Schullern zu Schrattenhofen (noble family)

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Coat of arms of the Knights of Schullern zu Schrattenhofen

Schullern zu Schrattenhofen is the name of an Austrian family from Tyrol .

history

Grave site at the Westfriedhof Innsbruck

The Schullern zu Schrattenhofen family comes from the Zillertal . On May 17, 1734, the Upper Austrian court chamber councilor Anton Schueller , a native of Schwaz , was appointed by Emperor Karl VI. raised to the imperial and hereditary-Austrian knighthood with the predicate "von Schuellern zu Schrattenhofen". The sex is divided into two tribes, the Moravian (Schueller von Schullern) and the Tyrolean (Schullern zu Schrattenhofen), the latter is divided into the East Tyrolean and the North Tyrolean Ast. The Moravian tribe and the East Tyrolean branch died out at the end of the 19th century. The North Tyrolean branch continues to bloom in North Tyrol, Lombardy and Vienna. The Schullern zu Schrattenhofen belong to the Tyrolean nobility and are not enrolled in the Tyrolean nobility register.

coat of arms

Quartered, 1 and 4 in gold a black eagle facing the gap (coat of arms), 2 and 3 in silver a man without a hair or beard, dressed in red, facing the gap, with gold buttons, a silver belt and a cap, in his inner hand a six-pointed gold one Holding up the star and in the other a swan pen with a lowered point. - Two helmets, on the right the eagle with black and gold covers, on the left with red and silver covers the man with the star and pen as if in shields.

Possessions

  • In the 16th century on the Weerberg , the family owned the farms “Huebenhof” and the two “Jakoberhöfe”, in 1548 they bought the “Schweickenhoferhof” on the great Volderberg and through marriage the “Oberauhof” and the “Kolbenhof” were added to the Weerberge. At the end of the 17th century, Bartlmä Schueller bought the “scrap yard” near Schwaz .
  • 1718 to 1768 Edelheim Ehrenheim in Pickettorgasse (today Seilergasse 10) in Innsbruck (v. Lachemayr).
  • 1751 to 1781 continuous lordship of Staufen and Hilzingen in the district of Constance by the Petershausen monastery .
  • From 1768 to 1795 the Prantlhof in Heiligenkreuz near Hall in Tirol .
  • From 1830 to 1903 the house Burggraben 4 in Innsbruck was owned by the North Tyrolean branch of the Schullern zu Schrattenhofen family.
  • From 1860 to 1925 they owned the estates "Fenile Nuovo" and "Fenile Brunello" in Pavone del Mella , "Mombello" in Mompiano , "Nassino" in Borgo Poncarale and parts of the former feudal rule Flero , all in the province of Brescia in Lombardy in Italy . The Schullern villa in Pavone del Mella served as the family's summer residence. The Brescian goods were expropriated in 1925 by the Mussolini regime .
  • Hermann von Schullern zu Schrattenhofen built the Schullern-Schlössl above Aldrans (Innsbruck) in 1908 .

Lineage - North Tyrolean branch

Serial no parents People and their genealogical data
1 (0) Anton Schueller Ritter von Schuellern zu Schrattenhofen (1695–1763), Upper Austrian Representative and Court Chamber Councilor, married to Katharina Eleonore Lachemayr von Ehrenheimb and Madlein († 1775)
2 (1) Johann Schueller Knight von Schuellern zu Schrattenhofen (1723–1795), administrator of the royal canons of Lienz , real marching commissioner in Pustertal and castle captain on Bruck , married to Helene, née Preu von Lusenegg a. Korburg (1732-1801).
3 (2) Anton Ritter von Schullern zu Schrattenhofen (1762–1815), imperial judge and Tyrolean defender, married to Maria Anna, née Leis von Laimburg (1759–1827)
4th (3) Johann Maria Karl Anton Schullern zu Schrattenhofen (1797–1855), gubernial designer, married to Antonia, née Weinhart von Thierburg a. Vollandsegg (1795–1846)
5 (4) Anton von Schullern zu Schrattenhofen (1832–1889), writer and school man, married to Dorothea, née von Finetti (1840–1903)
6th (5) Hermann von Schullern zu Schrattenhofen (1861–1931), Austrian economist, married to Theresina, née Manfredi (1858–1946)
7th (5) Heinrich von Schullern zu Schrattenhofen (pseudonym Paul Ebenberg ; 1865–1955), writer and military doctor, married to Anna, née Thurn (1868–1937)
8th (6) Manfred Schullern-Schrattenhofen (1893–1959), kuk Leibgarde Infantry First Lieutenant, Austrian Consul General, married to Maria, née Stockheim (1894–1971)
9 (8th) Hermann Schullern-Schrattenhofen (1931–2016), entrepreneur, married to Vincenzina, née Tamagni-Verderio (1926–2017)

Web links

Commons : Schullern zu Schrattenhofen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Genealogical pocket book of the noble houses of Austria. Volume 3 (1908/09), p. 548.
  2. ^ Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg (Generallandesarchiv Karlsruhe) - Petershausen Monastery confers the dominions of Staufen and Hilzingen as fiefs; Schueller zu Schrattenhofen: archive unit 21 no. 3908 [02/08/1751] ; No. 3909 [11/25/1761] .
  3. Rudolf Granichstaedten-Czerva: Old Innsbruck town houses and their owners. Sensen-Verlag, Vienna 1962–1966.
  4. ^ Hermann von Schullern zu Schrattenhofen: On the history of an Innsbruck town house. Society ADLER, monthly newspaper, volume 5, pp. 69 and 74.
  5. Paolo Guerrini: Note varie su i paesi della provinca di Brescia. Volume 1, p. 130.
  6. ^ Vittorio Nichilo: In quell aparte della vaste pinura - La gente, i giorni e le memorie di Pavone del Mella. In: Terre Bresciane. Pp. 91-93, 183-186.