Hatzenberg (noble family)

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Coat of arms of the Hatzenberger

The Hatzenberg (Haetzenberg, Hatzenberg von Cronberg) were a Lower Austrian noble family, which in 1593 was accepted into the imperial knighthood and 1604 into the Lower Austrian knighthood and raised to the baron status in 1715.

history

Jakob Hatzenberger was an imperial court servant, his sons Philipp, Johann Baptist, Peter and Heinrich were ennobled by Ferdinand I in 1559 . In 1593 Johann Ernst Hatzenberger was accepted by Rudolf II into the imperial knighthood with Hatzenberg von Cronberg and in 1604 under the new nö knights. With Franz Joseph Freiherr von Hatzenberg, kk Rittmeister, this line died out on September 4, 1776.

Personalities

  • Maria Viktoria (monastery name), daughter of Johann Ernst Hatzenberger, 1632 abbess of St. Augustin at the Gate of Heaven in Vienna
  • Johann Ernest I von Hatzenberg and Cronberg († 1657), 1645 nö Landrechts assessor, 1654–57 ordinator of the knighthood, Lord von Immendorf (municipality of Wullersdorf) . Whose first son was
  • Johann Ernest II von Hatzenberg and Cronberg († 1717), nö Landrechts assessor, 1685 regimental councilor, 1693–99 ordained knight, then in the committee, 1713–1717 Landuntermarschall, Oberst-Hofstabelmeister of Josef I and Karl VI., 1715 elevated to baron, but no longer assumed; buried in the Augustiner Hofkirche in Vienna. Mr. von Immendorf.
  • Albrecht Ignaz von Hatzenberg and Cronberg († 1734), son of Johann Ernest I, Rittmeister zu Feld, kaiserl. Pre-cutter and cupbearer, 1698 director of the Lower Austrian Landscape Knight Academy, 1702 Raitherr, 1710–1716 nö Knightly Ordinance, also on the Lordship Committee.

coat of arms

The original coat of arms has always been retained: in a red shield a jumping white greyhound with a gold collar and gold crown of prongs on his head, standing with his rear feet on a green hill. Crowned open tournament helmet with the dog jumping up, but without a crown; White and red helmet cover.

literature

  • Franz K. Wissgrill, scene of the rural Lower Austrian nobility from the lordship and knighthood ..., Volume 4, Vienna 1800, pp. 203-206

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Viktor Bibl, The Catholic and Protestant Estates in Lower Austria ..., in the yearbook for regional studies of Lower Austria 1903, p. 320; the imperial court insisted on a Catholic, the Protestant Ferdinand von Hohenfeld was no longer appointed in 1654
  2. ^ Anton Mayr, The Estates Academy in Vienna , in sheets of the Association for Regional Studies, 1888, pp. 311–354; indicates 1696-1701