List of provincial presidents and governors of Salzburg

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State coat of arms

The list of chancellors, district chiefs, provincial presidents and provincial governors gives an overview of the highest politicians and officials in the state of Salzburg .

During this time, the rulers were the incumbent Prince Archbishops of Salzburg , then Ferdinand, Duke and Elector of Salzburg , the ruling Duke of Salzburg (also Emperor of Austria ), 1809–1810 Napoléon , Emperor of the French, and 1806–1815 Maximilian I. Joseph, King of Bavaria , who had granted himself the dignity of Duke and Prince of Salzburg.

Since 1920, the formal head of state has been the incumbent Austrian Federal President .

Court councilors and court chancellors of the Salzburg diocese (until 1803)

Councilors and court chancellors of the Archdiocese of Salzburg (until 1648)

The medieval offices of treasurer , marshal , Schenk and Truchseß were given to the dukes of Bavaria (treasurer), Styria (marshal), Austria (Schenk) and Carinthia (Truchseß), who in turn entrusted ministerials as inheritance. They are Councilor order still led the 1524th Until the middle of the 14th century, the head of the court chancellery only had the title of proto notary or chief clerk, the title of chancellor is first attested in 1354. In the late Middle Ages, it was mostly the bishops on the Chiemsee (as auxiliary bishop in Salzburg) who held the office of court chancellor . The connection with the office of the feudal provost (board of directors of the Lehenhof) is known from the 15th century. In the court chancellery regulations of 1561, the office of the court chancellor and the court director are connected as heads of the court chancellery. In 1588 Wolf Dietrich set up the office of President of the Court Chamber . In 1592 the rules of the court chancellery were adapted to the management of the court council and a secret chancellery was created for state and cabinet affairs, imperial and district affairs.

(the following list is incomplete)
  • Friedrich Gren
    Term of office: around 1438
  • Bernhard von Kraiburg [Kreyburg] (* 1412 in Kraiburg am Inn, † 1477 in Herrenchiemsee)
    Term of office: 1463–1467
    Chancellor. then Bishop of Chiemsee
  • Georg Altdorfer (* 1437 in Landshut, † 1495 in Salzburg)
    Term of office: around 1488
    as Bishop of Chiemsee
  • Wolfgang Pachhaimer [Pachaimer]
    Term of office: 1508 - around 1511
    Protonotary. First layman as Chancellor
  • Hieronymus von Baldung (? † 1539 in Tyrol)
    Term of office: 1524–1526
    ? subsequently Chancellor of Tyrol
  • Jerome beginning
    Term of office: under Archbishop Ernst of Bavaria (1540–1554)
  • Sebastian Höflinger [also: Sigmund] (* 1533, † November 28, 1584)
    Term of office: 1556? –1573 under the Archbishops Ernst, Michael von Kuenburg (1554–1560) and Jakob von Kuen-Belasy (1560–1586)
    both rights Dr .; advice
  • Simon Paurs
    Term of office: from 1580
    both rights Dr., protonotary, fiefdom, councilor and chancellor
  • Balthasar Höfinger
    both rights Dr. and advice
  • Johann Gyster
    Term of office: under Archbishop Wolf Dietrich (1587–1612)
    both rights Dr. and advice
  • Kaspar Gröpper
    secret council and chancellor
  • Georg Khiell
    Term of office: from 1609
    Council, Vice Chancellor and Fiefdom
  • Johann Grueber
    Vice Chancellor
  • Bartlmä Thurner
    from 1613
    both rights licentiate and councilor
  • Stephan Feyertag
    both rights Dr. and advice

Councilor and court chancellor of the Prince Archbishopric of Salzburg (1648 to 1803)

  • May 15 - October 24, 1648: Peace of Westphalia , the archbishopric is recognized as a sovereign country with the rank of a principality

Government of the Electorate of Salzburg (1803 to 1806)

Commissioner / Minister of State
  1. Heinrich Freiherr von Krumpipen (* 1738, † 1811 Stuttgart)
    Term of office: 1803 - October 10, 1803
    Commissioner for taking possession
  2. Marchese Federigo Manfredini (* 1743; † 1829)
    Term of office: 1803 - February 1806
    Conducting Minister of State, remained in office during the occupation
Court Chancellor

Military governors of the 1st French occupation (1805)

  1. Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte (* 1763 in Pau, France, † 1844 in Stockholm as Karl XIV. John of Sweden / Karl III. John of Norway)
    Term of office: October 30, 1805 - November 9, 1805
    French Marshal
  2. Franz Count of Minuzzi
    Term of office: November 9, 1805 - December 6, 1805
    Bavarian Major General
  3. Michel Ney (* 1769 in Saarlouis, † 1815 in Paris)
    Term of office: December 6, 1805 - 1806
    French Marshal

State management of the Duchy of Salzburg (1806 to 1816)

Kk commissioners and provincial presidents of the Duchy of Salzburg (1806 to 1809)

  1. Ferdinand Count von Bissingen and Nippenburg (* 1749 in Wilten, Tyrol; † 1831 ibid)
    Term of office: February 1806 - July 1807
    Extraordinary Commissioner
  2. Christian Graf von Aicholt (* 1754; † 1838)
    Term of office: July 3, 1807 - April 1809
    carried the official title of provisional presidium administrator of the Salzburg state government (first place among the four councilors of the five-member state government in which the post of president was vacant)

Governors and District Presidents of the French State of Salzburg (1809/1810)

  • April 6, 1809: Declaration of war in the Fourth Coalition War
  • April 29, 1809: French army occupies the city of Salzburg
  • October 14, 1809: Peace of Schönbrunn , Duchy of Salzburg (including the Berchtesgadener Land) to Napoléon as Land Salzburg ( French Pays de Salzbourg )
Military governors
  1. Georges Baron Kister (* 1755 Saargemünd [Sarreguemines], Lorraine, † 1832 Saint-Avold, Lorraine)
    Term of office: 1809 - April 15, 1810
  2. Pierre-Paul Fourn (* 1776 in Limoux; †?)
    Term of office: Apr 1810 - 18 Aug 1810
    Commander in Ried
Directors
  1. Jules Jean-Baptiste Baron Anglès (* 1778; † 1828)
    Term of office: May 10, 1809 - August 6, 1809
  2. Camille Périer (* 1781; † 1844)
    Term of office: August 1809 - January 1810
  3. Pierre-Paul Fourn
    Term of office: January 1810 - May 30, 1810
    then governor
  4. Menzeau
    Term of office: May 30, 1810 - June 1810
  5. Chevalier Thomas
    Term of office: June 14, 1810 - September 26, 1810
President
  1. Josef Felner (* 1769 St. Veit im Pongau, † 1850 Vienna?)
    Term of office: April 1809 - May 1809
    provisional president of the Salzburg provincial government
  1. Sigmund Christoph Graf von Zeil and Trauchburg (* 1754 in Munich, † 1814 in Salzburg)
    Term of office: May 1809 - October 10, 1810
    President of the General Regional Administration ( French administration générale du pays de Salzburg ); Prince-Bishop of Chiemsee, also clerical vicar general

Royal Bavarian Administration of the Salzach district (1810 to 1816)

  • February 28, 1810: Treaty of Paris : Napoléon exchanges territory with the Kingdom of Bavaria, Land Salzburg to Bavaria (seizure of ownership effective at the end of September 1810)

Governor General for the newly won areas for Bavaria (Inn and Salzach district) was Ludwig of Bavaria, later King Ludwig I.

General District Commissioner
  1. Carl Graf von Preysing (* 1767 Munich, † 1827 Brannenburg Castle)
    September 30, 1810 - May 1, 1816
    previously court commissioner for the preparation of the assumption of office
Government Director (Office Director)
  1. Arnold Friedrich von Mieg (* 1778 in Heidelberg, † 1842 Frankfurt / Main)
    September 30, 1810 - May 1, 1816
     

Kk district chiefs of the Salzburg district (1816 to 1849)

  • June 3, 1814: Paris Treaty (separate treaty with Bavaria on the return of Salzburg east and west of the Inn without Berchtesgaden, and other territorial compensation)
  • September 18, 1814 - June 9, 1815: Congress of Vienna (reorganization of Europe)
  • April 14, 1816: Munich State Treaty (State Treaty between Bavaria and Austria, return without Berchtesgaden and Rupertiwinkel)
  • May 1, 1816: Official takeover in Salzburg
  • April 30, 1818: Bavarian. Royal All Assignment patent for the Innviertel. Hausruckviertel. the Amt of Vils and the Principality of Salzburg (execution of the contract of April 14, 1816)
Bernhard Gottlieb Baron von Hingenau (1759–1833)
President of the state government of Austria ob der Enns, as imperial court commissioner for the takeover in April 1816
  1. Karl Joseph Anton Count Welsperg von Primör and Raitenau (1779–1873)
    Term of office: May 1, 1816 - 1825
  2. Johann Nepomuk Freiherr von Stiebar (1791 – unknown)
    Term of office: 1825-1831
  3. Albert Count of Montecuccoli-Laderchi (1802-1852)
    Term of office: 1831-1838
  4. Franz Count Mercandiu
    Term of office: 1838
  5. Leopold Friedrich Graf Stolberg-Stolberg (1799–1840)
    Term of office: 1838-1840
  6. Gustav Ignaz Graf Chorinsky von Ledske (1806–1873)
    Term of office: 1840 - late 1849

Imperial and Royal Presidents and Governors of the Crown Land of Salzburg (1849/50 to 1918)

The country's president was a state leader the direct representative of the emperor and his government in Vienna and thus the responsible head of government of the country. In most of the other crown lands, his function was designated as governor . According to the Imperial Constitution for the Austrian Empire ( Octroyed March Constitution ), Imperial Patent of March 4, 1849, from 1861 according to the Basic Law on Imperial Representation of February 26, 1861 as part of the February Patent , and from 1867 also after the December Constitution for Cisleithanien , the state president became appointed and dismissed by the emperor. The state regulations for the Duchy of Salzburg of February 26, 1861 were attached to the February patent . On the basis of the December constitution, the law on the establishment of political administrative authorities was passed on May 19, 1868.

The governor appointed by the emperor from the middle of the state parliament was then chairman of the state parliament and its executive committee, called the state committee . In this body the state's own assets were administered and state laws were prepared in those few matters in which the December constitution had given the crown lands a free hand.

  • January 1, 1850: Crown Land Duchy of Salzburg with its own administration
  • January 1, 1860 - April 1860: After Austria's military defeats in Italy in 1859 ( Sardinian War , Solferino ), the Crown Land of Salzburg was briefly subordinated to the Lieutenancy in Austria on the Enns for reasons of savings.
  • October 20, 1860 Statute on the state representation (with the October diploma ): Establishment of a Salzburg state parliament, with the governor as chairman
  • February 28, 1861: State regulations and state election regulations ( February patent )
  • March 29, 1861: Formal re-establishment of independent state authorities through imperial handwriting
  • 8/15 May 1861: Establishment of a separate regional authority for the Duchy of Salzburg

State presidents / state chiefs (1850 to 1918)

  1. Friedrich Graf Herberstein (1810–1861)
    Term of office: May 1, 1850 - 1852
  2. Karl Prince Lobkowitz (1814–1879)
    Term of office: 1852 - 1855
  3. Otto Franz Graf Fünfkirchen (1800–1872)
    Term of office: 1855 - end of 1859
  4. ( Eduard Freiherr von Bach ) (1814-1884)
    Provisional co-administration as governor in Austria above the Enns: January 1, 1860 - April 1860
  5. Ernst Graf Gourcy-Droitaumont (1821–1870)
    Interim term of office: April 30, 1860 - July 11, 1861 (initially held the title of governor , from March 29, 1861 kk provincial president )
  6. Franz Freiherr von Spiegelfeld (1802–1885)
    Term of office: July 1861 - April 1863
  7. Eduard Graf Taaffe (1833–1895)
    Term of office: April 1863 - January 1867
  8. Karl Graf Coronini-Cronberg (1818–1910)
    Term of office: January 8, 1867 - September 22, 1869
  9. Ernst Graf Gourcy-Droitaumont (see above)
    Second term: September 30, 1869 - February 10, 1870
  10. Adolf Fürst Auersperg (1821–1885)
    Term of office: March 15, 1870 - November 25, 1871
  11. Sigmund Graf von Thun and Hohenstein (1827–1897)
    Term of office: 1872 - September 7, 1897
  12. Clement of Saint-Julien-Wallsee
    Term of office: 1897 - August 23, 1908
  13. Levin Graf Schaffgotsch (1854–1913)
    Term of office: 1908 - August 1, 1913
  14. Felix von Schmitt-Gasteiger (1865–1932)
    Term of office: 1913-1918

Governors (1861 to 1918)

(Chairwoman of the state parliament and state committee)

  1. Joseph Ritter von Weiß (1805-1887)
    Term of office: March 31, 1861 - September 20, 1872
  2. Hugo Raimund Count Lamberg (1833–1884)
    Term of office: September 30, 1872 - June 14, 1880
  3. Carl Graf Chorinsky (1838-1897)
    Term of office: June 17, 1880 - October 30, 1890
  4. Albert Schumacher (1844–1913)
    Term of office: September 21, 1890 - January 17, 1897
  5. Alois Winkler (1838-1925)
    Term of office: January 17, 1897 - December 29, 1902
  6. Albert Schumacher (see above)
    Second term: December 21, 1902 - July 21, 1909
  7. Alois Winkler (see above)
    Second term: from July 21, 1909
    remained in office even after the end of the war and the end of the monarchy

Governors in the state of Salzburg (1918/19 until today)

On October 30, 1918, the state of German Austria was founded, which was renamed the Republic of Austria on October 21, 1919 in connection with the peace treaty .

The country's leadership and administration, which was divided in the monarchy, was abolished in November 1918 and organized in the spirit of federalism from 1920 onwards . The term governor in its current scope has existed since November 10, 1920, the day the Austrian Federal Constitution came into force . It grants the governor a special position: as chairman of the state government elected by the state parliament and formal head of the state - and at the same time as a federal body, responsible to the respective federal minister in the indirect federal administration and therefore sworn by the federal president . Accordingly, he is the most important representative of state power at the state level.

Governors of Salzburg in the First Republic (1919 to 1938)

The time until annexation to Nazi Germany is referred to in Austria as the First Republic ; some authors do not include the corporate state dictatorship 1934–1938, when the rulers avoided the word republic.

The state was now one of the eight from 1920, with Burgenland from 1921 one of the nine federal states of the new republic. The republic was transformed into the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg Federal State of Austria (the corporate state) in 1934 . The state regulations remained largely unaffected, but no democratic elections were held until 1945. In 1936 all parties (social democracy and communists had long since been banned) were united in the Fatherland Front .

  1. Alois Winkler (* 1838 in Waidring near Lofer / Pinzgau; † 1925 in Salzburg)
    Term of office: until April 23, 1919
    third term, was (with a different scope of functions) from 1897 and from 1909 governor
  2. Oskar Meyer , CS
    Term of office: April 23, 1919 - May 4, 1922
  3. Franz Rehrl , CS / VF (* 1890 in Salzburg; † January 23, 1947 there)
    Term of office: May 4, 1922 - March 12, 1938

Reich Governor of the Reichsgau Salzburg in the German Empire (1938 to 1945)

From 1938 to 1945 Salzburg was part of the Ostmark (from 1939 Reichsgau) and from 1942 the Danube and Alpine Reichsgaue . During the country's membership of the German Reich , the Reichsstatthalter was the highest representative of the Berlin Reich government in the Reichsgau. The Reichsstatthalter was also the Gauleiter of the NSDAP party organization and was therefore usually referred to as such in his official government function.

  • March 12, 1938: Entry of German troops (Anschluss, formally completed on March 13, 1938)
  • May 4, 1945: The city of Salzburg was handed over to the Americans without a fight
  1. Anton Wintersteiger , NSDAP
    Term of office: March 13, 1938 - May 22, 1938
  2. Friedrich Rainer , NSDAP (* 1903 in Sankt Veit an der Glan, Carinthia; † July 19, 1947 in Laibach, Slovenia)
    Term of office: May 22, 1938 - November 29, 1941
  3. Gustav Adolf Scheel , NSDAP (* 1907 in Rosenberg / Baden, D; † March 25, 1979 in Hamburg)
    Term of office: November 29, 1941 - May 4, 1945

Governors of Salzburg in the Second Republic (since 1945)

Christian Stöckl Astrid Rössler Wilfried Haslauer junior Gabriele Burgstaller Gerhard Buchleitner Wolfgang Radlegger Herbert Moritz Karl Steinocher Franz Peyerl (Politiker, 1897) Wilfried Haslauer junior Gabriele Burgstaller Franz Schausberger Hans Katschthaler Wilfried Haslauer senior Hans Lechner Josef Klaus Josef Rehrl Albert Hochleitner Adolf Schemel

Since the restoration of Austria in 1945 one speaks of the Second Republic . 1945–1955 Salzburg was part of the US-American zone of occupation in Austria.

Because the former incumbent Gabi Burgstaller has stipulated, Landeshauptfrau to be called, it is called in Salzburg in the plural of provincial governors (not househusbands ).

  1. Adolf Schemel , ÖVP
    Term of office: May 23, 1945 - December 12, 1945
  2. Albert Hochleitner , ÖVP (* 1893 in Blühnbach near Werfen, Pongau; † May 8, 1964 Vienna)
    Term of office: December 12, 1945 - December 4, 1947
  3. Josef Rehrl , ÖVP (* 1895 in Salzburg; † 1960 there)
    Term of office: December 4, 1947 - December 1, 1949
  4. Josef Klaus , ÖVP (* 1910 in Mauthen, Carinthia; † 2001 in Vienna)
    Term of office: December 1, 1949 - April 17, 1961
  5. Hans Lechner , ÖVP (* 1913 in Graz, Styria, † 1994 in Salzburg)
    Term of office: April 17, 1961 - April 20, 1977
  6. Wilfried Haslauer Sr. , ÖVP (* 1926 in Salzburg; † October 23, 1992 ibid)
    Term of office: April 20, 1977 - May 2, 1989
  7. Hans Katschthaler , ÖVP (* 1933 in Embach bei Lend, Pinzgau; † July 5, 2012 in Anif)
    Term of office: May 2, 1989 - April 23, 1996
  8. Franz Schausberger , ÖVP (* 1950 in Steyr, Upper Austria)
    Term of office: April 24, 1996 - April 28, 2004
  9. Gabi Burgstaller , SPÖ (* 1963 in Penetzdorf, Upper Austria)
    Term of office: April 28, 2004 - June 19, 2013
  10. Wilfried Haslauer , ÖVP (* 1956 in Salzburg )
    Term of office: since June 19, 2013

See also

literature

Middle Ages and Early Modern Times:

  • Gerhard Ammerer : Constitution, administration and jurisdiction from Matthäus Lang to secularization (1519–1803) - aspects of the development of modern statehood. In: History of Salzburg. 2,1, 1988, pp. 325-374.
  • Heinz Dopsch: Law and Administration. In: History of Salzburg. 1,2, 1983, pp. 939-950 (Central Authorities).
  • Josef Karl Mayr: History of the Salzburg central authorities from the middle of the 13th to the end of the 16th century. Tl. 1–3, In: Communications from the Society for Salzburg Regional Studies. 64, pp. 1-44 (1924); 65, pp. 1-72 (1925); 66 (1926), pp. 1-62.

Individual evidence

Austrian Lands before 1918: Salzburg . Ben Cahoon: worldstatesmen.org , 2000
  1. Hofratsordnung 1524. Printed by Mayr 1925, p. 64 ff., Appendix No. 2.
  2. a b Heinz Dopsch: Salzburg, Ebf.e von (with Salzburger Eigenbm.ern Gurk, Seckau, Chiemsee, Lavant) . In: Courtyards and residences in the late medieval empire. A dynastic-topographical handbook (=  residency research . Volume 15.I ). Jan Thorbecke Verlag, Ostfildern 2003, ISBN 3-7995-4515-8 , B.3. Spiritual imperial princes / Ebf.e. , P. 484–495 , here p. 486 ( resikom.adw-goettingen.gwdg.de [PDF; accessed on October 10, 2011] special edition from the work, PDF p. 3).
  3. a b Dopsch: Salzburg, Ebf.e von . S. 485 , PDF p. 2 .
  4. a b c d e f g h i j k l Salzburg court chancellor . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  5. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai mentioned in: Joseph Ernst v. Koch-Sternfeld (ed.): Salzburg and Berchtesgaden in historical-statistical-geographical and state-economic contracts . tape 1 . Mayr'sche Buchhandlung, Salzburg 1810, II. Historical-statistical sketch of the Salzburgtschen Ritterlehenhofe. Salzburg fiefdoms , p. 8–15 , here p. 13 f ( Google eBook, full view in Google book search).
  6. ^ Hofratsordnung 1588. Salzburger Landesarchiv, Generalia 1.
    Hofstaatsordnung 1590. Salzburger Landesarchiv, HS 13.
  7. a b Dopsch: Salzburg, Ebf.e von . S. 487 , PDF p. 4 .
  8. ^ Court chancellery regulations 1592. Salzburg State Archives, Secret Archives XXIII / 3. Printed by Mayr 1926, pp. 55–57.
  9. Sebastian Höflinger . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  10. Volpert Motzel . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  11. Camerlohr von Weiching . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki . (Family).
  12. ^ Franz Martin: Contributions to the Salzburg family history . In: MGSLK . tape 77 , 1937, 41. Staudacher von Wispach , p. 140 ff. (141) . ; Hundreds of Salzburg families . 1946, p. 176 ff .
  13. Johann Jakob Lebel von Löwenheimb . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  14. ^ Gentilotti von Engelsbrunn . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki . (Family).
  15. Franz Anton Ignaz Freiherr von Kürsinger . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  16. ^ Johann Franz Thaddäus von Kleimayrn . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  17. ^ Johann Heinrich Baron von Bleul . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  18. Heinrich Freiherr von Crumpipen . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  19. ^ Marchese Federigo Manfredini . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  20. Christian Graf von Aicholt . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  21. Georges Kister . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  22. LA Buzairies: Biographies limouxines . impr. J. Boute, 1865, XXX. Paul et Martin FOURN, De Limoux - Militaires (1)., Pp. 209 ( Google eBook, full view in Google Book Search).
  23. Jules Anglès . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  24. Camille Périer . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  25. a b worldstatesmen.org; contemporary mentioned in: Joseph Dürlinger: Von Pinzgau: 1. Historical overviews: 2. Place and church registers; with chronological table . Self-published, 1866, p. 75/76 ( Google eBook, full view in Google Book Search).
  26. Josef Felner . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  27. ^ Crown Prince Ludwig August of Bavaria - Governor General of the Inn and Salzach districts. Catalog entry on: Crossing borders - Bavaria and Salzburg 1810 to 2010 . Double exhibition Salzburg and Laufen from June 11 to October 31, 2010, Salzburg department under Bavarian rule 1810 to 1816 . (No longer available online.) Salzburg Museum, 2010, archived from the original on February 4, 2014 ; Retrieved October 10, 2011 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.salzburgmuseum.at
  28. ^ Carl Graf von Preysing . In: Salzburger Nachrichten : Salzburgwiki .
  29. Thomas Brechenmacher:  Mieg, Arnold Ritter von. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 17, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1994, ISBN 3-428-00198-2 , p. 470 f. ( Digitized version ).
  30. Mieg, Arnold von . In: Zeitschriften , Teßmann State Library 2009.
  31. GM Kletke: The State Treaties of the Kingdom of Bavaria ...: from 1806 up to and including 1858. Pustet, 1860, Section II. State treaties with regard to sovereignty, territorial and border treaties 20., pp. 263–266 (cf. Pragmatisches Contents directory. Wikisource)
  32. Kletke: The State Contracts of the Kingdom of Bavaria ...: 1860, 28d., P. 328 (cf. Pragmatic Table of Contents . , Wikisource)
  33. ^ Johann Nepomuk Freiherr von Stiebar (* 1791 in Linz, Austria odEnns; † unknown); Family item : Stiebar
  34. ^ Albert Graf Montecuccoli-Laderchi (born June 30, 1802 in Mitterau, Austria udEnns; † August 19, 1852 in Vienna); Albert Count Montecuccoli-Laderchi . In: Salzburger Nachrichten: Salzburgwiki .
  35. RGBl. No. 44/1868 (= p. 77).
  36. cf. Franz Satzinger: "Vöcklabruck" City History - From the Beginnings to 1850 . The princely city of Vöcklabruck in Attergau in the field of tension between Bavaria and Austria from the beginnings to 1850. Kilian Verlagsges.mbH, Vöcklabruck 2006, ISBN 3-901745-16-5 , Chapter 12 The revolution of 1848 and its effects on the end of the city magistrates and Patrimonial rule , section Administrative reform under the sign of neo-absolutism , p. 558 , PDF p. 40 ( voecklabruck.at [PDF; accessed on September 8, 2011]).
  37. ^ Statute on the state representation in the Herzogthume Salzburg. RGBl. No. 238/1860 (EReader, ALEX Online ).
  38. ^ State regulations and state parliament election regulations for the Duchy of Salzburg. Appendix 2c of the RGBl. No. 20/1861, p. 106 ff (112 ff; EReader, ALEX Online).
  39. ^ Announcement of the governor of May 8, 1861 regarding the re-establishment of an independent regional authority in Salzburg and the time of its activation. Z 2564 / Pr. Ordinances of the state authorities for the crown lands of Austria whether the Enns and Salzburg , born 1861, VI. Piece, 6th, ex. May 13, 1861, to be entered May 15, 1861 (EReader, ALEX Online).
  40. Ernst von Gourcy-Droitaumont (born March 16, 1821 in Vienna, † February 10, 1870 ibid); Gourcy-Droitaumont Ernst, Graf In: Richard Voithofer: "... loyalty and obedience to the emperor ...": A biographical handbook of the political elites in Salzburg from 1861 to 1918 . Volume 40 of the series of publications of the research institute for political-historical studies of the Dr.-Wilfried-Haslauer-Bibliothek, research institute for political-historical studies . Ed .: Dr. Wilfried Haslauer Library. Böhlau Verlag, Vienna 2011, ISBN 978-3-205-78637-5 , p. 55 f . ( limited preview in Google Book search). ; Ernst Count Gourcy-Droitaumont . In: Salzburger Nachrichten: Salzburgwiki .
  41. ^ Franz von Spiegelfeld (born May 10, 1802 in Trieste; † October 20, 1885 in Volders, Tyrol); Franz Freiherr von Spiegelfeld . In: Salzburger Nachrichten: Salzburgwiki .
  42. Dr. (Franz) Karl Graf Coronini-Cronberg (born April 29, 1818 in Paris, France, † January 2, 1910 in Gorizia, today Gorizia, Italy); Coronini-Cronberg, 5 Karl, Graf, Dr. In: Richard Voithofer: "... loyalty and obedience to the emperor ...": A biographical handbook of the political elites in Salzburg from 1861 to 1918 . Volume 40 of the series of publications of the research institute for political-historical studies of the Dr.-Wilfried-Haslauer-Bibliothek, research institute for political-historical studies . Ed .: Dr. Wilfried Haslauer Library. Böhlau Verlag, Vienna 2011, ISBN 978-3-205-78637-5 , p. 44 ( limited preview in Google Book search). ; Karl Count Coronini-Cronberg . In: Salzburger Nachrichten: Salzburgwiki .