners of the Alt - und Neustarkenberg castle in Tarrenz in the Imst district of Tyrol from 1806 .

Now this sex was divided into the counts and baronial lines.

It was the baronial line that built the run-down Coredo Castle from Count Johann Michael von Spaur (* 7 July 1638 - † 27 April 1725), through Siegmund Niklaus Freiherr von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo, Upper Austrian Government Councilor (around 1735) on 19 May 1717 as a reward requested by Johann Baptist von Coreth ("castrum Coredi cum stabulo apud ecd. S. Silvestri"). For this reason, the coat of arms of the baronial line from Coreth to Coredo and Rumo includes Coredo Castle on the main shield. Sigismund immediately started the restoration work and completed it in 1726. This is confirmed by the inscription above the portal: " Familiae Coreda Coredi Sigismundus Nicolaus de Castro de Castro Coredo Coredi SRI eques sc et CM Consiliarius Excelsi des Regierens Austriae superioris 1726". The restoration of 1726 ended with the feudal appearance of the former castle and transformed the property into a modern two-story building with a peaceful bourgeois character, which was mainly used as the summer residence of the barons of Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo. The last remnant of the former castle was a tower, which was torn down in the same century.

From this baron line are Johann Joseph, imperial baron and noble lord of Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo, who was the Imperial and Royal Upper Austrian court chamber councilor and city governor of Trient and his brother Leopold Joseph, who was married to the baroness Marie Ludowika von Servi and who was president of the Electorate of the Palatinate Neuburg died. The son of Johann Joseph, Siegmund Balthasar, Freiherr von Coreth (born September 21, 1728 in Witten; † March 3, 1769) was married to Barbara Freiherrin von Buffa zu Lilienberg. Siegmund Balthasar's descendants were Alois Claudius Freiherr von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo (* 1765 in Lawis; † May 16, 1822 in Innsbruck), city commander in Innsbruck and imperial and royal major, who passed the ancestral palace to the count's line in 1790 (Johann Baptist Franz Graf von Coreth) sold. Alois Claudius' son Alois Romedius Johann, high-born lord, old lord of Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo (born December 17, 1806 in Chrudim, Bohemia; † March 12, 1881 in Innsbruck) was a landowner, city commander in Innsbruck, bländ. Austrian Major of the Kaiser Jäger Regiment, owner of the Military Merit Cross and the War Medal, Lord and Farmer in Tyrol. The latter propagated the family of today's imperial lords and nobles and countrymen in Tyrol from Coreth to Coredo and Rumo. He had a daughter Clementine Anna Ernestine von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo and two sons. His two sons Hugo and Alois Fidelius and their descendants settled in Innsbruck (Inzing) and in Vorarlberg (Feldkirch) and the Swiss Rhine Valley (Heerbrugg, St.Margrethen, Rorschach and St.Gallen) and in Zurich (Nänikon-Greifensee) . The line of Hugo von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo (* June 12, 1849 - June 16, 1921), married to Leopoldine Pölt (* September 15, 1855 in Telfs; † June 28, 1938 in Mühlau), lives today mainly in Austria , of which a branch of these descendants runs a florist shop in Inzing. Many descendants of the line of Alois Fidelius von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo (* March 28, 1857 in Feldkirch; † June 20, 1929), married to Wilhelmine Gorbach (* April 1, 1862; † July 7, 1938 in Innsbruck) are during died of the First World War. His descendants living in Vorarlberg and Switzerland around Baron Alfred von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo as well as Baroness Anna von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo, who married Jakob von Baumberger ( von Baumberger and Coreth) and their descendants around Eugen and Ralf Baumberger has settled in Heerbrugg or Nänikon-Greifensee and Alfred von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo in St.Gallen.

Alois Romedius Johann von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo's daughter Clementine Anna Ernestine von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo (born October 7, 1846 in Innsbruck) was married to Baron Maximilian von Pelkhoven and Hohenbuchbach († January 14, 1903 in Teising, Bavaria) and fathered a daughter Elisabeth von Pelkhoven (born May 11, 1877 in Munich; † May 14, 1960 in Rottach am Tegernsee), the latter was married to Alfred Hans Carl Christoph von Hornstein, Freiherr von Hornstein-Bietingen (born June 14, 1866 in Bollsteg; † June 19, 1932 in Teising) and this resulted in a daughter Maria Sidonia von Hornstein, Baroness von Hornstein and Bietingen (* 1908)

From the count's line the barons and nobles Franz Anton, Upper Austrian court chamber councilor and Johann Baptist Urban, imperial real chamberlain and Upper Austrian regimental council, were in 1766 in the imperial and on April 26, 1772 in the hereditary counts with "high and well-born" under raised to the name of Count von Coreth zu Coredo, Freiherrn zu Starkenberg .

Count Franz Anton (1712–1775) continued the family. From his marriage to Maria Anna Freiin von Blümegen († 1800) in 1738 came Count Joseph (1744–1793), Oberhofmarschall, married in 1769 to Maria Leopoldine Countess von Brandis. Their son, Count Franz Joseph (* 1770 in Innsbruck; + December 2, 1805 in Austerlitz), chamberlain and Rittmeister in the 1st  Arcièren Life Guard , who later fell in the battle of Austerlitz , became the head of the family. Ernst Ignaz Franz (* December 2, 1803; † July 18, 1881 in Neu-Braunfels, Texas ), his son from his marriage (January 23, 1803) with Antonie Freiin von Dillon zu Skréen and Brondston (Proudstone) (* 24. August 1769 in Raczkeve ; † April 21, 1835 in Graz ) had three sons: Carl (born January 10, 1837), Rudolph (born May 7, 1838) and Johann (born November 26, 1844).

Franz Joseph's brother, Count Johann Baptist Franz (* July 5, 1773 in Innsbruck; † December 10, 1854 in Salurn ) was a landowner and estate in Tyrol and, with Caroline, Countess Arz von Wasegg (* November 14, 1789 in Arsio; † 14 December 1850 in Salurn) married (18 April 1809). Two sons grew out of this marriage. One of the sons was Joseph August (born June 18, 1810 at Coredo Castle; † March 16, 1892 in Trient ), kk council recorder at the appeals court in Trient, married to Emilia (born August 20, 1827 in Trient; † February 28, 1919 in Innsbruck), daughter of Count Albert Alberti von Poja , and Heinrich Joseph (born June 26, 1820), who died early, was first  lieutenant . Count Johann Baptist Franz bought the family castle in Coredo around 1790 from Alois Claudius Freiherr von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo (baronial line). After his death, the castle became the property of his brother Count Franz Joseph Anton's family.

The half-brother of Count Ernst Franz was Rudolph (July 31, 1807 in Marein ; † May 25, 1860 in Graz), son of the Imperial and Royal Chamberlain Caspar (born April 4, 1779 in Innsbruck; † January 5, 1832 in Vienna) and the widow of the father brother Franz, who fell in 1805, the Antonia Johanna Freiin von Dillon zu Skreen and Brondston, who was married to Caroline (born October 13, 1810 in Graz; † February 5, 1903), daughter of Count Siegmund von Wagensperg married. The two were the parents of the Imperial and Royal Major General Carl Theodor (* 1837, † 1894). A son of Rudolph was called Moritz, Count of Coreth zu Coredo (* July 26, 1840 in Graz; † October 8, 1840 in Welsberg) who with Maria Emma Countess zu Stolberg-Stolberg (* November 11, 1849 in Hanover; † November 14, 1937 in Hochscharten ) was married. One of her sons, Botho Theobald Rudolf se. Count Coreth zu Coredo (born October 20, 1871 at Welsberg Castle; † January 25, 1942 in Hochscharten) was an Austrian businessman and politician.

One of the descendants of Count Rudolph of the Count's line was Count Karl Theodor von Coreth zu Coredo und Starkenberg (* 1837; † 1894) who was married to Anna Teofilovna Pankratieva (* 1849; † 1912). Her children were Maria Theresia, Ferdinand, Ottilie, Max and Count Emerich von Coreth zu Coredo and Starkenberg (* 1881 - † 1947), President of the Administrative Court, who was married to Countess Magdalena Matz von Spiegelfeld (* 1888 † 1973). He was President of the Austrian Administrative Court and one of the two creators of the pioneering Administrative Procedure Act, which has proven itself so well in practice that other states, e.g. B. Yugoslavia, have adopted it. Count Emerich's descendants were Anna Coreth (* 1915; † June 3, 2008), Maria Magdalena Coreth (* 1918) and Emerich Coreth (* August 10, 1919 in Raabs an der Thaya; † September 1, 2006 in Innsbruck) an Austrian Catholic theologian and philosopher. Emerich Coreth was attributed to Neuthomism, because he founded metaphysics because of his thinking, which in the 20th century in confrontation with Immanuel Kant and more recent philosophers. He was best known for his works on the history of philosophy, which deal with the philosophy of the 17th to the 20th century, mostly endeavoring to present it objectively. He became a Jesuit in 1937 and studied philosophy and theology in Pullach and Innsbruck, where he received his doctorate in 1948. theol. PhD. At the Gregoriana he was promoted to Dr. phil. PhD. From 1950 he taught at the theological faculty of the University of Innsbruck, from 1955 until his retirement in 1989 as full professor of Christian philosophy. From 1961 to 1967 Count Coreth was rector of the Jesuit College in Innsbruck, from 1969 to 1971 rector of the university and from 1972 to 1977 provincial of the Austrian Jesuit Province. In 1972 he came to the convention of the Kösener Corps in Würzburg with the Seniors' Convent in Innsbruck. He has received various honors for his work beyond the university, e.g. B. the Cardinal Innitzer Prize (1988).

The possessions of the barons and counts of Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo / Starkenberg included the palaces and castles Alt- and Neustarkenberg, Coredo , Bragher, Cronmetz, Flavon, Malgolo, Valer, Hochscharten, Casez, Casa Marta in Coredo, Tramin, Kolbenthurm in Tyrol, the mills at Romedio-Bache, the Mittelweiherburg in Vorarlberg, the Schneeburg in Hall, the Ottakringer Freihof, the Coreth Chapel and the Corethhof in Hall as well as the Gasthof Koreth in Innsbruck. She also owned the Bohemian Inkolat and the incorporated countries in the count state, issued in Vienna on August 29, 1780, for Joseph Count von Coreth, kk chamberlain.

coat of arms

Coat of arms of the Imperial Knights of Coreth 1564 and 1567

The Coreth family coat of arms is three golden bars in blue .

The coat of arms from 1766 then shows:

Squared shield with central shield . The crowned central shield is divided lengthways four times by red and silver. 1 and 4 three golden crossbars in blue. 2 divided diagonally left; on the right in red a left-facing golden lion , the left silver half is divided diagonally to the right and in each of them there is an octagonal red star . 3 Like field 2, only the stars are in the right half and the lion in the left half. On the main shield there are four helmets with a count's crown, and the whole coat of arms rests on the breast of a black eagle with two crowned heads, which are surrounded by gold circles.

Siebmacher names quartered, 1,4 the family coat of arms, 2,3 diagonally divided, above (with 3 below) a golden lion in red, below (with 3 above) with red and black diagonally divided 2 stars in mixed up colors . The heart shield is split three times from red and silver. (Old Starkenberg ). The latter is also available in the original form in red and gold.

Personalities

  • Johann Baptist von Coreth (* 1549; † June 22, 1616), knight and noble lord, canon in Brixen and Trient, advisor to the bishop, bought back the ruined castle in Coredo. He was married to Juliana Di Grotta de Grumes (episcopal nobility), a great niece of Canon Paulus Grotta. She was distinguished by beauty, spirit and virtue, but she died the last victim of the plague in 1575.
  • Nikolaus von Coreth († 1591) was an advisor to Archduke Carl of Austria, educator of the five archdukes, the sons of Emperor Maximilian II and from 1575 to 1591 as Nicoló III. Bishop of Trieste. He had part of the episcopal residence built in Trieste, as the inscription there testifies.
  • Johann Franz Imperial Barons and Panierherren von Coreth, Lords zu Starkenberg, Coredo and Kolbenthurn (1640–1718) was Privy Councilor, from 1686 to 1695 Salzmaier in Hall, from 1698 to 1702 kk Hofkammerpräsident. In 1675 he bought the Palais Coreth in Vienna, Burggraben 6.
  • Johann Engelhard Freiherr von Coret zu Kolbenthurm and Waldtgriess (1658–1724) was a secret councilor, government chancellor of Innsbruck, secret conference minister of the Electorate of the Palatinate and court chancellor on September 11, 1715 in Vienna.
  • Franz Anton Count von Coreth zu Coredo, Baron zu Starkenberg (1712–1775) was Imperial Chamberlain.
  • Joseph Count von Coreth zu Coredo, Freiherr zu Starkenberg (born November 4, 1744 in Innsbruck ; † December 4, 1783 ibid) was the Imperial and Royal Chamberlain and Oberhofmarschall.
  • Carl Theodor Graf von Coreth zu Coredo, Freiherr zu Starkenberg (January 2, 1837 in Vienna , † October 23, 1894 in Ginselberg ) was an Austrian officer, on November 1, 1888 (rank of November 8 of the year) major general . He was also the tutor of Archduke Franz Ferdinand Carl of Austria, the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary from the House of Habsburg-Lothringen . He was married to Anna Teofilowna Pankratiewa (born October 16, 1849 in Cherson , † March 18, 1912 in Purkersdorf ).
  • Botho Theobald Rudolf se. Count Coreth zu Coredo (born October 20, 1871 at Welsberg Castle; † January 25, 1942 1942 in Hochscharten) was an Austrian entrepreneur and politician. In 1897 he married Countess Maria zu Aichelburg and bought the Hochscharten Castle near Waizenkirchen in Upper Austria. He was the town's mayor for many years and held many functions in the agricultural and economic sectors. Coreth served in the front during World War I and was the holder of numerous war awards. In the 1930s he was a close confidante of Starhemberg and a functionary of the Home Guard . In 1934 he became a member of the Austrian Council of State and the Bundestag.
  • Siegmund Niklaus Freiherr von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo , Upper Austrian government councilor (* 1668, † 1715) and married Anna Maria Müllerin zu Lebenberg on June 16, 1692. He enfeoffed the dilapidated ancestral castle in Coredo on May 19, 1717 within the relatives and completely rebuilt it. For this reason, the coat of arms of the baronial line from Coreth to Coredo and Rumo includes Coredo Castle on the main shield.
  • Leopold Joseph von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo , imperial baron, president of the Electorate of the Palatinate in Neuburg. He was married to the baroness Marie Ludowika von Servi.
  • Johann Joseph von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo, imperial baron and noble lord, Count von Starkenberg, kk Upper Austrian court chamber councilor, commander and city governor of Trient (* 1699; † 1782). He was married to the imperial baroness Eleonora von Sauter et Mennerth.
  • Alois Claudius Freiherr von Coreth zu Coredo und Rumo (* 1765 in Lawis; † May 16, 1822 in Innsbruck), city commander in Innsbruck and kk major. He was married to Anna Maria von Prechter (* 1775 in Altenburg; † January 18, 1842 in Innsbruck). Alois Claudius sold the ancestral castle to the count's line, who is still the owner of the castle today.
  • Alois Romedius Johann, high-born lord, old imperial baron and pennant of Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo (born December 17, 1806 in Chrudim, Bohemia; † March 12, 1881 in Innsbruck) was city commander in Innsbruck, erbländ. Austrian Major of the Kaiser Jäger Regiment, owner of the Military Merit Cross and the War Medal, Lord and Farmer in Tyrol. He was married to Anna Griess (born July 3, 1827 in Feldkirch; † October 18, 1899 in Feldkirch).
  • Emerich Coreth Count of Coreth zu Coredo und Starkenberg (born August 10, 1919 in Raabs an der Thaya; † September 1, 2006 in Innsbruck) was an Austrian Catholic theologian and philosopher. Emerich Coreth was attributed to Neuthomism, because he founded metaphysics because of his thinking, which in the 20th century in confrontation with Immanuel Kant and more recent philosophers. He was best known for his works on the history of philosophy, which deal with the philosophy of the 17th to the 20th century, mostly endeavoring to present it objectively. He became a Jesuit in 1937 and studied philosophy and theology in Pullach and Innsbruck, where he received his doctorate in 1948. theol. PhD. At the Gregoriana he was promoted to Dr. phil. PhD. From 1950 he taught at the theological faculty of the University of Innsbruck, from 1955 until his retirement in 1989 as full professor of Christian philosophy. From 1961 to 1967 Count Coreth was rector of the Jesuit College in Innsbruck, from 1969 to 1971 rector of the university and from 1972 to 1977 provincial of the Austrian Jesuit Province. In 1972 he came to the convention of the Kösener Corps in Würzburg with the Seniors' Convent in Innsbruck. He has received various honors for his work beyond the university, e.g. B. the Cardinal Innitzer Prize (1988).

Web links

Commons : Coreth family  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Adler: YEARBOOK OF THE KK HERALDISCHEN GESELLSCHAFT. In: https://archive.org/stream/neuesjahrbuch10adlgoog/neuesjahrbuch10adlgoog_djvu.txt . 1899, Retrieved December 4, 2017 .
  2. a b c Adler: YEARBOOK OF THE KK HERALDISCHEN GESELLSCHAFT. Adler, 1899, Retrieved December 4, 2017 .
  3. a b c d New Adeliches Wappenwerk: Gender and coat of arms descriptions for the Tyroffischen new aristocratic Wappenwerk , 1st volume, Issue 4, Verlag des Conrad Tyroffschen Wappencomtoirs, Nuremberg 1805, S. 97 ff.
  4. ^ A b c Ernst Heinrich Kneschke: German count houses of the present: in heraldic, historical and genealogical relation. 1. Volume, AK, Verlag TO Weigel, Leipzig 1852, p. 166 f.
  5. Coret - Castel Coredo. In: https://www.coret.org/cc/res/castelcoredo.php . Retrieved December 4, 2017 .
  6. Hans Friedrich von Ehrenkrook, Deutsches Adelsarchiv, Committee for Nobility Law Issues of the German Nobility Associations, German Nobility Law Committee: “Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels”, Volume 58, Verlag Ostsee, CA Starke., Limburg ad Lahn, 1974, p. 13
  7. Walter von Hueck (ed.): "Adelslexikon" - Stiftung Deutsches Adelsarchiv (GHdA), edited under the supervision of the German Nobility Law Committee, Volume 2, Boo-Don, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg an der Lahn 1972, p. 340 f.
  8. a b Coreth , Adelslexikon, coresno.com-
  9. ^ A b Karl Friedrich Frank: Elevations of rank and acts of grace for the German Empire and the Austrian hereditary lands up to 1806 , Vol. 1, AE, Senftenegg Castle, page 194
  10. ^ Gotha: Justus Perthus: Freiherrliches Taschenbuch. In: Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Freiherrlichen houses for the year 1871, one and twentieth year. 1871, Retrieved October 15, 2017 .
  11. Starke Verlag (ed.): Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels . 1959th edition. Complete series of tape 21 , October 15, 2017, p. 86 .
  12. Gothaisches Genealogisches Taschenbuch der Freiherrlichen Häuser . 1861-1937 edition.
  13. Otto Titan Hefner: Register of the flourishing and dead nobility in Germany: Ed. some German nobles . Manz, 1860 ( google.ch [accessed October 16, 2017]).
  14. Online Adelslexikon 1648-1918. Retrieved May 7, 2018 .
  15. Conrad TYROFF, Johann Christian SIEBENKEES : Gender and coat of arms descriptions [by JC Siebenkees] to the Tyroffischen new noble coat of arms. Book I-XVI. published by the Konrad Tyroffischen Wappencomtoir, 1791 ( google.ch [accessed on October 16, 2017]).
  16. ^ Castel Coredo. Retrieved December 4, 2017 .
  17. a b Starke Verlag (ed.): Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels . 1959th edition. Complete series volume 21.
  18. ^ Hugo Freiherr von Coreth zu Coredo and Rumo geb. 12 Jun 1849 Innsbruck died: Stammreihen.de. (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on May 8, 2018 ; accessed on May 7, 2018 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / Stammreihen.de
  19. ^ Coreth floristry supplies. Retrieved April 17, 2018 .
  20. CA Starke Verlag (ed.): Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels, Freiherrl. Houses, Volume III, 1959, Complete Series 21 . Pages 86 - 90.
  21. a b Impoverishment of the nobility in Tyrol . In: Szlachta Wiki . ( wikia.com [accessed February 20, 2018]).
  22. Anna Coreth at http://www.legion-mariens.at , accessed on May 13, 2018
  23. Trentino: Trentino - Castles-Palaces. In: https://www.trentino.com/de/highlights/burgen-schloesser/ . Retrieved December 4, 2017 .
  24. Visitvaldino: Palaces and castles in Trentino. Retrieved December 4, 2017 .
  25. ^ Commune Conta: Castel Flavon. In: http://www.comune.conta.tn.it/Territorio/Cosa-visitare2/A-Flavon/Castello-di-Flavon . Retrieved December 4, 2017 .
  26. SchlösserRundschau.de. Retrieved December 5, 2017 .
  27. The Koreth Inn. Retrieved February 20, 2018 .
  28. ^ Ottakringer Freihof in the Vienna History Wiki of the City of Vienna
  29. a b Johann Siebmacher, Otto Titan von Hefner, Friedrich Heyer von Rosenfeld: J. Siebmacher's large and general book of arms, volume 4 The nobility of the ducal county of Tyrol. , 1st edition, Verlag Bauer & Raspe, 1859, entry Coreth (Grafen, Freiherrn und Ritter) , p. 4, column 2 ( Google eBook, complete view ).
  30. http://www.coresno.com/index.php/genealogie/117-gra-geschichte/1880-gra-nordtirol-salzmaier
  31. ^ Antonio Schmidt-Brentano: The kk or kuk Generalität 1816–1918, Austrian State Archives, 1907, p. 29
  32. ^ Theodor von Sosnosky: Franz Ferdinand: Archduke and Heir to the Throne: Biography . Diplomica Verlag, 2018, ISBN 978-3-96337-029-8 ( google.ch [accessed June 17, 2019]).
  33. ^ Genealogical handbook of the nobility . In: Volumes 10, 21, 40, 58 . Volumes 10, 21, 40, 58.
  34. Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the baronial houses . Perthes, 1873 ( google.ch [accessed May 30, 2018]).