Hacque (noble family)

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The Hacqué (also Hacque, Hakhy) come from the Spanish Netherlands and came to Austria around 1650. Ludwig von Hacqué was accepted on August 5, 1744 under the new Lower Austrian and in 1752 under the old noble families.

history

Johann Baptist Hacqué, born in Antwerp , came to Austria and was the imperial book printer in Vienna from 1659 to 1663. His grandson Peter von Hacqué was initially Emperor Joseph I's court chamberlain and because he provided the emperor with several hundred thousand guilders loans, he was given to Charles VI. on April 27, 1715 appointed to the real kk Hofkammer-Rath . With his only son Ludwig von Hacqué, most recently Lower Austria sub-marshal, this knightly family went out.

Personalities

  • Johann Baptist Hacqué (around 1634–1678), imperial court printer
  • Ludwig von Hacqué (before 1719 – after 1802), kk Untersilberkämmerer, Lower Austrian sub-marshal and president of the knighthood

coat of arms

The coat of arms is a shield divided across the middle, the upper half of which is a white or silver field, in which a right-facing red lion appears with an outstretched red tongue and a double tail opened behind him, the lower half is a black field with three silver spandrels, which are put together in a point at the edge below. Above the shield is adorned with two crowned open helmets; on the front to the right the red lion is placed between two silver buffalo horns; On the other helmet on the left stands a high plume of black and white ostrich feathers. The helmet cover is mixed silver and red on the right, silver and black on the left.

literature

  • Franz K. Wissgrill, scene of the rural Lower Austrian nobility from the lordship and knighthood ..., Volume 4, Vienna 1800, pp. 31–33