Rudolf Coraduz from and to Nussdorf

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rudolf Coraduz (ennobled by and zu Nußdorf ) († around 1618 ) was Vice Chancellor of the Holy Roman Empire .

He was the son of a doctor and came from Friuli or Istria . He studied law and received his doctorate. Between 1591 and 1606 he was Reichshofrat and between 1594 and 1612 Privy Councilor at the imperial court in the Austrian court chancellery of Rudolf II. During this time, he served the emperor as envoy in Rome. He was in Rome in 1595 and was busy acquiring works of art for the imperial collections, among other things. From 1601 he was de facto Vice Chancellor. The emperor has entrusted him with the administration of the office and has the actually responsible imperial chancellor and bishop of Mainz Johann Adam von Bickennot included, just informed. He was on the Catholic side and kept in close contact with the papal nuncios .

Individual evidence

  1. Eliška Fučíková: Adriaen de Vries, Prague Castle and the Wallenstein Palace. In: Studia Rudolphina. Vol. 6, 2006, ISSN  1213-5372 , pp. 27-35, online (PDF; 2.88 MB) .
  2. Maximilian Lanzinner : The role of the Archchancellor of Mainz at the Reichstag in the second half of the 16th century. In: Peter Claus Hartmann (Hrsg.): Kurmainz, the Reichserzkanzleramt and the realm at the end of the Middle Ages and in the 16th and 17th centuries (= historical regional studies. Vol. 47). Steiner, Stuttgart 1998, ISBN 3-515-07246-2 , pp. 69-87, online version .
  3. ^ Václav Bůžek: Confessional plurality in the imperial body chamber at the beginning of the 17th century. In: Joachim Bahlcke, Karen Lambrecht, Hans-Christian Maner (eds.): Confessional plurality as a challenge. Coexistence and Conflict in the Late Middle Ages and Early Modern Times. Leipziger Universitäts-Verlag, Leipzig 2006, ISBN 3-86583-081-1 , pp. 381–395, here p. 386.

Web links