Eibiswald (noble family)

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Family coat of arms of those of Eibeswaldt (Eibiswald) according to Siebmacher's Wappenbuch (037), Austrian nobility, isolated
Dominion Eibiswald, after Vischer, Topographia Ducatus Stiria, 052
Owned by those von Eibiswald (noble family): Dornhofen Castle in the municipality of Eggersdorf near Graz ( Graz-Umgebung district , Styria , Austria ).

The family of those von Eibiswald (including gentlemen and barons of Eybiswald, Eybeswaldt, Eibeswald, Eibeswaldt, Eibiswald , Eibiswald or Eibiswalder ) was an old Styrian baron family with the same ancestral seat Schloss Eibiswald in the market town of Eibiswald in Austria and belonged to the Austrian municipality of Eibiswald in Styria or Lower Austrian country nobility.

history

Origin and possessions

The origin of the old Styrian barons begins with the enfeoffment of the Eibiswald Castle ( Eibiswald , Styria , Austria ). The line of trunks begins with Buswald von Eibiswald , whose descendant Johann von Eibiswald acquired Arndorf and Edelbach possessions in Lower Austria in 1527 . Johann was married to Rosina von Herberstein (noble family) , with whom he fathered two sons and daughters. He died on February 7, 1532 in Vienna and was buried in the former collegiate church of St. Dorothea .

Paul von Eibiswald , a descendant, acquired Burgstall Castle in 1476 and died in the same year. Paul's sons accepted the fief from the emperor in 1478. In the 16th century, Georg von Eibiswald expanded Burgstall Castle to become Burgstall Castle in the Renaissance style, which belonged to the Eibiswald rulership from 1638 to 1799 and was sold by the Barons of Eibiswald to Count Schrottenbach .

The Palais Lamberg (Graz) was sold by Wilhelm von Trauttmansdorff from the von Trauttmansdorff family in 1553 to Georg Breuner Freiherr von Stübing and Rabenstein from the Austrian von Breuner family, who in turn tore it down. The Palais Lamberg was rebuilt under master mason Stefan de Adriano in 1564/65 and around 1581 the barons of Eibiswald took over the property. Under the Eibiswalders, Domenico Torre continued to rebuild the palace in 1654 . When Maria Isabelle von Eibiswald was married to Johann Graf Lamberg in 1689 , it came into the possession of the von Lambergs (noble family) through marriage . Anna Lucia Countess Lamberg rebuilt the town house in the following years of 1720.

The lords of Eibiswald were not only owners of Burgstall and Palais Lamberg in Graz , but also of Oberlorenzen , Eibiswald , Thürn , Weyer (Rothleiten) , Tausendlust , Weissenegg (Styria) , Wildon (castle ruins) , Peggau , Eybesfeld , Dornhofen , Gamlitz ( Obergamlitz) , Limberg (southern Styria) and Trautenburg .

Nobilitations and dynastic marriages

The noble family belonged to the Styrian nobility and was raised to the baron status at that time and became extinct in Austria with the death of Wolf Maximilian Freiherr von Eibiswald in 1673 . Members of the family are said to have been known outside of Styria in 1719. They belonged to the Austrian aristocracy or Lower Austrian country nobility and entered into dynastic marriages a. a. with daughters of those von Herberstein (noble family).

Name bearer

Among the lords of Eibiswald and barons of Eibiswald there were the following namesake:

  • Amelreich von Eibiswald
  • Christof Freiherr von Eibiswald
  • Christof and Georg von Eibiswald
  • Georg von Eibiswald
  • Georg Amelreich Freiherr von Eibiswald
  • Gottfried Freiherr von Eibiswald
  • Hans von Eibiswald
  • Maria Isabelle von Eibiswald
  • Maria Rosina Freiin von Eibiswald
  • Paul von Eibiswald
  • Paul Hartmann Freiherr von Eibiswald
  • Siegmund von Eibiswald
  • Sigmund von Eibiswald
  • Veit Siegmund Freiherr von Eibiswald
  • Wilhelm von Eibiswald
  • Wolf Maximilian Freiherr von Eibiswald

coat of arms

Family
coat of arms of those from Eibiswald (Eybeswaldt) after Zacharias Bartsch (1567), Styrian coat of arms book

Blasonierung : The gemehrte crest of those of Eybiswaldt evident after Siebmachers crests squared with red heart shield , wherein two crossed gold grip hostages [by Franz Karl Wißgrill : fly whisk ] are; 1. in black a golden crossbar, 2. in red a silver diagonal bar, set with three silver clovers, 3. in gold a rising crowned black loess looking inward, 4. in red a pomegranate tree hung with fruits; three crowned helmets; two buffalo horns with three clovers of different colors each , the right one gold, the left black; 2. a red eagle wing in front decorated with the two crossed hostages; 3. a bush covered with five black ostrich feathers, with a shield divided by silver over red; the helmet covers right gold, black, left silver and red.

literature

  • Johann Evang. Kirnbauer von Erzstätt : The Lower Austrian rural nobility. Panels, A – R. In: J. Siebmacher's large and general book of arms . Volume 4. Bauer and Raspe, Nuremberg 1909, plate 43.
  • Johann Evang. Kirnbauer von Erzstätt: The Lower Austrian rural nobility. Text, A – R. In: J. Siebmacher's large and general book of arms . Volume 4. Bauer and Raspe, Nuremberg 1909, 87.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e A-R, Text - GDZ. Retrieved March 7, 2019 .
  2. a b c d archive. Retrieved March 7, 2019 .
  3. a b c d e f archive. Retrieved March 7, 2019 .
  4. Archive. Retrieved March 7, 2019 .
  5. Archive. Retrieved March 7, 2019 .
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  16. Archive. Retrieved March 7, 2019 .