Haiden to Guntramsdorf

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Coat of arms of the knight Haiden von Gundersdorf

The Haiden zu Guntramsdorf (also Hayden, Haidn zu Gundersdorf) were a Viennese aristocratic family, which exercised the inheritance and lower leg office of Lower Austria and which went out around 1620.

history

In 1381 a document from Rudolph von Walsee named Hanns Haidn as councilor and treasurer of the city of Vienna. He had two sons: Chunrad (Conrad) and Heinrich. Chunrad († 1450) owned the Stainhof in Lower Austria (today Neusteinhof ), his tombstone is in St. Stephen's Cathedral. His grandson Christoph Haiden was mayor of Vienna from 1551 to 1553 and city judge from 1553 to 1556.

Heinrich I († before 1454) was Lord of Gundernstorf ( Guntramsdorf ) from 1447 and soon after that of Achau . In 1454 his widow ruled Guntramsdorf. Her son Lorenz (Laurenz) was city judge in 1460 and 1464 and mayor of Vienna from 1479 to 1485. He had a son and 14 daughters with two wives. Clara was the lady in waiting for Queen Beatrix of Hungary.

Heinrich II zu Achau and Gundersdorff, the only son, was Doctor iuris, real councilor and through his wife Erb-Unterschenk of Austria. He had three sons and is buried in Guntramsdorf.

Karl zu Achau u. G. was councilor and colonel master master in Hungary for Emperor Maximilian II . He was married four times and had three sons: Ernst, Heinrich and Maximilian.

Maximilian was Raitdiener in the Lower Austrian Chamber in 1594, model master in 1596 and died in Mödling in 1597 . Ernst and Heinrich sold their Gülten to Allendt ( Alland ) in 1599 . Ernst zu Achau u. G. had a son Karl, who died as a minor soon after his father 1613-1618. This knightly family ended with him.

Personalities

coat of arms

Coat of arms of the Haiden zu Gundersdorf (Guntramsdorf)

In a black shield is a man without hands with curled white hair, a short gray beard, in a long golden dress, which is studded with black buttons down the middle, with a wide ermine collar open at the front, but with a closed one on his head covered with pearls and precious stones adorned golden royal crown, from which at both ends a golden flying ribbon hangs down. Above the shield on a crowned open tournament helmet appears the bust of the above-described crowned man dressed in gold, but above whose crown a peacock's tail is erected here. The helmet cover on both sides is gold and black.

literature

  • Franz Karl Wissgrill, Karl von Odelga: scene of the rural Lower Austrian nobility from… Volume 4, Vienna 1800, pp. 60–64.
  • Richard Perger: The Haiden of Guntramsdorf. In: Yearbook of the Heraldic-Genealogical Society "Adler". 3. Volume 7 (1967-1970), pp. 95-127.
  • Géza Pálffy : Together against the Ottomans - expansion and functions of the border fortresses in Hungary in the 16th and 17th centuries. Exhibition catalog of the Austrian State Archives. Budapest / Vienna 2001.

Web links

Commons : Haiden zu Guntramsdorf family  - Collection of images, videos and audio files