Eleonora Maria Rosalia of Liechtenstein

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Eleonora Maria Rosalia von Liechtenstein , after her marriage, Eleonora Maria Rosalia von Eggenberg (born 1647 ; died on August 4, 1704 in Graz ) was a Princess of Liechtenstein and Duchess of Troppau and Jägerndorf by birth .

She was the daughter of Karl Eusebius von Liechtenstein and his wife Johanna Beatrix von Dietrichstein-Nikolsburg . On July 4, 1666, she married Prince Johann Seyfried von Eggenberg (1644–1713). The couple had several children, including the first son and successor to his father, Johann Anton II von Eggenberg (1669–1716).

Voluntarily cracked pomegranate apple of the Christian Samaritan

Under her name as Eleonora Maria Rosalia, Duchess of Troppau and Jägerndorf , a work was first published in Vienna in 1695, printed by master printer Leopold Voigt, with folk medical prescriptions, home remedies and dietary regulations, which was entitled "The Christian Samaritan's Garnet Apple Voluntarily Opened " wore. This collection, based on a Koch and Artzney book published anonymously as early as 1686 , was very successful and was therefore reprinted several times and further revised in the process; In 1741 the 12th edition appeared in Vienna. Reprints from other cities are also known. The work contained over 1700 recipes; an additional book in the fourth edition also contained 500 cooking recipes. The publisher Thomas Fritsch in Leipzig also published an alleged “second part” of the “ pomegranate ” in 1713 , but it was written by Georg Adam Seelig, a doctor practicing there, and was also published several times.

“The Christian Samaritan's Garnet Apffel voluntarily jumped open” is one of the early printed cookbooks from Graz , which are to be presented in digitized form on the cookbook platform of the University of Graz , supplemented by registers, possibly also by transcriptions and glossaries of the Styrian and Austrian kitchen languages.

literature

  • Michael Sachs: The so-called pharmacopoeia of Eleonora Maria Rosalia, Duchess of Troppau and Jägerndorf: a recipe collection of Princess Eleonora Maria Rosalia von Eggenberg (1647–1703) born in 1695 under the title 'Freywillig-auffsprunger Granat-Apffel'. Princess of Liechtenstein, Duchess of Jägerndorf and Troppau. In: Würzburg medical history reports. Volume 14, 1996, pp. 45-62.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Hanns Bohatta: Princess Eleonore of Liechtenstein and her pomegranate. A bibliographical attempt. In: Yearbook of the Historical Association for the Principality of Liechtenstein, 1933. Digitized
  2. Eleonora Maria Rosalia, Duchess of Crummau and Princess of Eckenberg: Freywillig-auffsprunger Granat-Apffel / Deß Christian Samaritans / Or: Out of Christian love of the neighbor, Gehaimbnus Viler opened excellent / especially proven means and miracle-haylsamen doctors against different conditions and evil Human body and life. [...]. Digitized
  3. Digitized version of the 12th edition
  4. Georg Adam Seelig: Of the voluntarily cracked pomegranate apple of the Christian Samaritan Other part: or From the Christian love of the next, the secrets of many excellently proven Artzneyen [...]. Leipzig (Thomas Fritsch) 1727.
  5. Introduction. uni-graz.at, accessed on December 22, 2018 .