Maria Anna von Buol-Berenberg

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Maria Anna von Buol-Berenberg (born August 21, 1861 in Innsbruck ; † May 21, 1943 in Kaltern , South Tyrol ), noble mistress of Mühlingen ( Hegau ), was a poet and writer.

Maria Anna von Buol-Berenberg

Life

Maria Anna came from the Buol-Berenberg family and was the daughter of Franz Carl Maria Heinrich von Buol-Berenberg (born September 15, 1823, Innsbruck, † June 24, 1875, Kaltern), baron, noble gentleman in Mühlingen, farmer in Tyrol, Incola of Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia, landowner, kk chief treasurer and general advisor of the Tyrolean landscape and concipist in the Ministry of Justice and his wife, Luise di Pauli Freiin von Treuheim, daughter of Joseph Di Pauli von Treuheim and Franzisca Schasser von Thanheimb ( * September 23, 1835, Kaltern, † April 3, 1903, Kaltern). She was the granddaughter of Franz Seraphicus Anton von Buol-Berenberg, Edler Herr zu Mühlingen (1794–1865), baron, Gubernal, Imperial and Privy Councilor, real councilor of the United Court Chancellery in Vienna and great-granddaughter of Joseph Ignaz von Buol-Berenberg (1749–1817), on May 29, 1795, was raised by Emperor Franz II. With the title of Mühlingen to baron of Behrenberg and Mühlingen.

In 1867 the family moved to Kaltern, their mother's homeland, where the father had acquired a residence ("Schloss Loch"). Maria Anna von Buol-Berenberg was tutored by a private tutor and cultivated friendships with South Tyrolean aristocrats. She had a friendly relationship with the poet Emilie Ringseis (1831–1895). Maria Anna von Buol-Berenberg made several trips, including to Palestine . She acted as a champion for homeland and nationality in a social understanding and realistic view of life through her example and her care.

Buol-Berenberg gained recognition as a narrator with character and customs portrayal and wrote plays for rural stages. With "Songs from the Holy Land" and unpublished "Heckenlied" (hedge songs), she wrote mainly smaller and larger folk tales that initially appeared in newspapers and magazines. She remained a lawyer for South Tyrol, especially in the struggle for the preservation of the Tyrolean character and the German mother tongue.

Her stories include The Gamswirtin , in which a brave innkeeper from Steinach is glorified as the mother of 1809 heroes, as well as The Foundling , Des Mahnworts Weib and Ein Herrgottskind .

She died in 1943 as the last of the Kaltern line of the Barons von Buol.

Works

  • The stepchildren , story (Bozen 1902)
  • Songs from the Holy Land (Brixen 1902)
  • Mother's Secret (1903)
  • The Church Driver (1904)
  • The Bader of St. Margrethen (1904)
  • Gillis wood shavings (1906)
  • From Etschland and Inntal (Graz 1907)
  • The Gamswirtin (1909)
  • The stepchildren (Bozen 1910)
  • Notburga , drama (Innsbruck 1911)
  • Stories and legends from Tyrol (1912)
  • The Woman of the Missing (1916)
  • The savings bank book (1922)
  • The foundling (1922)
  • Stories from the old days of fathers (Innsbruck 1926)
  • Ein Herrgottskind (Innsbruck 1928) (biography of Maria von Mörl)
  • From God's workshop (Innsbruck 1931)
  • Johann Nepomuk von Tschiderer and his time (Innsbruck 1934)
  • From old Tyrol (Innsbruck 1936)
  • Fruits of the homeland , stories, ed. by M. v. Rubatscher (Vienna 1948)

literature

Web links

Works by Maria Anna von Buol-Berenber in the Gutenberg-DE project

Individual evidence

  1. Family tree of the Buol family (Buol Family Tree) by Justin Buol and Anton von Sprecher No. 95 p. 58 / No. 83 p. 53 / No. 71 p. 50.
  2. ^ Anton Dörrer: Buol von Berenberg, Maria Anna Freiin. In: New German Biography , 3 (1957)
  3. Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950
  4. Austrian Family Register Working Group