Pace von Friedensberg
The Counts of Pace and Freiherren von Friedensberg are an old, originally Spanish noble family who worked in Trieste and Veneto and rose to the Austrian counts .
history
The Counts Pace von Friedensberg come from an old, originally Spanish family, which has enjoyed great respect among the Trieste nobility since 1336. A branch of the family came to the states of the Venetian Republic in the 15th century.
Possibly the family was once called Castronovo. A Victor Castronovo seu de Montefumo, called de Pace , and his brothers received a noble coat of arms on December 5, 1509 in Heidelberg .
After several family members in kk had entered Austrian military service and reaches high esteem, rose Emperor Leopold I on 10 December 1675 at Vienna, the Field Marshal Lieutenant Carl Maria Conte de Pace (1635-1701) and his brothers John and Andrew in a baron with " Well-born "as" Pace Freiherrn von Friedensberg ". Admission to the Styrian estates took place on March 12, 1686. In 1690, the family finally received the dignity of the hereditary-Austrian count. On September 3, 1737, the family became a country estate in Gorizia. Since both brothers died childless, the dignity of Count passed to Bernardin Karl Maria Joseph von Pace († September 8, 1827 in Görz), the line to Udine , with imperial approval , from which his marriage to Maria Anna Therese Countess von Abensperg and Traun (* August 15, 1759; † January 12, 1820) descended from Pace who lived in Gorizia .
All current members of the family, who are wealthy in the county of Gorizia , come from the marriage of the Imperial Chamberlain and captain Count Rudolph Pace, († September 27, 1825) with Luise daughter of Count Paul Joseph von Beroldingen. One of his sons was Karl Maria Philipp (born February 24, 1821 in Thurn-Gallenstein; † May 30, 1884 ibid). His marriage to Camilla Freiin Schweiger von Lerchenfeld on March 31, 1845 (born January 11, 1822 in Rupertshof , Krain , † June 25, 1899 in Thurn-Gallenstein) gave birth to two sons, Anton, who would later become President of Bukowina, and Rudolf ( * September 9, 1847 in Rupertshof, Krain; † March 1, 1923 in Graz ).
Personalities
- Carl Maria de Pace, Baron von Friedensberg (* July 25, 1635; † March 7, 1701) was Chamberlain to Emperor Leopold I, Imperial Lieutenant Field Marshal (July 16, 1692) and Commanding General in Bohemia .
- Wilhelm Paul Eugen Graf Pace von Friedensberg (born March 15, 1819 at Thurn-Gallenstein Castle near Heiligenkreuz; † German Landsberg November 30, 1896) was governor of the princes of Gorizia Gradisca (1861–1870) and a member of the manor of the Austrian Imperial Council for life .
- Anton Graf Pace von Friedensberg (1851–1923) was an Austro-Hungarian Privy Councilor , high administrative officer and state president of Bukovina . He was considered a leading expert in the field of administrative law
coat of arms
1690: shield divided lengthways; on the right a two-headed, crowned, black eagle in gold; on the left in red three silver doves standing one below the other, turned to the left, each of which holds a green olive branch in its beak. The shield is covered by the count's crown, on which are three crowned helmets. The right helmet wears an open, black eagle flight, the middle a dove, just like in the left half of the shield, only seeing right, and the left four ostrich feathers, silver, red, gold and black. The covers of the right helmet of the middle left as well as the left and left are black and gold, those of the middle and left but on both sides of the right are red and gold, and the shield is held by two silver unicorns looking outwards. As described, this is usually the case: coat of arms, and so the same can be found in the register of arms of the Austrian monarchy (XII. 3). The Genealogical Pocket Book of the Count's Houses (1848, p. 479) places the three silver doves (2 and 1) in the right half of the shield and the two-headed, crowned, black eagle in the left half of the shield.
Individual evidence
- ↑ http://www.coresno.com/index.php/search?searchword=Montefumo&ordering=newest&searchphrase=all&limit=30
- ^ Antonio Schmidt-Brentano: Imperial and Imperial Generals (1618-1815), Austrian State Archives / A. Schmidt-Brentano 2006, p. 72
- ↑ link to coresno
- ↑ a b Prof. Dr. Ernst Heinrich Kneschke: "German count houses of the present: in heraldic, historical and genealogical relation", 3rd volume, AZ, Verlag TO Weigel, Leipzig 1854, p. 291 f.
- ↑ Otto Titan v. Hefner: "The nobility of the Duchy of Carniola and Counties of Görz and Gradiska", in Siebmacher's large book of arms, vol. IV, 2nd section, Bauer & Raspe publishing house, Nuremberg 1859. Name index and arms on p. 29
- ↑ Pierer's Universal Lexicon of Past and Present, Volume 12, Altenburg 1861, p. 545
- ^ Antonio Schmidt-Brentano: Imperial and Imperial Generals (1618-1815), Austrian State Archives / A. Schmidt-Brentano 2006, p. 72
- ↑ Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the count's houses, Verlag Justus Perthes, Gotha 1864, p. 607
- ^ Anton Bettelheim (ed.): "Biographisches Jahrbuch und Deutscher Nekrolog", Volume 3, Verlag G. Reimer, 1900, p. 426
- ↑ link to ÖBL
literature
- Gothaisches genealogical pocket book of the count's houses, Verlag Justus Perthes, Gotha 1864
- Prof. Dr. Ernst Heinrich Kneschke: "German count houses of the present: in heraldic, historical and genealogical relation", 3rd volume, A – Z, Verlag TO Weigel, Leipzig 1854
- Antonio Schmidt-Brentano: Imperial and Imperial and Royal Generals (1618–1815), Austrian State Archives / A. Schmidt-Brentano 2006
- Geneall.net