Johann Georg von Künigl

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Count Johann Georg von Künigl zu Ehrenburg , Freiherr zu Warth (born March 23, 1628 in Ehrenburg, † August 18, 1697 in Innsbruck ) was a real privy councilor and governor of Tyrol .

Life

Johann Georg was the eldest son of Veit Ernst Graf Künigl, Freiherr von Ehrenburg and Warth (1595–1664), Archducal Privy Councilor and Chamberlain, Erbland-Truchseß of Tyrol, and his wife Kunigunde Elisabeth Freiin zu Königsegg-Aulendorf (1601–1663) .

Ferdinand Karl (Austria-Tyrol) gave him the rule of Egloffen in Swabia ( Eglisau Castle ? Near Schaffhausen) and raised his father Veit and him to the hereditary Austrian count in 1662. After the death of his father, Johann Georg was enfeoffed on September 3, 1664 by Sigismund Franz with the hereditary land office of the County of Tyrol, Emperor Leopold I confirmed him in 1667 in this hereditary land office. Johann Georg Graf Künigl was administrator from March 1675 (for his predecessor Johann Dominicus Graf von Wolkenstein-Trostburg) and from 1676 to 1695 governor of the (princes) county of Tyrol. His successor was his son Johann Georg Sebastian .

Johann Georg Graf von Künigl married Maria Anna Wilhelmine von Vitzthum von Eckstädt (* August 1640; † January 1, 1697 Innsbruck), daughter of August Vitzthum von Eckstädt (* 1596; † July 27, 1640) and on October 16, 1656 in Kisslegg the Susanna Countess Khuen von Belasy zu Liechtenberg and Gandeck (* 1610; † November 15, 1669). The couple had ten children:

Karl Joseph (1658–1698) was Canon of Trient, Sigmund Anton (1661–1677) Canon of Bressanone and Kaspar Ignaz (1672–1747) was Prince-Bishop of Brixen. Maria Claudia (1669–1710) imperial court lady married Leopold Mathias Fürst von Lamberg , Landgrave of Leuchtenberg (1667–1711), head stable master of Emperor Joseph I.

By Johann Georg Sebastian (1663–1739), kk Geh. Rath, governor in Tyrol, the Tyrolean and the Bohemian line descend. The line based on Thomas Bernhard (1675–1732) expired as early as 1801.

See also

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. New genealogical Reich and State Handbook 1779 p. 140 f
  2. Anton Emmert: Historical representation of the hereditary land offices in the ducal county of Tyrol and the associated hereditary homages on the occasion of the hereditary homage ceremony in 1838 , Innsbruck, p. 142, (see also 48, 148) limited preview in the Google book search
  3. ^ The transparent houses in Europe ; ... 13th edition, Regensburg 1725, p. 909 restricted preview in the Google book search