Stadium (aristocratic family)

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Coat of arms of the stadium

The Swabian noble family of lords, barons and counts von Stadion originally came from Graubünden in Rhaetia . It belonged to the high nobility . The sex died out in the male line in 1908.

history

Count family in front of Warthausen Castle in the 1780s
Stadioner Hof , Mainz

The family came from Graubünden and acquired property in Swabia in the 13th century. It appears for the first time in a document on September 9, 1197 with "Heinricus de Lapide". Named after the manor in the Oberstadion , it can be traced back to May 13, 1270 with the knight "Waltherus de Stadegun".

In the 14th century, the stadiums in the Habsburg service acquired property in Graubünden again. The inserted by the Habsburgs Meier of the convent Säckingen in Glarus , Walter Stadion, a grandson of 1270 mentioned in Swabia knight, abused his power, which led to an open conflict. In 1352 the people of Glarus moved out, killed Walter von Stadion and destroyed the monastery castle in Näfels . Walter's brother Ludwig von Stadion († 1364) was the Austrian bailiff in Swabia, his wife Agnes von Frielingen was the founder of the Augustinian monastery in Augsburg . Ludwig's grandchildren divided the property between themselves in 1392: Johann the Rich († 1458) was the Württemberg court master and founder of the Swabian line, his brother Konrad († 1439) founded the Alsatian line.

The Swabian line, based in Oberstadion , was in the service of Württemberg, but remained Catholic at the time of the Reformation and then entered Austrian service. The line died out in 1693, and its goods, including the Schlössle Alberweiler , fell to the Alsatian line.

With Christoph von Stadion (1478–1543), the Alsatian line produced a prince-bishop of Augsburg and, in the following generations, cathedral capitulars in Augsburg, Basel, Mainz, Würzburg and Bamberg. Johann Caspar von Stadion (1567–1641) was German master, four of his nephews were as cathedral capitular supporters Johann Philipps von Schönborn in his election as bishop, which from 1643 onwards led to a great bond between the houses of Stadion and Schönborn . A fifth nephew, Johann Christoph von Stadion (1610–1666), was a senior magistrate in Würzburg in Treuberg. His son Johann Philipp Stadion (1652-1741) was Electoral Mainz Lord High Steward was in 1686 for baron collected in 1705 for Imperial Count. In 1696 he acquired the Warthausen rule , and in 1705 the Thannhausen rule . As a result of the acquisition of the direct imperial rule of Thannhausen, he was accepted on May 3, 1708 in the Swabian Imperial Counts College. The lines created by division in 1741, which died out in 1890 and 1908, were named after these two places. The Counts of Schönborn- Buchheim became heirs.

Status surveys

  • Since 1520 (by Christoph von Stadion, Prince-Bishop of Augsburg) heir to the Augsburg monastery
  • Elevation to the imperial baron status for the brothers Johann Philipp, Georg Heinrich and Christoph Rudolph, Vienna April 25, 1668
  • Bohemian Inkolat (Vienna December 31, 1696) for Johann Philipp Freiherr von Stadion
  • Elevation to the imperial count status with an improvement in the coat of arms, Vienna December 1, 1705 for the aforementioned brothers Georg Heinrich and Johann Philipp (on Warthausen and Thannhausen), the founders of the Bohemian line, which branched into the Frederician and Philippine lines and with Philipp Franz Joseph Graf von Stadion (* Gersdorf near Graz; † as KK Dragoon Lieutenant in Innsbruck on September 13, 1908 in Kauth (Kouty), Pilsen district in Bohemia ) has expired as the last entail master
  • Admission to the Swabian Imperial Counts College on May 3, 1708 because of the possession of Thannhausen , which was mediatized in 1806
  • 1756 Grand Palatinate for Friedrich Graf von Stadion with the title Enlightened for the head of the family (primogenitur) by Bundestag resolution of August 18, 1825 and February 13, 1829 with a family contract of December 14, 1768 and the family statute of the civil registry dated Vienna May 17, 1830

coat of arms

Coat of arms of the stadium near Siebmacher , 1605

The family coat of arms shows three golden wolf rods, one above the other, with the hook turned downwards . On the helmet with black and gold blankets, a gold, comfortable red pillow, on it a gold wolf's tang with the hooks turned upwards, covered with a natural peacock whisk. Because of the coincidence of the heraldic coat of arms, a relationship with the sexes of Pflumper, von Salmendingen and the multiple branched lords of Stain is considered likely.

The count's coat of arms from 1705 is quartered with the family coat of arms as a heart shield. 1 and 4 in black, (later also in blue) three golden pine cones placed in stakes (Thannhausen); 2 and 3 a floating, curved red paw cross in silver. Count's crown with three crowned helmets, on the right with black or blue-gold blankets a growing large golden pine cone; in the middle with black and gold covers the jewel of the family coat of arms; on the left with red-silver covers (sometimes covered with a red cross) in front a silver, behind red closed flight. Shield holder: on the right an outward-looking, red-tongued golden lion, on the left an equally golden wolf.

According to family tradition, the red paw cross was included in the count's coat of arms in memory of the Grand Master of the Teutonic Order and Prince of the Holy Roman Empire Johann Kaspar von Stadion , enfeoffed in Prague on February 5, 1628, Imperial War Council President and Feldzeugmeister , * 1567; † Ammern in Thuringia on January 21, 1641, buried in Mergentheim.

Name bearer

chronologically by year of birth

Philipp Franz von Stadion-Thannhausen, lithograph by Josef Kriehuber , 1841

literature

  • Kneschke, Ernst Heinrich (Ed.) (1867), New General German Adels Lexicon , Vol. VIII, pp. 584-585.
  • Constantin von Wurzbach : stadium, the count's house, genealogy . In: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich . 37th part. Imperial and Royal Court and State Printing Office, Vienna 1878, pp. 22–25 ( digitized version ).
  • Constantin von Wurzbach : stadium, the count's house, coat of arms . In: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich . 37th part. Imperial-Royal Court and State Printing House, Vienna 1878, p. 34 f. ( Digitized version ).
  • Stiefenhofer, Dominikus (1880), Chronicle of the Count's Family from Stadion . Upper stadium: typescript.
  • Lamp, Hans (1940), The Church in Oberstadion: The Relationship of the Stadium Family to the Church in Oberstadion and to other churches in Swabia, especially in the Oberstadion rulership . Tübingen: Dissertation.
  • Genealogical manual of the princely houses , Vol. II, 1953, pp. 151–152, and Vol. VI, 1961, pp. 328–329 (= Genealogical Manual of the Adels, Vol. 3 and 25).
  • Roman von Procházka : Genealogical handbook of extinct Bohemian gentry families, stadiums sequence of stadiums pages 303 to 308, Neustadt an der Aisch 1973, ISBN 3-7686-5002-2 .
  • Stadium von und zu Tannhausen, Count J. Siebmacher's Grosses Wappenbuch, Volume 30, The coats of arms of the Bohemian nobility, Neustadt an der Aisch 1979, page 172, coat of arms panel 76.
  • Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.) (1981), European Family Tables . New Series Vol. IV. Able Magnificent houses I . Marburg: JA Stargardt, plates 156–160 (The (Counts of) Stadium).
  • Mann, Jörg (1989): Bönnigheim and the Imperial Counts of Stadium. In: Ganerbeblätter 12 , 1989.
  • Landesarchivdirektion Baden-Württemberg (Ed.): The Alb-Donau-Kreis . 2 Vols. Sigmaringen: Thorbecke, 1999, here article Oberstadion , Vol. 2, pp. 765–772. ISBN 3-7995-1351-5 .
  • Genealogisches Handbuch des Adels , Adelslexikon Volume XIII, Volume 128 of the complete series, pp. 507-509, CA Starke Verlag, Limburg (Lahn) 2002, ISSN  0435-2408
  • Schwarzmaier, Hansmartin, Jörg Martin and Wilfried Schöntag (Berab.) (2007), From the archives of the Counts of Stadium: Documents and official books of the Count of Schönborn's archive in the Oberstadion . Konstanz and Eggingen: Edition Isele (= Documenta Suevica, Vol. 14).

Web links

Commons : Stadion (noble family)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Procházka novel : Genealogical handbook of extinct Bohemian gentry families, stadiums, pages 303 to 308, description of the family coat of arms and the count's coat of arms from 1795, with extensive other sources, Neustadt an der Aisch, 1973 ISBN 3-7686-5002-2
  2. ^ Württembergisches Urkundenbuch II, 323
  3. ^ Württembergisches Urkundenbuch VII, 95.