Family list of the House of Schönburg

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Family coat of arms of the Counts and Princes of Schönburg

All of the Schönburgers still alive today ("Muldenland") go back to Hermann I and his son Hermann II. Hermann I founded the place Geringswalde and the castle there, probably already planned the establishment of the local house monastery of the Schönburger - which only happened under Hermann II - and most likely also built Glauchau Castle .

Master list of the Markmeißnischen / Geringswalder line

  1. Ernst I., Lord of Schönburg (around 1458–1489), owner of the castle / Schloss Glauchau / Hinterglauchau ⚭ Anna von Rieneck (1458–1525)
    1. Anna (1479-1533)
    2. Wolf I., Baron von Schönburg (* 1482, † end of 1529 in Chemnitz Monastery )
    3. Elisabeth (1484–1522)
    4. Ernst II, Baron von Schönburg (* 1486 Glauchau, † September 12, 1534), owner of the castles Hinterglauchau, Fordglauchau, Hartenstein and Waldenburg. ⚭ Amalia Countess of Leisnig († 1559)
      1. Wolf (1527–1532)
      2. Johann Ernst (1528–1545)
      3. Georg I von Schönburg-Glauchau (1529–1585) ⚭ I) December 25, 1547 Countess Dorothea von Mansfeld zu Vorder-Ort (1519–1550); ⚭ II) Glauchau February 12, 1551 Dorothea Reuss zu Greiz (1522–1572); ⚭ III) Katharina Agathe von Putbus (1549–1608)
        1. Augustus of Schönburg-Glauchau (1583–1610)
      4. Hugo I., Baron von Schönburg-Waldenburg († 1565) or (1530–1566), alleged builder of the front Waldenburg Renaissance castle
        1. Hugo II, Baron von Schönburg-Waldenburg († 1606), is the owner of Hartenstein Castle in 1572
          1. Otto Albert, Baron von Schönburg-Waldenburg († 1681)
            1. Otto Ludwig, Baron von Schönburg-Waldenburg († 1701), since August 7, 1700 in the imperial count; → Descendants see below
      5. Wolf (gang) II., Baron von Schönburg-Penig (1532–1581) ⚭ Anna Schenk von Landsberg († 1568 or 1586)
        1. Wolfgang III., Baron von Schönburg-Penig (1556–1612) ⚭ Anna Barbara Reuss von Plauen zu Untergreiz
          1. Wolf Ernst, Baron von Schönburg-Remissau (1582–1623), Lord of Penig and Glauchau, murdered his brother Otto Wilhelm (1587–1617) in Hinterglauchau Castle ; → Descendants see below
          2. Wolfgang Heinrich I, Baron von Schönburg-Penig († 1657); → Descendants see below
      6. Anna (1531–1556)
      7. Dorothea (1534-1539)
    5. Margarethe (1489–1535)

Descendants of Otto Ludwig (Schönburg-Waldenburg, -Hartenstein, -Lichtenstein, -Stein)

  1. Otto Ludwig, Baron von Schönburg-Waldenburg († 1701), since August 7, 1700 in the imperial count; → For ancestors see above
    1. Georg Albrecht, Count of Schönburg-Hartenstein († 1716)
      1. Friedrich Albrecht, Count of Schönburg-Hartenstein († 1786)
    2. Otto Wilhelm, Count of Schönburg-Lichtenstein († 1747)
      1. Wilhelm Heinrich, Count of Schönburg-Lichtenstein († 1740)
    3. Ludwig Friedrich, Count of Schönburg-Stein († 1736)
      1. Albrecht Karl, Count of Schönburg-Stein († 1765)
        1. Otto Karl Friedrich, Count von Schönburg-Stein (1758–1800), in the Imperial Princes since October 9, 1770, ⚭ December 9, 1779 Henriette Eleonore Elisabeth Countess Reuss zu Köstritz (1755–1829)
          1. Otto Alexander (1781–1782)
          2. Victoria Albertine (1782-1840)
          3. Juliane Ernestine (1784-1838)
          4. Otto Victor, 1st Prince of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1785–1859); → Descendants see below
          5. Friedrich Alfred, 1st Prince of Schönburg-Hartenstein (1786–1840)
          6. Heinrich Eduard, 2nd Prince of Schönburg-Hartenstein (1787–1872); → Descendants see below
          7. Marie Klementine (1789–1863), ⚭ Count Heinrich von Schönburg-Glauchau († 1881)
    4. Christian Heinrich, Count of Schönburg-Waldenburg († 1753), ⚭ Friederike Auguste von Limpurg
      1. Christian August, Count of Schönburg-Waldenburg († 1754)
      2. Sophie von Schönburg-Waldenburg († 1757), co-heiress of Limpurg , ⚭ Friedrich Ernst, Count von Welz († 1741)

Descendants of Otto Victor (Schönburg-Waldenburg)

  1. Otto Victor, 1st Prince of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1785–1859); → For ancestors see above, descendants of Otto Ludwig
    1. Marie (1818-1829)
    2. Otto Friedrich, 2nd Prince of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1819–1893)
      1. Otto Karl Victor , Hereditary Prince of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1856–1888)
        1. Lucia (1881-1894)
        2. Otto Victor , 3rd Prince of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1882–1914)
        3. Alexander (1883-1888)
        4. Sophie (1885–1936), ⚭ Wilhelm Prinz zu Wied , Prince of Albania (1876–1945)
        5. Günther, 4th Prince of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1887–1960), on Waldenburg , Lichtenstein , Belgershain and Pomßen ⚭ 1926 Hertha Rötzschke (1890–1959) - no children
      2. Otto (1860-1888)
      3. Thekla (1862-1869)
      4. Elisabeth (1864–1949), ⚭ Ernst Graf von Wurmbrand-Stuppach (1866–1924)
      5. Otto Sigismund (1866–1936) ⚭ 1920 Emilie Friederike Handschke (1876–1964)
      6. Heinrich Otto Friedrich (1867–1937), ⚭ July 9, 1906 Marie Luise von Simolin-Wettberg (1874–1956)
    3. Ida (1821–1895), ⚭ August 9, 1877 Count Viktor von Wartensleben († 1900)
    4. Hugo (1822–1897), gentleman at Droyzut Castle , ⚭ April 29, 1862 Hermine Princess Reuss (1840–1890)
      1. Heinrich (1863–1945), ⚭ I) Princess Olga zu Löwenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg (1880–1961), ⚭ II) 1921 Adelheid Princess zur Lippe-Biesterfeld (1884–1963), on Droy says
        1. Hermine (1899–1982) ⚭ 1919 Prince Heinrich XXXVI. Reuss (1888–1956)
        2. Amélie (1902–1995) ⚭ 1922 Adolf Fürst zu Bentheim-Tecklenburg (1889–1967)
        3. Alfred (1905–1941) ⚭ 1937 Marie Eleonore Princess zu Wied (1909–1956)
        4. Hugo (1910–1942) ⚭ 1937 Waltraut von Klüchtner (1918–1979)
          1. Michaela (* 1940) ⚭ I) 1963 (closed 1974) Alexander Fürst zu Hohenlohe-Jagstberg (* 1937); ⚭ II) 1975 (cut 1985) Wolfgang Prinz zu Oettingen-Oettingen and Oettingen-Wallerstein (1924–2001); ⚭ III) 1985 Alfredo Sigfrido von der Becke-Klüchtzner (* 1929)
        5. Marie (1922–2004), ⚭ Wolff Freiherr von Wolhaben and Neuhaus (1910–2003)
      2. Margarita (1864–1937), ⚭ October 4, 1888 Heinrich Prinz zu Schoenaich-Carolath (1852–1920)
      3. Emma (1865-1966)
      4. Elisabeth (1867–1943)
    5. Emma (1824-1839)
    6. Mathilde (1826–1914), ⚭ September 27, 1847 Adolf Prinz von Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt (1801–1875)
    7. Georg (1828–1900), Lord of Hermsdorf Castle ⚭ October 7, 1862 Princess Luise zu Bentheim-Tecklenburg (1844–1922)
      1. Hermann (1865–1943), Herr auf Hermsdorf, Grünberg and Schneeberg ⚭ July 5, 1912 Thekla von Rothenberg (1862–1941)
      2. Ulrich Georg (1869–1939), Lord of Guteborn Castle , ⚭ February 24, 1900 Pauline Princess of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg (1881–1945)
        1. Charlotte Pauline Luise Amalie (1901–1982)
        2. Wolf Georg Alfred, 5th Prince of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1902–1983) ⚭ 1944 Comtessa Luciana Bargagli-Stoffi (1921–1984)
          1. Gracia Dorothea Guglielma (* 1946), ⚭ 1976 Gianfranco Vailati (* 1937)
          2. Alessandra Luisa Carlotta (* 1949), ⚭ 1981 Ricardo di Tanturri Horatio (* 1944)
          3. Anna-Luisa Ermanna Pia Cecilia (* 1952), ⚭ 1977 Don Fabrizio Pignatelli della Leonessa dei Principi di Monteroduni (* 1952)
        3. Dorothea Luise Pauline (1905-2000)
        4. Georg Ulrich (1908–1982)
          1. Anna-Amelie Madeleine Charlotte Marie Therese Sibylle Ulrike (1936–1966), ⚭ Franz Salvator Archduke of Austria, Prince of Toscana
          2. Clementine Pauline Hermine Dorothea Antonie Ottilie (* 1936)
          3. Stephanie Pauline Amelie Walpurgis Alexandrine (* 1938), ⚭ 1960 Ludwig Graf von Waldburg zu Wolfegg and Waldsee (* 1934)
          4. Luise Pauline Amelie Vibeke Emma (* 1943), ⚭ 1968 Andreas Prinz zu Hohenlohe-Langenburg (* 1938)
        5. Wilhelm (1913–1944) ⚭ 1939 Marie Elisabeth Princess zu Stolberg-Roßla (1921–1975), adoptive son of his aunt Anna Luise Princess of Schwarzburg
          1. Ulrich (* 1940), ⚭ 1972/1977 Brigitte Hirschle (* 1943)
            1. Verena Alexandra Natalie (* 1971)
          2. Wolf Christoph (* 1943), ⚭ 1968 Eveline Mente (* 1944)
            1. Kai-Philipp Wolf (* 1969), ⚭ 1994 (closed 2001) Isabelle Borges Sampaio (* 1966)
      3. Anna Luise (1871–1951), ⚭ 1891 Günther Victor , Prince of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt (1852–1925)
    8. Ottilie (1830–1880), ⚭ 1856 Richard Klemens, Count of Schönburg-Hinterglauchau
    9. Karl Ernst (1836-1915), Lord of Castle Gauernitz , Schloss Schwarzenbach (Saale) and manor Förbau , ⚭ 1863 Helene Countess of Stolberg-Wernigerode (1840-1908)
      1. Thekla (1867–1939), ⚭ 1896 Graf Gustav zu Ysenburg and Büdingen in Meerholz (1863–1929)
      2. Friedrich Ernst (1872–1910), ⚭ I) 1897 (closed 1903) Alicia Princess of Bourbon , Infanta of Spain (1876–1975), ⚭ II) ( morganatic ) 1907 Franziska Maison von Lobenstein, since 1907 Countess von Bug (1874 –1942)
        1. Maria Karl Leopold Salvator Ernst Anton Joseph Franz Xaver Friedrich Bonifacius Benno Jaime (1902–1992) ⚭ 1928 (ex.) Ornella Ravaschieri Fieschi dei Duchi di Roccapiemonte (1904–2004); ⚭ II) 1955 (closed 1971) Varaiterai a Neti (* 1915), the children (born out of wedlock, legitimized by subsequent marriage, by the second wife)
          1. Marie-Marewa von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* Papeete April 9, 1939)
          2. Vetea-Pierre-Jaime von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* Papeete March 1, 1941)
          3. Teva Karl Manuia Pai von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* 1945)
          4. Mihimana-Christine von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* 1947)
          5. Matahi-Georges-Leopold von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* 1951)
        2. Maria Sophie Antonia Helene Freiin von Bug (* 1910)
      3. Mathilde (1878–1948), ⚭ 1913 Gottfried Graf von Hochberg (1882–1929)
      4. Marie (* / † 1881)

Descendants of Heinrich Eduard (Schönburg-Hartenstein)

  1. Heinrich Eduard, 2nd Prince of Schönburg-Hartenstein (1787–1872) ⚭ I) 1817 Princess Pauline zu Schwarzenberg (1798–1821), ⚭ II) 1823 Princess Ludovica zu Schwarzenberg (1803–1884)
    1. Alexander, 3rd Prince of Schönburg-Hartenstein († 1896) ⚭ 1855 Princess Karoline von und zu Liechtenstein (1836–1885)
      1. Ludovika (1856–1932) ⚭ Bertram Prince of Quadt zu Wykradt and Isny
      2. Franziska (1857–1926) ⚭ Eugen Graf Czernin von und zu Chudenitz
      3. Alois , until 1918 4th Prince of Schönburg-Hartenstein (1858–1944) ⚭ 1887 Johanna Countess von Colloredo-Mannsfeld
        1. Alexander (5th Prince) (1888–1956) ⚭ 1913 Princess Agathe von Auersperg , 12 children, including:
          1. Aloys (1916–1945) ⚭ 1944 Elisabeth von Trotha
            1. Aloys (6th Prince) (1945–1972)
          2. Hieronymus (7th Prince) (1920–1992) ⚭ 1946 Countess Mathilde von Tattenbach
          3. Alexander (8th Prince) (* 1930) ⚭ 1950 Margarethe Princess zu Windisch-Graetz , 4 children, including:
            1. Johannes Karl (* 1951) ⚭ Alexandra Countess von Attems , 4 children, including:
              1. Aloys (Louis) (* 1982)
            2. Alfred Alexander (* 1953) ⚭ Marie Thérese Kastner-Lanjus-Wellenburg, 4 children, including:
              1. Alexander (* 1979) ⚭ 2014 Clara Maria Countess von Waldburg zu Wolfegg and Waldsee
              2. Ferdinand (* 1984) ⚭ 2015 Eleonora Countess zu Brandis
          4. Constantin (1933–1958) ⚭ 1958 Mathilde Hartenstein, 6 children, including:
            1. Alexander (* 1959) ⚭ I) 1982 Marie Therese Countess of Meran, II) 1995 Selma Navarro
              1. Constantin (* 1983)
              2. Matthias (* 1995)
            2. Michael (* 1960)
            3. Eduard (* 1966) ⚭ Angela Pin
              to e Silva
        2. Jerome (1889–1914)
        3. Aglaë Karoline (1891–1965) ⚭ Franz Joseph Prince of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst
        4. Karoline Franziska (1892–1986)
        5. Maria Theresa (1896–1979) ⚭ Count Alexander Kálnoky von Kőröspatak
        6. Margarethe Ernestine (1897–1980) ⚭ Alain Prince of Rohan , Duc de Montbazon et de Bouillon, Prince de Guéméné, de Rochefort et de Montaubon
        7. Isabella Josephine (1901–1987) ⚭ I) Nikolaus Frhr. von Wyneken, II) Georges Zafiropulo
      4. Maria (1861–1945) ⚭ Eduard Prince of Auersperg
      5. Eduard (1863-1903)
      6. Johannes (1864–1937) ⚭ Sophie, Princess of Oettingen-Oettingen and Oettingen-Wallerstein

Descendants of Wolf Ernst (Schönburg-Remissau, -Rochsburg, -Hinterglauchau, -Unterglauchau, extinct)

  1. Wolf Ernst, Baron von Schönburg-Remissau († 1623); → For ancestors see above
    1. Godfried Ernst, Baron von Schönburg-Remissau († 1679)
      1. Christian Ernst, Baron von Schönburg-Remissau († 1718), in the imperial count since August 7, 1700
        1. Otto Ernst, Count of Schönburg-Remissau († 1746)
          1. Heinrich Ernst, Count of Schönburg-Rochsburg († 1777)
            1. Ernst, Count von Schönburg-Rochsburg († 1825), sold Remissau in 1789
          2. Albert, Count of Schönburg- (Unter-) Glauchau († 1799)
            1. Gottlob Karl Ludwig Christian Ernst, Count of Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1762–1842), ⚭ 1789 Countess Henriette von Hochberg (1767–1836)
              1. Charlotte Henriette Ferdinande Luise (1790–1791)
              2. Luise Emilie Henriette (1791–1847)
              3. Ferdinand Heinrich Fürchtegott Ernst (1793–1794)
              4. Heinrich Gottlob Otto Ernst, Count of Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1794–1881), ⚭ 1820 Clementine Princess of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1789–1863)
                1. Henriette Marie Elisabeth (1821–1899)
                2. Friedrich Wilhelm Edmund (1823–1897), ⚭ 1852 Gabrielle Princess zu Windisch-Graetz (1827–1917)
                3. Friedrich Alfred (1827–1855)
                4. Richard Klemens Graf and Lord von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau since 1881 (1829–1900), ⚭ I) 1856 Ottilie Princess von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1830–1880), ⚭ II) 1886 Ida Friederike (called "Frieda") Freiin von Fabrice ( 1864–1943)
              5. Hermann Albrecht Heinrich Ernst (1796–1841), ⚭ 1830 Sophie Katharina Josephine Freiin von Wrede (1811–1876)
                1. Marie Hermine Julie Ferdinande Alexandra (1831-1885)
                2. Mathilde Julie Sophie Adolfine (1833–1895), ⚭ 1860 Rudolf Josef Graf Kottulinsky (1810–1892)
              6. Emilie Henriette Albertine Charlotte (1797–1798)
              7. Otto Heinrich Ludwig (1798–1804)
              8. Ernst Ferdinand Ludwig Heinrich (1800–1868)
              9. Ferdinand Gustav Ernst (1802–1827)
              10. Gotthelf Georg Heinrich Ernst (1803–1833)
              11. Charlotte Emilie (1808-1881)

Descendants of Wolfgang Heinrich I (Schönburg-Wechselburg, -Penig, -Forderglauchau, -Glauchau)

  1. Wolfgang Heinrich I, Baron von Schönburg-Penig (1605–1657); → Ancestors see above , ⚭ Judith Eva, daughter of Heinrich III. Reuss von Plauen, Lord of Burgk (1614–1666)
    1. Samuel Heinrich, Baron von Schönburg-Wechselburg († 1706), in the imperial count since August 7, 1700, ⚭ Elisabeth Magdalena Sophia von Schönburg-Glauchau (1642–1716)
      1. Franz Heinrich, Count of Schönburg-Wechselburg († 1746), ⚭ I. Magdalena Eleonora von Schönburg-Penig (1674–1720), ⚭ II. Johanna Sophia Elisabeth von Schönburg-Hartenstein (1699–1739)
        1. Karl Heinrich, Count of Schönburg-Penig / Fordglauchau (1729–1800), ⚭ Christiane Wilhelmine Countess of Einsiedel
          1. Wilhelm Albrecht Heinrich, Count of Schönburg-Fordglauchau (1762–1815), ⚭ Albertine Countess of Wartensleben
            1. Karl Heinrich Alban, Count of Schönburg-Fordglauchau (1804–1864), ⚭ Amalie Countess Jenison-Walworth (* 1806)
              1. Karl, Count von Schönburg-Fordglauchau (1832–1898), ⚭ I) Adelheid Countess von Rechteren-Limpurg (* 1845); ⚭ II) Sophie Comtesse d'Ursel (* 1851)
                1. (I.) Joachim, Count von Schönburg-Glauchau (1873–1943), ⚭ Octavia Countess Chotek von Chotkow and Wognin (* 1873)
                  1. Carl Graf von Schönburg-Glauchau (1899–1945), ⚭ Maria Ana Countess Baworowska (* 1902)
                    1. Joachim Graf von Schönburg-Glauchau (1929–1998), ⚭ Beatriz Countess Széchényi de Sárvár-Felsővidék (* 1930)
                      1. Maria-Felicitas "Maya" Countess von Schönburg-Glauchau (1958–2018) ⚭ Friedrich Christian Flick (div.)
                      2. Mariae Gloria Countess von Schönburg-Glauchau (* 1960) ⚭ Prince Johannes von Thurn and Taxis (1926–1990)
                      3. Carl Alban Graf von Schönburg-Glauchau (* 1966)
                      4. Alexander Graf von Schönburg-Glauchau (* 1969) ⚭ 1999 Irina Verena Princess of Hesse
                  2. Adelheid, Countess von Schönburg-Glauchau (1900–1987), ⚭ Franz Ludwig von Waldburg zu Wolfegg and Waldsee (1892–1989)
                  3. Wilhelmine, Countess von Schönburg-Glauchau (1902–1964), ⚭ Maximilian Egon Prince of Fürstenberg (1896–1959)
                  4. Maria Agnes, Countess von Schönburg-Glauchau (1912–1994), ⚭ Felix Fleischer (1908–1990)
    2. Wolfgang Heinrich II., Baron von Schönburg-Penig († 1704)
      1. August Siegfried von Schönburg-Penig (1678–1763)

Other people / lines

From the 12th century

  • Ulrich von Schönburg "Ulricus de Schunenburg" (first mentioned in 1130, last mentioned or † 1166). It was first mentioned as a witness in a document that Countess Helinburg von Gleichen issued to the Volkenroda monastery in 1130. His seat is accepted on the Schönburg near Naumburg. He is the first known Schönburger from the Thuringian line and probably the first occupied Schönburger of all lines.
  • Hermann I von Schönburg "Hermannus de Sconeburg" (first mentioned 1212, † or last mentioned 1224/25). In a contract between King Otto IV and Margrave Dietrich von Meißen in 1212, he was named as the Reichsministeriale "ministerialis imperii" along with several other royal witnesses (including the royal burgrave of Altenburg ). He is said to have been the founder of Geringswalde on the site of today's Altgeringswalde - and probably also the castle there around 1158 - and around 1182 (as a plan) of the local Schönburg monastery (hereditary burial of the Schönburgers). He is believed to be the founder of Glauchau Castle around 1170–1180 . He founded the Markmeissniche / Geringswalder / Muldenland line of the Schönburger. His son was Hermann II von Schönburg.

From 13th century

  • Hermann II. Von Schönburg (first mentioned in 1212), son of Hermann I. Hermann II. Issued the founding document of the Geringswalde Monastery on January 2nd, 1233, this was the first mention of a Schönburger in the valley of the Zwickauer Mulde and at the same time the oldest depiction of the Schönburg Coat of arms (alternating red and white) - on the seal of the certificate. His Czech name is "Heřman II. Ze Šumburka".
  • Friedrich I von Schönburg-Glauchau (first mentioned in 1247, † between 1290 and 1291), owner of Lichtenstein Castle and Glauchau Castle. 1247 patron of the Geringswalde monastery in a document (his oldest mention). In 1256 he seals a certificate “in cenaculo Gluchowe”, ie in the dining room or hall of the castle of Glauchau. This is the oldest indirect mention of the Glauchau castle and its four sons , who, together with their father Friedrich I, transferred the embarrassing jurisdiction to the Geringswalde monastery in 1261:
    • Dietrich von Schönburg (probably Dietrich I.)
    • Friedrich von Schönburg (probably Friedrich II.)
    • (a second) Friedrich von Schönburg (probably Friedrich III.)
    • Hermann von Schönburg (probably Hermann III.)
  • Friedrich II. Von Schönburg (first mentioned 1261, † around 1297), owner of Lichtenstein Castle, apparently the son of Friedrich I. von Schönburg
  • Hermann III. von Schönburg (?), he is officially confirmed from 1276 to 1289 as West Prussian provincial commander in Kulm .
  • Friedrich III. from Schönburg (?). In 1295 he was appointed district judge of the Egerland by the Bohemian King Wenceslaus II .
  • Friedrich von Schönburg († 1312) ( CZ : "Bedřich ze Šumburka" or "Fridrich ze Šumburka"), Bohemian-royal burgrave in Kaaden at Kadaň Castle . (This is probably Friedrich III.)

From 14th century

  • Friedrich IV. Von Schönburg-Crimmitschau (?), Lord of Crimmitschau. On March 31, 1307, he was the leader of the imperial cities of Pleißenland, Zwickau, Altenburg and Chemnitz, on the side of the German king in the battle of Lucka with the royal goal of disempowering the margraves of Meissen. The latter win against the Imperial Army and he is taken prisoner by the margraves. He must agree in a contract to give up the imperial immediacy of his rule Crimmitschau and to cede the sovereignty to the Margraves of Meissen. That was the only way he could get into freedom. After his line in the male line died out in 1413, the rule of Crimmitschau fell to the Wettins as a settled fiefdom.
  • Friedrich VI. von Schönburg († 1328). He is the governor of King John of Bohemia and was murdered in 1328 during a riot in Prague's old town.
  • Friedrich VII of Schönburg (?). Probably around 1330 he came into the possession of the Bohemian castle Pürstein .
  • Lords of Schönburg at Pürstein Castle (without precise assignment of the person):
for the year 1363 the "right of submission" for the church in Preßnitz is in the possession of a Friedrich von Schönburg auf Pürstein ("Fridrici de Birssestein").
In 1363 and 1393 they have the right of patronage in Preßnitz.
  • Adelheid von Schönburg-Glauchau († June 15, 1342/52), through marriage she became the wife of Burgrave Otto Heyde I von Dohna. Buried in the Meissen Cathedral. Your grave slab is missing. As "Adelheid von Dohna" her Czech name is "Adléta z Donína".
  • Albrecht I von Schönburg (first mentioned in 1349, died around 1353), Lord of Burg Pürstein . 1349/50 he is in the loan book of Friedrich the Strict together with Friedrich XIII. von Schönburg-Pürstein (first mentioned 1341, died around 1367) as the owner of the castles (referred to as palaces) Ponitz and Lichtenstein.
  • Lords of Schönburg at Hassenstein Castle (without precise assignment of the person):
On April 13, 1348 a Friedrich von Schönburg , Herr zu Hassenstein, was enfeoffed with "Gythain" ( Geithain ).
In 1357 a Friedrich von Schönburg left Geithain and the town and castle Kohren to the Lords of Reuss.
In 1360 the Landgraves of Thuringia issued a letter of protection and protection to a Friedrich von Schönburg , Herr zu Hassenstein.
In 1396 a Friedrich ("Friczko") von Schönburg, Herr von Hassenstein , got into a dispute with his liege lord, the Bohemian king. He had promised the Margrave of Meissen military aid. In addition, he had given Hassenstein Castle to his brother-in-law, the Teutonic Knight Heinrich von Plauen, without the consent of the Bohemian king.
In 1418, the Bohemian king had Hassenstein besieged.
But it was not until 1420 that a royal siege under the leadership of Lord Lobkowitz was successful. The Schönburgers lost the castle and rule of Hassenstein with the associated shares in Preßnitz and several villages and the knight seat Hagensdorf .
In 1437 the Schönburgers sued the Lords of Lobkowitz apparently unsuccessfully at the Bohemian court feudal court for the return of Hassenstein Castle.
(See also Veit I von Schönburg.)
  • Hermann VIII of Schönburg († 1356). His brothers are Friedrich XI. († 1389), Herr zu Glauchau, and Dietrich II. (?) Von Schönburg. When Dietrich II entered the Teutonic Order in 1347, the so-called "Schönburg Fratricidal War" began between the two brothers Hermann VIII and Friedrich XI. Between 1347 and 1355 they mutually devastate their possessions. A battle is also documented in Mülsengrund near Glauchau. Finally, the dispute is settled through forced arbitration by the Margraves of Meissen.
In 1360 the Landgraves of Thuringia issued a protection and umbrella letter for a Friedrich von Schönburg , Herr zu Hassenstein.
  • Dietrich II of Schönburg (?). His brothers are Friedrich XI. († 1389), Herr zu Glauchau, and Hermann VIII. Von Schönburg († 1356). He joins the Teutonic Order in 1347. This is the prelude to the Schönburg fratricidal war for his inheritance between his two brothers.
  • Friedrich XI. von Schönburg-Glauchau (first mentioned in 1341, † 1389), owner of Lichtenstein Castle.
1378 "Lord of Glauchau and Waldenburg" after an inheritance with the Lords of Waldenburg / Wartha.
When his brother Dietrich II entered the Teutonic Order in 1347, the so-called "Schönburg Fratricidal War" began between the two brothers Hermann VIII and Friedrich XI. Between 1347 and 1355 they mutually devastate their possessions. A battle is also documented in Mülsengrund near Glauchau. Finally, the dispute is settled through forced arbitration by the Margraves of Meissen.
(Apparently this Friedrich was also lord of Hassenstein Castle in Bohemia.)
  • Veit I von Schönburg-Glauchau (first mentioned in 1370, † between 1421 and 1423), owner of Lichtenstein Castle. According to Walter Schlesinger, died in 1423. In 1388 Veit I was besieged by Margrave Wilhelm von Meißen (Wettiner) during the Rabensteiner feud in Waldenburg Castle. He is said to have already issued an (obviously lost) guild letter to the cloth makers of Glauchau. As early as 1390, a “notary” (secretary) was mentioned under him. In 1420, King Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia withdrew the Bohemian castle of Hassenstein from the Schönburgers because Veit I was said to have been involved in a riot. Other sources say that the Schönburger lent the castle to Heinrich von Plauen without the knowledge of the Bohemian king. The (first) royal siege of Hassenstein Castle is said to have taken place as early as 1417. Then this castle came to the von Lobkowitz as a Bohemian fief.
Before 1388 he was involved in the forcible capture of Rabenstein Castle near Chemnitz and an attack on Chemnitz Monastery in 1388 during the Rabenstein feud. 1389 to 1390 lasted a dispute with the Remse monastery, in which he was led by Pope Boniface IX. was banned on April 11, 1390 because he had attacked the monastery village of Weidensdorf. After nine days the ban (interdict) was lifted. In 1399 he bought Oelsnitz, Mülsen and Dennheritz. In 1405 he issues a guild letter to the tailors of Waldenburg. In 1406 he acquired the county of Hartenstein from the Burgraves of Meißen (Meinheringer) by way of pledge. In 1416 Hartenstein finally came into his possession.
  • Friedrich XV. (first mentioned in 1388, † after 1400). Presumably it was this Friedrich who in 1400 had 16 pictures of his ancestors in "big giant stature" painted on the walls of the chapel in the house monastery Geringswalde.
  • Friedrich XVII. (?), Father of Veit II. And Friedrich XX.
  • Friedrich VIII of Schönburg (last mentioned 1361), Lord of Hassenstein, Schlettau and Preßnitz.
In 1351 - together with Bernhard I von Schönburg - he got the ownership of the (then Bohemian) castles and lordships of Schlettau and Hassenstein as well as the village of Preßnitz confirmed by Emperor Karl IV.
With his death soon after 1361 the rule passed to "the two brothers" (his brothers?) Bernhard (probably Bernhard I) and Hermann (which one?) Von Schönburg.
  • Bernhard I of Schönburg (?), Lord of Hassenstein, Schlettau and Preßnitz.
In 1351 - together with Friedrich VIII. Von Schönburg - he got the ownership of the (then Bohemian) castles and lordships of Schlettau and Hassenstein as well as of the place Preßnitz confirmed by Emperor Karl IV.
Shortly after 1361 he inherits the lordships mentioned together with his brother Bernhard (probably Bernhard I), since Friedrich VIII died. In 1367 they split the rulers among themselves, with Bernhard Hassenstein receiving it.
  • Hermann von Schönburg (?), Lord von Hassenstein, Schlettau and Preßnitz.
Shortly after 1361 he inherits the lordships mentioned together with his brother Bernhard (probably Bernhard I), since Friedrich VIII died. In 1367 they split the rulers among themselves, with Bernhard Hassenstein receiving it.

From the 15th century

  • Friedrich XIII. von Schönburg (first mentioned 1341?, died around 1367?), master of Pürstein Castle (Pirsenstein), he ceded the town and care of Schlettau in 1413 to the Grünhain monastery. In 1349/50 he is listed in the feudal book of Friedrich des Strengen together with Albrecht I von Schönburg (first mentioned in 1349, died around 1353) as the owner of the castles (called palaces) Ponitz and Lichtenstein. (Note: the information given in both sources is contradictory)
  • Friedrich XVI. von Schönburg († 1426). He died on June 15, 1426 in Aussig during the fight against the Hussites.
  • Albrecht IV of Schönburg (?). In 1431, when the rule of Pürstein was divided, he received part of this rule, the other half was given to Wilhelm I. von Schönburg, lord of Neuschönburg Castle .
  • Wilhelm I of Schönburg (?), Lord of Neuschönburg Castle in Bohemia.
In 1431, when the rule of Pürstein was divided, he received part of this rule, while Albrecht IV of Schönburg received the other half.
In 1435 he called himself "Vilém ... zcu Nuenschonenburg".
In 1442 he acquired the Hoyerswerda castle and estate.
In 1443 he sold the neighboring Egerberg Castle in Bohemia, but in 1444 he returned to the Egerberg Castle through betrayal. He is said to have owned the small Funktstein Castle on a ridge east of the village of Lestkov (near Klösterle on the Eger). Almost nothing of Funkstein has survived (ground monument).
  • Alesch von Schönburg (?) ( CZ : Aleš ze Šumburku), lord of Pürstein Castle . After the Lords of Schönburg lost the royal Bohemian castle and rule of Hassenstein with the associated part of Preßnitz and several associated villages to the Lords of Lobkowitz in 1420, only the Lords of Schönburg at Pürstein Castle still own the other part of Preßnitz with several Villages. Alesch von Schönburg sells this Pürstein part of Preßnitz at Pürstein Castle in 1446 to Nikolaus II von Lobkowitz, lord of Hassenstein Castle.
  • Veit II von Schönburg-Glauchau (1418–1472), owner of Waldenburg Castle. In a partition agreement between him and Friedrich XX. Veit II receives only Lichtenstein and Hartenstein. Glauchau remains common property. In 1439 he married Anna von Plauen from the Reuss family to settle disputes over the ownership of Grafschaft Hartenstein. In 1454 he took part in the battles of the Teutonic Order in West Prussia. In 1437 Veit II von Schönburg-Glauchau acquired the Seeberg rule . However, he apparently only owned this dominion in Seeberg in Bohemia for a short time, because it was in the hands of the Burgraves of Leisnig as early as 1454 and was sold on in that year.
  • Friedrich XX. von Schönburg († 1480), brother of Veit II. von Schönburg-Glauchau, Lord von Hartenstein. In a partition contract between him and Veit II in 1446, Friedrich XX. Waldenburg alone. Glauchau remains common property. In 1464 he issues statutes for the city of Lößnitz. Friedrich XX. took a prince (Ernst von Kursachsen) in Hartenstein during the prince robbery and brought him to Chemnitz. Both brothers were also participants in the Saxon Fratricidal War. Her father was probably Friedrich XVII. from Schönburg.
  • Ernst I. von Schönburg-Glauchau (* around 1456; † January 26, 1490 in Vilvorden Castle), imperial captain of the Habsburgs on January 24, 1490 at the siege of Brunburg Castle (dismissed), seriously injured. Buried in Antwerp Cathedral.
Together with his wife Anna he donated a preserved altar in the village church in Schlunzig near Glauchau with the coats of arms of Schönburg and von Rieneck on it. Around 1470–1480 he had Glauchau Castle converted into a late Gothic residential palace. (The famous master builder of the Albrechtsburg Castle in Meißen is assumed to be the master builder.) In 1476, Ernst I stayed in Munich at the court of the art-loving Duke Albrecht IV of Bavaria and got to know contemporary music-making here. He was the founder of the Glauchau Latin School.
  • Anna von Schönburg (1458 / 1461–1525), née Countess von Rieneck, wife of Ernst I von Schönburg. As a widow, she supposedly granted the town of Hohenstein (which later became Hohenstein-Ernstthal) town charter as early as 1510. Between 1489 and 1493 she bought some tax rights to farms in Niederlungwitz and Elzenberg (near Glauchau) from the Lords of Weißenbach at Rittergut Thurm. Together with her husband Ernst I, she donated a preserved altar in the village church in Schlunzig near Glauchau with the coats of arms of Schönburg and von Rieneck on it.
  • Friedrich von Schönburg (?) (CZ: Fridrich ze Šumburka ). Probably from the Pürsteiner or Neuschönburger line. In 1472, Hans von Warnsdorf († after 1489), governor of the County of Glatz, transfers the castle and town of Trautenau as pledge to his son-in-law Friedrich von Schönburg, who was governor of Königgrätz , from whom they inherited his sons. One son was apparently Hermann von Schönburg (?), Who later also owned the Schatzlar estate and castle . Due to over-indebtedness, the town and rulership of Trautenau and Schatzlar with the castle were sold by Hermann von Schönburg to the brothers Johann and Wilhelm Kruschina von Lichtenburg in 1521. Trautenau Castle was completely destroyed in the Thirty Years War and apparently demolished afterwards. Only the foundations have been preserved.
  • Wolf I. von Schönburg (1482–1529). From 1520 to 1521 he fought for the Teutonic Order in Poland against the Polish King Sigismund. In 1523 Wolf I and Ernst II jointly buy the Wehlen estate in Saxon Switzerland. Through a partition contract with his brother Ernst II, Wolf I becomes Lord of Waldenburg, Lohmen and Wehlen (the latter both in Saxon Switzerland) in 1524, deputy and supreme commander for Elector / Archbishop of Mainz Albrecht von Brandenburg in the campaign of the Swabian Federation in 1519 against Duke Ulrich of Württemberg. Under Wolf I. the Swabian Federation subjugates the town and castle Möckmühl and takes Götz von Berlichingen prisoner. In 1521 he was a participant in the Diet of Worms, where Martin Luther was negotiated. He is next to his brother Ernst II von Schönburg in 1525 Mr. von Glauchau (and probably also von Waldenburg). In 1524 the brothers Wolf I. and Ernst II. Von Schönburg set up the "Gesamt (m) thaus" Schönburg . It is a house contract that regulated the unity of all Schönburg rulers outwardly. Glauchau became the seat of government for the entire house; this was where the general government, the Lehnhof and the Lehngericht sat, and from 1556 also the house's common archive.
  • Ernst II of Schönburg (1484–1534). In 1523 Wolf I and Ernst II jointly buy the Wehlen estate in Saxon Switzerland. Through a division agreement with his brother Wolf I, Ernst II becomes lord of Glauchau, Meerane, Lichtenstein and Hartenstein in 1524. Nevertheless, he called himself "Herr zu Glauchau and Waldenburg". He was a bitter opponent of the Reformation. In the Peasants' War, Ernst II led the troops of Duke George the Bearded of Saxony on May 15, 1525 at the Battle of Frankenhausen. Thomas Müntzer was captured and taken to Wasserburg Heldrungen (property of Ernst von Mansfeld, a bitter opponent of Müntzer), where Ernst II von Schönburg was also staying. Müntzer was tortured here and later brought to Mühlhausen for execution. After returning to Schönburg, he had several leaders of peasant unrest executed, tortured or imprisoned. Some were deprived of their property or had to pay heavy fines.
On February 5, 1525, he was appointed to the ducal-Saxon “Secret Council” by his friend Duke Georg von Sachsen. Probably for this reason he had the Fordglauchau Castle built between 1527 and 1534 (and supposedly also the front Waldenburg Renaissance castle). At the same time, under him, changes were made to Hinterglauchau Castle, especially to the east facade of the north wing (bay window). In addition, in 1525 he acquired the castle and lordship of Hohnstein in Saxon Switzerland.
In 1528 he issued a guild letter to the Glaucher weavers in which he called himself “Ernnst Herre von Schonburgk zu glauchaw vnd Waldenburg”. In 1531 Ernst II, together with the Freyburg bailiff Taubenheim, was entrusted with a revision of all the ducal-Saxon offices in Thuringia by Duke Georg von Sachsen. His brother is Wolf I. von Schönburg. In 1524 the brothers Wolf I. and Ernst II. Von Schönburg set up the "Gesamt (m) thaus" Schönburg . It is a house contract that regulated the unity of all Schönburg rulers outwardly. Glauchau became the seat of government for the entire house; this was where the general government, the Lehnhof and the Lehngericht sat, and from 1556 also the house's common archive. For the feudal lordship of the Ponitz manor belonging to the Glauchau rulership , Ernst II von Schönburg, as landlord, led a lengthy process against the Wettins from 1531 to 1533, which was decided in his favor in Prague. In 1533 he issues regulations and statutes for the dominions of Glauchau and Waldenburg. At his death in 1534 a guardianship government was established for his underage sons until 1550.

From the 16th century

  • Hermann von Schönburg (?). Friedrich von Schönburg (?) Came into possession of the lordships and castles of Trautenau and Schatzlar in 1472 , which he received from Hans von Warnsdorf , the governor of the County of Glatz. In 1521 his son and heir Hermann von Schönburg was forced to sell the lordship of Schatzlar and Trautenau to Johann and Wilhelm Kruschina von Lichtenburg because of indebtedness. Hermann retained the right to live in Schatzlar Castle. After Hermann was accused of damaging the country, a punitive expedition under the Bohemian governor Karl von Münsterberg burned the Schatzlar castle down in 1523.
  • Wenzel von Schönburg († 1523), lord of the manor and castle Hoyerswerda . His sons Wanke and Georg von der Kosel were not entitled to a name because they were children of a bastard line. They owned the Cosel manor and named themselves after it "von der Kosel" (Upper Lusatian noble family).
  • Karl von Schönburg (?), Lord of Castle Pürstein and Castle Trautenau . In 1526, as guardian of the underage sons of Wenzel von Schönburg († 1523), Mr. von Hoyerswerda, Wanke and Georg, he had to buy the villages of Cosel and Sella from the Dresden Augustinian monastery , as a result of a claim for damages by the monastery from King Ludwig II of Bohemia .
  • Johann von Schönburg († January 9, 1555 Passau) ( CZ : "Jan ze Šumburka"), Bishop of Gurk in Carinthia from 1552 to 1555. (Note: it is doubtful whether he is a family member of the Thuringian-Saxon Schönburgers)
  • George I of Schönburg (1529–1585). Since a partition contract on May 1, 1556, he has been the sole owner of Glauchau (and the Electoral Saxon feudal lordship of Remse) and he calls himself "Georg (I) von Schönburg-Glauchau" and thus establishes the first Glauchau line of the Schönburgers, to which Glauchau belongs alone . In 1558 he issues town and police regulations for Glauchau. His two brothers are Wolf II and Hugo II. In 1577 Greßlas ( Graslitz ) in Bohemia became his free inheritance, but this rule had already been bought in 1575. Georg I, Hugo I and Wolf II von Schönburg buy together from Wolf von Ende on January 26, 1548 the rulership and Rochsburg Castle , which is a fiefdom of the Electorate of Saxony.
  • Hugo I. von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1530–1566), his remarkable sandstone epitaph with four columns and "him" in a kneeling, praying position is in the town church of Waldenburg and since 1946 also his grave slab, which was previously in the Waldenburg castle chapel was. (The epitaph and grave slab are from the Dresden artist Christoph Walther II.) Hugo I is considered to be the founder of the Schönburg-Waldenburg line , from which the Schönburg-Stein, Schönburg-Lichtenstein and Schönburg-Hartenstein branches also descend. This so-called "upper line" was raised to the rank of imperial prince in 1790. All Schoenburgers had owned the counts since 1600. Georg I, Hugo I and Wolf II von Schoenburg jointly bought the rulership and castle Rochsburg, which is an electoral fiefdom, from Wolf von Ende on January 26, 1548. A guardianship government was established for the underage sons Hugo I from 1566 to 1582. On November 21, 1582, his three sons Georg II, Veit III. and Hugo II. signed an inheritance agreement. From 1559 Hugo I had annual synods for the clergymen of his ephoria held in Waldenburg Castle. The aim is to abolish all Catholic customs.
  • Wolf II von Schönburg-Penig (1532–1581), owner of the Penig castles and Rochsburg Castle. Since an inheritance was divided on May 1, 1556, he has owned Penig, Wechselburg and Rochsburg alone. His two brothers are Hugo II and Georg I. In 1557 he had the “front castle” built in Penig as a Renaissance building. After a renovation / new building in the 18th century, it is known as the "New Castle" Penig (in the classicistic style).
He was married to Anna, born Schenk von Landsberg. Both donated a sandstone altar (by the Dresden artist Christoph Walther II.) Which is located in the Peniger city church and shows both donors kneeling and praying.
In the village church of Rochsburg there is a free grave for Wolf II and his wife Anna, which is a simplified "copy" of the Moritz monument in Freiberg Cathedral. It was created by Samuel Lorentz from the Freiberg family of artists. In March 1567 he was arrested during the Flacian trials in Chemnitz and held in his home in Dresden until June 21st. He is making a written creed here. Georg I, Hugo I and Wolf II von Schönburg buy together from Wolf von Ende on January 26, 1548 the rulership and Rochsburg Castle, which is a fiefdom of the Electorate of Saxony.
  • Kaspar von Schönburg (?). In 1557 Kaspar von Schönburg bought the Bohemian castle Graupen on the southern slopes of the Ore Mountains from Thimo V. von Colditz.
  • Anna von Schönburg-Penig († 1568 or 1586), née Schenk von Landsberg. She was the wife of Wolf II von Schönburg-Penig. Both donated a sandstone altar (by the Dresden artist Christoph Walther II.) Which is located in the Peniger city church and shows both donors kneeling and praying.
In the village church of Rochsburg there is a free grave for Wolf II and his wife Anna, which is a simplified "copy" of the Moritz monument in Freiberg Cathedral. It was created by Samuel Lorentz from the Freiberg family of artists.
  • Wolf III. von Schönburg-Penig (1556–1612), owner of the Peniger castles and of Rochsburg and Wechselburg castles, bills of the Glauchau office indicate that Wolf III. made music himself.
  • Hans Ernst von Schönburg (1563–1586), buried with a sandstone epitaph in the city ​​church of Peniger . It shows a figure-rich two-storey "Tuscan" column structure.
  • Wolf Ernst von Schönburg-Penig (1582–1623), owner of Glauchau (together?) With his two brothers Otto Wilhelm (1587–28.11.1617) and August Siegfried (1596–1631). Wolf Ernst stabbed his brother Otto Wilhelm in an argument on November 28, 1617 in Hinterglauchau Castle . In 1603 Wolf-Ernst took part in a campaign to Hungary with Hans Georg von Schönburg. Wolf Ernst is considered to be the founder of the Schönburg-Hinterglauchau line
  • Hans Georg von Schönburg (?). In 1603 Wolf-Ernst von Schönburg-Penig took part in a campaign to Hungary with Hans Georg von Schönburg
  • August (us) von Schönburg-Glauchau (1583–1610). Sole owner of Glauchau. Owner of Greßlas (Graslitz) in Bohemia. In 1601 in Graslitz he issued a mountain code. In 1594 he founded a hospital in Glauchau. He was the last of the first line Schönburg-Glauchau. With him, the (old) Schönburg-Glauchau line expires in 1610. When the south wing of Castle Fordglauchau was renovated, Augustus had a court kitchen installed here. Remnants of this kitchen have been excavated archaeologically and are part of the Hinterglauchau Castle Museum (in the Fordglauchau Castle).
  • Christoph Friedrich von Schönburg (1585–1607), with a sandstone epitaph (by the artist Uriel II. Lorentz from a Freiberg family of artists) buried in the city church of Penig. The epitaph shows the deceased as a kneeling person praying.
  • Otto Wilhelm von Schönburg-Penig (1587–1617), Lord of Glauchau. He was highly educated. As an organ player, he was particularly fond of playing church music. In 1617 he was stabbed to death by his brother Wolf-Ernst in the rear castle of Glauchau (Hinterglauchau Castle) after a dispute. This event went down in history as the "Schönburg fratricide".
  • Hans Caspar von Schönburg (1594–1644), Lord of Glauchau. As Herr von Glauchau, in 1636 he certified the statutes ("Leges Fisci musicalis") of the Glauchau Kantoreigesellschaft. In 1639 he received a letter of protection (Salveguardenbrief) for Glauchau from the Swedish general Johan Banér. In 1640 he issued a "Police Order" for Glauchau. In November 1620 he took part in the Battle of the White Mountains near Prague with Hans Heinrich von Schönburg . He is buried "with his wife and children" in a crypt in the Glauchau Georgenkirche .
  • August Siegfried von Schönburg-Penig / Fordglauchau (1596–1631), died after the battle of Breitenfeld (September 7, 1631) as a result of an injury in Penig in 1631
  • Christian von Schönburg-Penig (1598–1664) , owner of Wechselburg Palace
  • Hugo II von Schönburg-Waldenburg (?), He received sole rule of Waldenburg with Lichtenstein in a partition contract on May 1, 1556. (His two contractual partners / brothers (?) Are Georg I and Wolf II?) In 1582 an inheritance is divided, in which Hugo II receives sole control of Hartenstein. His brothers are here as Georg II and Veit III. named. His father was Hugo I. In 1584 Hugo II bought the manor of Ölsnitz / Erzgebirge with Lugau. Allegedly there should have been another division in 1559.
  • Vitus III. from Schönburg (?). His brothers are Georg II. And Hugo II. On November 21, 1582 Veit III. in a contract of inheritance only the rule of Lichtenstein. In 1604 he is involved in a house contract with Wolf III., Georg II. And Hugo II. On April 13, 1610 he issues statutes for the city of Lichtenstein.
  • Georg II von Schönburg-Waldenburg (?), His brothers are Hugo II and Veit III, his father is Hugo I von Schönburg-Waldenburg. In 1582, George II received sole ownership of Waldenburg in an inheritance contract.
  • Hugo III von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1581–1644). He maintained a musical orchestra in Waldenburg and Lichtenstein until the turmoil of the Thirty Years' War. In 1632, during the Thirty Years' War, he saved the town of Waldenburg from being pillaged by imperial troops.

From 17th century

  • Eva von Schönburg († August 21, 1613 in Waldenburg), b. Give to Landsberg. Her tombstone was discovered around 1941 in the town church of Waldenburg.
  • Hans Heinrich von Schönburg (?). In November 1620 he took part in the Battle of the White Mountains near Prague with Hans Caspar von Schönburg .
  • Georg Ernst von Schönburg (?) And Friedrich von Schönburg (?), Probably Lords of Glauchau, sign a house contract with each other on April 17, 1632 (the so-called "Glauchau contract") and thus end inheritance disputes.
  • Friedrich von Schönburg (?) And Georg Ernst von Schönburg (?), Probably Lords of Glauchau, sign a house contract with each other on April 17, 1632 (the so-called "Glauchau contract") and thus end inheritance disputes.
  • Otto Albrecht von Schönburg (?). His brother is Veit IV von Schönburg. In 1632 Otto Albrecht, together with his brother Veit IV von Schönburg, became the owner of the castle and manor in Stein bei Hartenstein as their feudal recipients, who had expired from Trützschler. By a partition contract in 1639 he received only the castle and rule Hartenstein (without castle and manor stone). In 1667 he issues brewing regulations for Loessnitz .
  • Veit IV of Schönburg (* ?, † 1651). In 1632, together with his brother Otto Albrecht von Schönburg, he became the owner of the castle and manor in Stein bei Hartenstein as their feudal takers, who had expired from Trützschler. By a partition contract in 1639 he received the castle and (new) rule of stone alone. With his death, the Schönburg-Stein rule becomes part of the Hartenstein rule again.
  • Wolf Friedrich von Schönburg (?). Apparently Herr auf Glauchau, because in 1647 he drove the Electoral Saxon administrator / sequestrator from Glauchau here and was later taken prisoner by the advancing Electoral Saxon military. The Glauchau office was in debt.
  • Gottfried Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Remse-Rochsburg (1623-1679) In addition to Hinterglauchau, he is the owner of the Saxon feudal lords of Remse and Rochsburg . From 1666 to 1671 the farmers from Pfaffroda in the Remse lordship refused to let his sheep graze on their fields during the so-called "Pfaffroda Hat and Trift War". His sons with his wife Agnes Beata von Schönburg-Penig (1636-1687) are:
    • Christian Ernst of Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (-Remse-Rochsburg) (1655-1718)
    • August Ernst von Schönburg- (Hinterglauchau-Remse) -Rochsburg (1666-1729)
  • Hans Ernst von Schönburg (* 1628 ?, † 1649), at the age of 21 he was murdered by highwaymen on a trip to Italy.
  • Agnes Beata von Schönburg-Penig (1636-1687). She marries Gottfried Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Remse-Rochsburg (1623-1679) and has two sons with him.
  • Count Otto Ludwig von Schönburg-Waldenburg-Hartenstein-Stein-Lichtenstein (1643, † November 22, 1701). He is the sole owner of the lordships of Waldenburg, Hartenstein (with stone) and Lichtenstein. He was married to Sophie Magdalene (1651-1726), b. Countess of Leiningen-Westerburg. In 1687, he placed the trades the "Yellow gravel pit" in Lößnitz the right one arsenic - hut create. On September 10, 1691, he issued police regulations for the county of Hartenstein. He had the castle chapel in the Hartensteiner Schloss renewed and consecrated in 1696 and was now named Sophienkapelle after his wife (The imperial count was re-confirmed for all Schoenburgers on August 7, 1700 by Emperor Leopold I). Otto Ludwig's death ended in 1701 the common administration of all possessions of the Waldenburg line. His daughter Maria Elisabeth (1670-1737) married August Ernst von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1666-1729) from the Hinterglauchau line on November 9, 1692 in Waldenburg. In 1700 the entire Schönburg house was raised to the rank of imperial count. On June 1, 1702, his heirs sign an inheritance contract and raffle the inheritance among themselves. His heirs (sons?) Are:
    • Christian Heinrich von Schönburg (?)
    • Otto Wilhelm von Schönburg (?)
    • Georg Albrecht von Schönburg (?)
    • Ludwig Friedrich von Schönburg (1681–1736)
  • Countess Sophie Magdalene von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1643-1701), née Countess Leiningen-Westerburg. She marries Otto Ludwig von Schönburg-Waldenburg, sole master of Waldenburg, Hartenstein, Stein and Lichtenstein. The castle chapel in Hartenstein Castle, which was renewed by 1696, was named after her Sophienkapelle. Their daughter is Maria Elisabeth (1670-1737), who married August Ernst von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1666-1729) from the Hinterglauchau line in Waldenburg in 1692.
  • Count Christian Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1655-1718). He was born in 1655 as the eldest son of Count Gottfried Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Rochsburg-Remse (1623-1679) and Agnes Beata von Schönburg-Penig (1636-1687). He was a grandson of the fratricide Wolf-Ernst von Schönburg (1582-1623). His younger brother was Count August Ernst von Schönburg- (Hinterglauchau) -Rochsburg- (Remse) (1666-1729). When an inheritance was divided on December 6, 1681, both brothers each received half of the lordship of Hinterglauchau, Remse and Rochsburg. On April 18, 1689, August Ernst ceded his shares in Hinterglauchau and Remse to his older brother, Christian Ernst thus became the sole owner of Hinterglauchau and Remse. On August 7, 1700, Emperor Leopold I raised the entire Schönburg house to the status of imperial count.
  • Count August Ernst von Schönburg-Rochsburg (* July 26, 1666 Rochsburg - August 11, 1729 Rochsburg). He was born in 1666 at Rochsburg Castle as the younger son of Count Gottfried Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Rochsburg-Remse (1623-1679) and Agnes Beata von Schönburg-Penig (1636-1687). He was a grandson of the fratricide Wolf-Ernst von Schönburg (1582-1623). His older brother was Christian Ernst (1655-1718). When an inheritance was divided on December 6, 1681, both brothers each received half of the lordship of Hinterglauchau, Remse and Rochsburg. On April 18, 1689, August Ernst ceded his shares in Hinterglauchau and Remse to his older brother and became the sole owner of Rochsburg. His older brother becomes the sole owner of Hinterglauchau. In 1686 August Ernst served as a cornet in the Saxon army and in 1690 as a cavalry master in the body regiment "Cuirassiers". In the 1690s he resigns from the Saxon army. On August 7, 1700, Emperor Leopold I raised the entire Schönburg house to the status of imperial count. On March 4, 1717 he sends a reply / reverse to Friedrich August I of Saxony and fully recognizes the Saxon sovereignty over his rulership of Rochsburg. On his death he left a widow and two unmarried daughters living at Rochsburg Castle. He was buried in Rochsburg in the crypt of the village church and a baroque funeral procession took place, which has been handed down on four ink drawings. On November 9, 1692, in Waldenburg, he married Maria Elisabeth, Princess von Schönburg-Hartenstein (1670-1737), the daughter of Otto-Ludwig von Schönburg-Hartenstein (1643-1701) and Sophie Magdalene von Leiningen-Westerburg (1651-1726 ). His marriage has two sons and three daughters:
    • August Ludwig von Schönburg-Rochsburg (04.08.1693-06.11.1694)
    • Sophie Agnes Wilhelmine von Schönburg-Rochsburg (08/22/1694-13/02/1774)
    • Ludwig Ernst von Schönburg-Rochsburg (09/11/1695-10/01/1696)
    • Louise Auguste von Schönburg-Rochsburg (* and † 04.10.1696)
    • Christine Auguste von Schönburg-Rochsburg (July 8, 1698 to January 5, 1753)
  • Count August Siegfried von Schönburg-Penig-Mittelglauchau (1678–1763). He was probably musically inclined, because in 1760 he gave the church "a pair of beautiful and large drums".
  • Count Otto Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1683–1746). In 1724 he and his entourage attended the dedication of the Donati organ in the village church in Schlunzig .
  • Catharina von Schönburg (?) (Zu Penig) got into a witch trial in Penig in 1693 because her husband, the sovereign wanted a divorce
  • Countess Charlotte Elisabeth von Schönburg-Mittelglauchau (1698–1738). Her husband (name, dates?) Died in 1727 and she had the so-called “war scaffolding” erected in his honor in the St. Georgen Church in Glauchau, which is still there today.
  • Count Christian Heinrich von Schönburg-Waldenburg (?). On June 1, 1702, the four heirs of Count Otto Ludwig von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* ?, † November 22, 1701) sign an inheritance contract and raffle the inheritance among each other. Christian Heinrich becomes the owner of the Waldenburg estate. In the dispute over state sovereignty, he submitted his first own settlement proposal to Electoral Saxony in 1721.
  • Count Wolf Heinrich von Schönburg-Penig-Mittelglauchau († 1704)
  • Count Otto Wilhelm von Schönburg-Lichtenstein (?). On June 1, 1702, the four heirs of Count Otto Ludwig von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* ?, † November 22, 1701) sign an inheritance contract and raffle the inheritance among each other. Otto Wilhelm receives the rule of Lichtenstein. In addition to Lichtenstein Castle, the nearby small Rüsdorf Castle , which no longer exists today, belongs to this rule . In 1708 he had a new place built on a mountain opposite Lichtenstein, which was named "Callenberg" in 1712 after his late wife Henriette Charlotte, née von Callenberg (today the district of Lichtenstein, since around 1800 called "Callnberg"). In September 1720 Otto Wilhelm issued a process code for his rule Lichtenstein. In 1725 Callenberg received town charter.
  • Countess Henriette Charlotte von Schönburg-Lichtenstein (*?, Died around / before 1712), born von Callenberg. Wife of Count Otto Wilhelm von Schönburg-Lichtenstein.
  • Count Ludwig Friedrich von Schönburg-Stein (1681–1736). On June 1, 1702, the four heirs of Count Otto Ludwig von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* ?, † November 22, 1701) sign an inheritance contract and raffle the inheritance among each other. Ludwig Friedrich becomes the owner of the estate and Stein Castle . On December 21, 1707, he pledged the places Neudörfel and Rödlitz, which had previously belonged to the Stein rule, to his brother Georg Albrecht von Schönburg-Hartenstein. Until 1813 these places belonged to the Hartenstein office. Count Ludwig Friedrich (from the Waldenburg line) is said to have initiated a new building for Rüsdorf Castle . However, this castle was demolished around 1850.
  • Count Georg Albrecht von Schönburg-Hartenstein (?). On June 1, 1702, the four heirs of Count Otto Ludwig von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* ?, † November 22, 1701) sign an inheritance contract and raffle the inheritance among each other. Georg Albrecht becomes the owner of Herrschaft Hartenstein (excluding Burg and Herrschaft Stein). On December 21, 1707 he bought the towns of Neudörfel and Rödlitz, which had previously belonged to the Stein dominion, for resale (i.e. as a pledge) from his brother Count Ludwig Friedrich von Schönburg-Stein. They then belong to the Hartenstein lordship until 1813.
  • Count Christian Ernst von Schönburg (-Hinterglauchau) (1655–1718) and Count August Ernst von Schönburg (1666–1729), Lords of Glauchau, issued a permit after 1680 to build a new settlement near Hohenstein , named after the two of you "Ernstthal" is called. (Much later, both cities are united.) On December 2, 1681, the Glauchau rule was divided into the offices (and lines) of Fordglauchau and Hinterglauchau. Christian Ernst now called himself Christian Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau . At the same time he had become the owner of the Electoral Saxon feudal lordship of Remse .
  • Count August Ernst von Schönburg (1666–1729) and Count Christian Ernst von Schönburg (1655–1718), Lords of Glauchau, issued a permit after 1680 to build a new settlement near Hohenstein , which is called "Ernstthal" after the two of you. (Much later, both cities are united.)
  • Count Otto Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1682-1746). Under him, around 1720, two rooms on the upper floor of the east wing of Hinterglauchau Castle were redesigned in Baroque style

From the 18th century

  • Count Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1711 to 1777), lord of Rochsburg Castle, is buried here in the castle's crypt. His children were:
    • Friedrich Ernst (1748–1770)
    • Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst (1751-1816)
    • Wilhelmine Eleonore Sidonie (1756–1822)
    • Heinrich Ernst II (1760-1825)
    • Ludwig Ernst (1750–1806)
    • Caroline Antoinette Louise (1752-1827)
    • Albert Gottlieb Ernst (* † 1758)
    • Magdalena Louise (1762-1835)
  • Count Albert Christian Ernst von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1720–1799), 1757 founder of the castle company in Schloss Hinterglauchau, which existed until 1779. After storm damage to the roof structure of the north wing of Hinterglauchau Castle in 1763–64, he had the north wing largely demolished from February 1764 and then rebuilt. The corner tower from the Gothic period on the south-west corner of the north wing of Hinterglauchau was partially demolished and rebuilt. In 1766, at his suggestion, the Albertsthal settlement near Glauchau was founded, which is named after him. In 1768 he declared the main trial of 1740 with Saxony for his rule Hinterglauchau to be invalid, because the crown of Bohemia had never approved. Empress Maria Theresa actually lifted the recession in 1773. As a result, Kursachsen sent troops to Glauchau (known as the "Glauchau War" ) in 1777 to arrest Albert Christian Ernst. He escaped and then had to live in exile in Vienna. In 1779 he converted to Catholicism (person could be identical to Albert, Count von Schönburg- (Unter-) Glauchau.)
  • Countess Magdalena Luise von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1723? –1798), née Reichsfreiin von Elstern (von Elster zu Diamantstein), wife of Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg. Buried in the crypt of Rochsburg Castle.
  • Count Friedrich Erdmann von Schönburg (?). There is an epitaph for him from 1730 in the sanctuary of the St. Georgen Church in Glauchau .
  • Count Friedrich Ernst von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1748–1770), first son of Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg. Buried in the crypt of Rochsburg Castle.
  • Count Carl Heinrich III. von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Penig (1757-14 April 1815). He lived with his family in Kassel until 1813, after which his family lived in the New Palace in Penig .
  • Count Ludwig Ernst von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1750–1806). Son of Count Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg.
  • Count Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1751 to 1816), Lord of Rochsburg Castle. Second son of Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg. Buried in the crypt of Rochsburg Castle.
  • Princess Caroline Antoinette Louise of Schönburg-Rochsburg (1752–1827). Daughter of Count Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg.
  • Princess Wilhelmine Eleonore Sidonie von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1756 to 1822), widowed baroness von der Steyden. Daughter of Heinrich Ernst I of Schönburg-Rochsburg. Buried in the crypt of Rochsburg Castle.
  • Count Carl Heinrich III. from Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg (1757-1815). He has an oil painting by Anton Graff from 1806 as well as a coat of arms with the symbols of the Order of St. John integrated in addition to the Schönburg coat of arms (unknown painter, 1795). Both in the Hinterglauchau museum. In 1793, Carl Heinrich sells the Electoral Saxon feudal lordship of Remse with Abteioberlungwitz to Baron Christian Friedrich von Gregori.
  • Albert Gottlieb Ernst von Schönburg-Rochsburg (* and † 1758). Son of Count Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg.
  • Count Wilhelm von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Penig (* ?, † 02.09.1815 Wechselburg). Younger brother of Count Carl Heinrich III. from Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Penig. He lived with his family in Kassel until 1813, after which his family lived in the New Palace in Penig
  • Count / Prince (since 1790) Otto Carl Friedrich von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1758–1800). Between 1780 and 1798 he had the Green Field Park laid out in what was then "Greenfield", east of Waldenburg. On April 8, 1786, he established a primogeniture order for all possessions of the Waldenburg line and on December 18, 1786, after the death of Count Friedrich Albert von Schönburg-Hartenstein, he inherited his rule of Hartenstein. All possessions of the Waldenburg line are now united in one hand. On October 9, 1790, Emperor Leopold II raised the Waldenburg line of the Schönburgers to the rank of imperial prince. In 1791 Otto Carl Friedrich tried to set up his own princely government in Schönburg for the Waldenburg line. In 1797 he bought the Electoral Saxon feudal lordship of Remse from Baron Christian Friedrich von Gregori. After his death Otto Carl Friedrich was buried in the crypt of the Lichtenstein Castle . His widow (name?) Had a mausoleum built between 1820 and 1830 to commemorate him in Green Fields Park. However, due to the presence of groundwater, it could not be used as such and has been empty since then. From 1811 to 1813, his sons litigated over his inheritance. His firstborn son is Otto Victor I.
  • Count Heinrich Ernst II of Schönburg-Rochsburg (April 29, 1760 Rochsburg - April 19, 1825 Rochsburg). Lord at Rochsburg Castle. Fourth son of Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg. Buried in the crypt of Rochsburg Castle. Due to his merino sheep breeding, which was economically very important at the time and which became famous across Europe, and due to his economic diary for the years 1799–1819 (published in 1828), he is one of the most important German economists of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. First married to Sophie Wilhelmine (1766 to 1795), née Princess von Schönaich-Carolath. Second marriage to Ernestine Wilhelmine (1768 to 1838), born von Köhler. Since he has no male descendants, the Schönburg-Rochsburg line expires with his death in 1825. The Rochsburg rule then passes to the Schönburg-Hinterglauchau line.
  • Count (Franz Gottlob) Albert (Christian Ernst) von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (* April 20, 1761 Glauchau; † January 8, 1841 ibid). Owner of Hinterglauchau until 1797, in that year he sold the estate to his brother Gottlob Carl Ludwig von Schönburg (1762–1842). From 1825 co-owner of Rochsburg. From 1787 to 1830 representative of the Schönburgers in the Saxon Estates Assembly. 1836/37 representative of the Schönburger in the first chamber of the Saxon state parliament.
  • Princess Magdalena Louise of Schönburg-Rochsburg (1762–1835). Daughter of Count Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg.
  • Count (Gottlob Carl) Ludwig (Christian Ernst) von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (August 27, 1762 Glauchau; † May 1, 1842, ibid) ( CZ : "Ludvík ze Šumburka-Zadního Hluchova"). Until 17./18. November 1823 he was the guardian of the minor (Carl Heinrich) Alban von Schönburg-Fordglauchau (1804-1864) and administered his inheritance, the lordships of Fordglauchau, Penig and Wechselburg. On November 18, Alban came of age. Ludwig rented the so-called "Peniger portion" of the Fordglauchau castle (for Alban?). Ludwig served as major general in a royal Bavarian army. His son was Count Heinrich von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1794-1881). From him and his wife, Countess Ferdinande Henriette, b. Countess Hochberg-Rohnstock (1767-1836) has an oil painting (around 1790) by an unknown painter in the exhibition at Schloss Hinterglauchau.
  • Countess Juliane Eleonore Augusta von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1764–1823). She was musically educated. Composer Christian Gottlob Saupe (1763–1819), court and city organist in Glauchau until his death, dedicated the “German Chants” published by Verlag Breitkopf in Leipzig in 1791 together with sonatinas to “his hard-working pupil, the Comtesse Augusta von Schönburg”. The printing of the cantata “Der Abend” in Gera reveals her affection for Count Albert von Schönburg-Rochsburg.
  • Countess Sophie Wilhelmine von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1766–1795), née Princess von Schönaich-Carolath. First wife of Count Heinrich Ernst II von Schönburg-Rochsburg. Buried in the crypt of Rochsburg Castle.
  • Countess Ferdinande Henriette von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1767-1836), b. Countess Hochberg-Rohnstock. From her and her husband, (Gottlob Carl) Ludwig (Christian Ernst) von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1762-1842) there is an oil painting (around 1790) by an unknown painter in the exhibition at Schloss Hinterglauchau.
  • Countess Ernestine Wilhelmine von Schönburg-Rochsburg (1768–1838), born von Köhler. Second wife of Heinrich Ernst II von Schönburg-Rochsburg. Buried in the crypt of Rochsburg Castle.
  • Princess Viktoria Albertine von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1782–1840). She was an energetic and talented musician. A pastel painting by Christian Leberecht Vogel of her existed until 1945, made before 1810.
  • Princess Jenny of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1780-1809). By marriage she becomes Countess of Stolberg-Wernigerode. There is a double portrait of her and her daughter Eleonore, pastel by the painter Christian Leberecht Vogel , probably from 1802, in the classicism room in Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, as well as an oil painting by the same painter from 1799.
  • Count / Prince (since 1790) Otto Victor I. von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1785–1859). From 1811 to 1813 the sons of Otto Carl Friedrich litigated over his inheritance (primogeniture and allodial process). In a comparison, the first-born son, Otto Victor I., hands over the Hartenstein, Stein and Zschocken Vorwerk to his later-born brothers. In 1814/15 he campaigned for the rights of the House of Schönburg at the Congress of Vienna together with Prince Friedrich Alfred von Schönburg-Hartenstein . On August 13, 1819, he founded the “Fürstlich-Schönburgische Sparkasse” in Waldenburg. It is the first private savings bank in Saxony. Your vault will be set up in the keep of Waldenburg Castle and is still located in the tower with two huge steel doors. In 1819 or 1820 he bought the Gauernitz manor and castle . In 1840 the art-loving prince acquired part of the famous "Linck Natural Collection" from Leipzig pharmacist Rhode (Heinrich Linck (1638–1717) and his descendants collected passionately). In 1844, across from Waldenburg Castle, he had the museum building rebuilt to this day. The collection had previously been stored in the riding house of the Marstall of the Waldenburg Castle Vorwerk. As a museum, the collection was then open to the public under him. He also acquired other collections (Reichelche, Gerhardt and Oberland collections) for this “Princely Schönburg Natural History Cabinet in Waldenburg”. This museum still exists today as a "museum within a museum" in its largely original version and is significant in terms of museum history. "His daughter was Ottilie, who married Count Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Rochsburg in 1856. In 1833 he negotiated with the Saxon ministers Bernhard von Lindenau and von Zesche with the aim of concluding an" explanatory recession "between the House of Schönburg and the Kingdom of Saxony , This recess is issued in 1835 and renews the older one from 1740. Otto Victor I. financed several "seminars" (higher schools for the training of Protestant teachers) from private assets (converted to today's high millions). On July 26, 1844, in Waldenburg inaugurated the “Fürstlich-Schönburgische teachers 'seminar”. This building exists (expanded) to this day and houses the Waldenburg Eurogymnasium. In Callnberg , he donated the Callnberg teachers' seminar on February 8, 1855, today in Lichtenstein . This building is now used as a grammar school. In 1852 (according to the inscription on May 11, 1847) he founded the teachers' college in Droyßig (later called "Droyßiger Anstalten"), where he had already bought the castle there in 1839 . In 1826 he bought the dominion (and probably also the castle?) Preßnitz . He had most of the forest cut down here and sold the Preßnitz rule to Countess Gabriela von Buquoy-Longueval, née von Rotenhan, at Rothenhaus Castle as early as 1832. Apparently under him, the new Green Field Castle, also known as the "Teehaus", was built in the Green Fields Park from 1844 to 1846 , after the older one was almost completely demolished (probably due to dilapidation). An oil painting by him by the painter Christian Leberecht Vogel , dated around 1795, is on display in the classicism room of the Hinterglauchau Palace Museum.
    • Princess Ottilie von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1830–1880), his daughter
    • Prince Carl Ernst von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1836–1915), his youngest son
  • Prince Friedrich Alfred von Schönburg-Hartenstein (1786-1840). In 1814/15 he campaigned for the rights of the House of Schönburg at the Congress of Vienna together with Prince Otto Viktor I von Schönburg-Waldenburg . Around 1820 he had Hartenstein Castle rebuilt in the neo-Gothic style. On February 11, 1843, the "Alfred Foundation" was founded in Hartenstein, which, in addition to Hartenstein, was also responsible for the Stein and Zschocken rule. A pastel painting by the painter Christian Leberecht Vogel by him , dated around 1810, and an oil painting by the painter Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun from around 1820 are exhibited in the Classicism room in Hinterglauchau Castle.
  • Count Friedrich Albert von Schönburg-Hartenstein (* ?, † December 18, 1786). With his death, the old Schönburg-Hartenstein line expires . The property (Hartenstein) is now in the hands of Otto Carl-Friedrich von Schönburg-Waldenburg.
  • Countess Marie Clementine von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1789–1863), b. Princess of Schönburg-Waldenburg. Wife of Count Heinrich.
  • Count Heinrich (Gottlob Otto Ernst) von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (* December 14th, 1794 Quolsdorf Castle near Hähnichen; † March 12th, 1881 Glauchau). Owner of Hinterglauchau (1837) and Wechselburg (1842) with Gusow (1842). Co-owner of Rochsburg (1842). In 1858 he bought Netzschkau. In 1868 he became the sole owner of Rochsburg. His Czech name is "Jindřich ze Šumburka-Zadního Hluchova". He was a member of the First Chamber of the Council of States of the Saxon Kingdom. There is a portrait of him in the large historicism room of the Schlossmuseum Hinterglauchau (photograph overpainted with oil paint, Berlin around 1860). He was married to Princess Marie Clementine von Schönburg-Waldenburg and had four children with her who were brought up in an Evangelical Lutheran way:
    • Henriette Marie Elisabeth ("Elise") von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1821–1899)
    • Friedrich ("Fritz") Wilhelm Edmund von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1823–1897)
    • Friedrich Alfred von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1827–1855)
    • Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (November 19, 1829 Berlin - October 19, 1900 Berlin)

From the 19th century

  • Count Ernst Ferdinand Ludwig Heinrich von Schönburg (1800 to 1868). 2nd cousin of Heinrich Ernst II von Schönburg-Rochsburg. Presumably buried in an unlabeled coffin in the crypt of Rochsburg Castle.
  • Princess Adolfine Sophie Wilhelmine Henriette Ernestine von Schönburg-Rochsburg (* 1809), illegitimate, later legitimized. Daughter of Count Heinrich Ernst II von Schönburg-Rochsburg.
  • Count (Carl Heinrich) Alban von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1804–1864). His younger brother was Count Wilhelm von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Penig. On April 14, 1815, his younger brother, Count Wilhelm, inherited. However, he died on September 2, 1815 in Wechselburg. The only ten-year-old Alban became an heir. Count Ludwig von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1762–1842) took over the management of his legacy as guardian. Ludwig rented the so-called "Peniger portion" of the Fordglauchau castle (for his Hinterglauchau line?). On November 18, 1823, Alban von Schönburg-Fordglauchau came of age and inherited the lords of Fordglauchau, Penig and Wechselburg. (Other statement: Count Alban von Schönburg had already become the owner of the lordships of Fordglauchau, Penig and Wechselburg in 1829. ) He has lived in the new Wechselburg Castle since 1824 and had a first Catholic service here in the basilica / castle church on October 8, 1843. Alban von Schönburg enjoyed a great reputation for his tolerance in the religious field. From 1843 he made his Protestant castle church, the only surviving late Romanesque basilica in West Saxony available to the area's Catholics for church services. From 1829 to 1860, Alban had this church renovated in stages, partly from a historical preservation perspective. He was a member of the "German Society for Research into the Patriotic Language and Antiquities in Leipzig". On April 20, 1846, the marriage of his eldest daughter to the Catholic Count Otto von Quadt zu Wykradt and Isny ​​took place in the church. Alban was a knight of the Order of St. John and holder of the Grand Cross of the Order of Albrecht. He was buried with his wife Emilie in the Trinity cemetery in Dresden. His wife was Amalie Christiane Marie (1806-1880), called Emilie or Emmy, née Countess von Jenison-Walworth , whom he married in 1824. An oil painting by (Carl Heinrich) Alban is shown in the Biedermeier room in Schloss Hinterglauchau, which Julius Ferdinand Wilhelm Sattler (1796-1866) painted in Dresden in 1827 and shows him as a hunter in the Elbe Sandstone Mountains.
    • Princess Ida von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1829-1902), his daughter
    • Prince Carl von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1832-1898), his son
  • Countess Amalie Christiane Marie ("Emilie" or "Emmy") von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1806–1880), née Countess von Jenison-Walworth . Since 1824 wife of (Carl Heinrich) Alban von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig. She and her husband have lived in the new Wechselburg Palace since 1824 and had a deaconess (hospital) house built in Wechselburg on December 13, 1843. It also houses a baby custody facility ("kindergarten"). The furnishing of a salon in the New Palace is shown in the painting "The children of Count Alban von Schönburg in a salon of the Wechselburg Palace" from around 1837. The painting was presumably painted by the mother of the portrayed Countess Emilie and shows Emilie with her three children. At the invitation of Countess Emilie, the Dresden late romantic Johann Hermann Carmiencke (1810–1867) lived for a few months in Wechselburg and taught her daughters drawing and painting here. Emilie was friends with Countess Ida von Hahn , a writer who wrote her several letters and in the novel "Ulrich" describes the life of Count and Countess Schönburg in Wechselburg under pseudonyms (Prince Thierstein). It was made in 1843 by her daughter Ida (1829-1902 ) a porta relief made of plaster. Emmy is shown on the oil painting "The Children of Count Franz von Jenisson-Walworth", which was painted by Carl Wilhelm Tischbein around 1818/20 . Both are on display in the Biedermeier room in Hinterglauchau Castle. A plaster relief portrait made by his mother, Countess "Emilie" in 1843 is also shown here of her son Carl.
    • Princess Ida von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1829-1902), her daughter
    • Prince Carl von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1832-1898), her son
  • Princess Marie of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1818-1829). She was the eldest sister of the first wife of Count Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1829-1900), Countess Ottilie von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1830-1880). There is a marble bust of Marie in the large historicism room of the Hinterglauchau Castle Museum, dated around 1830.
  • Princess (Henriette Marie) Elisabeth (called "Elise") of Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1821–1899). In 1899 she bequeathed the manor and Schloss Netzschkau, which she owned, to her brother Richard Clemens . There is an oil painting / portrait of Elise in the large historicism room of the Hinterglauchau Castle Museum, which was painted by Gabriele von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1824-1917) around 1865/70.
  • Prince Hugo von Schönburg-Waldenburg (* August 29, 1822 Waldenburg; † June 9, 1897 Wiesbaden), Prussian artillery general. Fiduciary owner of Droyßig Castle (Fideikommissherr).
  • Countess Gabriele von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1824-1917), b. Princess of Windisch-Graetz. She painted. A watercolor has been preserved from her entitled "Hof in Glauchau", which shows the courtyard side of the south wing of Hinterglauchau Castle, newly built in 1864, and the castle courtyard with the count's coach and several people. Dated July 1872. In the large historicism room of Schloss Hinterglauchau there is an oil portrait she painted (around 1865/1870) of Count Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1829-1900) as well as one of Countess Elisabeth von Schönburg-Hinterglaucha (1821–1899), dated around 1865/70
  • Prince (Josef) Alexander (Heinrich Otto) von Schönburg-Hartenstein (March 5, 1826 Vienna – October 1, 1896 Vienna). Since 1879 first deputy chairman of the lower house of the Austrian Imperial Council .
  • Georg von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1828–1900). Czech name: "Georg ze Šumburka-Waldenburgu". Saxon general of the cavalry and adjutant general.
  • Count Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Rochsburg (November 19, 1829 Berlin - October 19, 1900 Berlin). He was born in Berlin and spent his childhood in Glauchau and Schloss Gusow. A painting was probably made in Gusow that shows him and his brother Friedrich Alfred as children. He was raised Evangelical Lutheran. His mother probably brought music into his life. He was trained at the Krause Realinstitut in Dresden and then in the royal Saxon cadet house. In 1848 he joined the Saxon Guard Rider Regiment, and later became a Second Lieutenant in the 2nd Royal Saxon Rider Regiment. In association with Prussian troops he took part in the suppression of the Dresden May uprising in 1849. Before 1852 he toured England and France. As a member of the guard regiment he was sent to Madrid in 1852 as an attaché to the Saxon legation. He traveled to Portugal, Gibraltar and Morocco, visited Tangier here. In 1854 he returned to Saxony, where he said goodbye to the Saxon Army and entered the Prussian military service. He was married twice. Both marriages remained childless. His second wife was Ida Friederike ("Frida"), née von Fabrice. With him the line Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Rochsburg expires in 1900 in the male line. He is considered to be the last Protestant count of the Glauchau Schönburger, as the line Fordglauchau remained Catholic. He is buried in the crypt in Hinterglauchau Castle. He made music with Frida and was a celebrated solo singer. His father was Heinrich von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau and his mother Marie Clementine, nee Princess Schönburg-Waldenburg. His siblings were Friedrich ("Fritz") Wilhelm Edmund, Henriette Marie Elisabeth ("Elise") and Friedrich Alfred. Richard Clemens was a sponsor of the Glauchau industrial museum founded in 1884. His second wife Frida, as a widow, had a memorial erected for him in 1901 in the Gusow Castle Park and an epitaph in the St. Georgen Church in Glauchau in 1929 , placed in the tower hall / entrance area. The artist for both monuments was the Dresden sculptor Clemens Grundig. In 1875 he became the owner of Gusow and Platkow, which he had already leased in 1870. With the death of his father in 1881, he became the owner of Hinterglauchau and Rochsburg. In 1899 he inherited the castle and manor Netzschkau from his sister Henriette Marie Elisabeth ("Elise"). His parade cuirassier armor and the corresponding parade helmet of the royal Prussian elite regiment "Gardes du Corps", in which he had served for Prussia, have been preserved in his possession. In the large historicism room of Hinterglauchau Castle there is an oil portrait of him, dated 1850 as well as one which was painted by Countess Gabriele von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1824-1917) herself. A portrait photo of him, taken around 1900 in Glauchau in the Richard Warth studio, is also shown here. Furthermore, there is a painted coat of arms of him.
  • Princess Ida von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1829-1902). She was the daughter of Count (Carl Heinrich) Alban von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1804–1864) and Countess Amalie Christiane Marie (1806-1880) and also sister of Count Carl von Schönburg-Fordglauchau (1832-1898) and Mother-in-law of Count Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1829-1900). By marriage she became Ida von Fabrice. An oil painting / portrait of her is shown in the historicism salon of the Hinterglauchau castle museum, which was painted by the painter Moritz Müller (painter, 1824) (called "Kindermüller") in Dresden in 1858. Her mother, Amalie Christiane Marie, made a plaster portrait relief from Ida in 1843, which is exhibited in the Biedermeier room of Hinterglauchau Castle.
  • Countess Ottilie von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1830–1880), b. Princess of Schönburg-Waldenburg. In 1856 she married Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau. She was his first wife. The marriage remained childless.
  • Count Carl von Schönburg-Fordglauchau-Wechselburg-Penig (1832–1898). He is the son and successor of Count Alban von Schönburg-Fordglauchau (1804-1864). His sister was Ida (1829-1902). With the death of his father in 1898, Carl claimed the entire castle for himself and his wife, so that Count Heinrich von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (1794–1881) and his wife Marie Clementine (1789-1863) from the previously rented "Peniger share" from Fordglauchau Castle had to move out. An oil painting / portrait of the painter Paul Kießling , created in Dresden in 1887, on which he is depicted in the Schönburg house uniform, is shown in the historicism salon of the Hinterglauchau castle museum. In the Biedermeier room of Schloss Hinterglauchau, Carl is showing a plaster relief portrait made by his mother, Countess "Emilie" (1806-1880), in 1843.
  • Karl von Schönburg (?). He converted to Catholicism on March 19, 1869 on a trip to Rome.
  • Carl Ernst von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1836–1915). Youngest son of Otto Victor I von Schönburg-Waldenburg. When his father dies in 1859, he inherits the manor and Gauernitz Castle . Carl Ernst had Gauernitz Castle rebuilt in the German Neo-Renaissance style between 1862 and 1870. His grandson and heir, Karl Leopold von Schönburg (1902–1992), was expropriated in 1945.
  • Prince (Eduard) Alois (Maria Alexander Konrad) von Schönburg-Hartenstein (born November 21, 1858 Karlsruhe, † September 20, 1944 Hartenstein). Austrian Supreme General and Minister of Defense.
  • Heinrich Eduard von Schönburg (?). On July 9, 1860, he and Otto Friedrich von Schönburg bought the manor and the noble farm Alberoda . In 1848 he applied for the ownership of the princely Waldenburg line to be divided. Then it came to this in 1861. When the inheritance was divided in 1861, Heinrich Eduard Alberoda was given sole ownership . In 1822 he converted to the Catholic faith.
  • Otto Friedrich von Schönburg (?). On July 9, 1860, he and Heinrich Eduard von Schönburg bought the manor and the Edelhof Alberoda . When an inheritance was divided in 1861, his part of Alberoda also passed to Heinrich Eduard.
  • Countess Ida Friederike ("Frida") von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Rochsburg (1864–1943), born von Fabrice. Second wife of Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau-Rochsburg. She was musically inclined. Their marriage was childless.
  • Prince Hermann (Georg Victor Adolf) von Schönburg-Waldenburg (born January 9, 1865 Leipzig; † October 20, 1943 in Hermsdorf). Czech name: "Heřman Prinz ze Šumburka-Waldenburgu". German diplomat, trustee and owner of the manors and castles Hermsdorf and Grünberg in Saxony and Schneeberg in Krain / Slovenia.
  • Prince Otto Sigismund von Schönburg-Waldenburg (April 8th, 1866 Waldenburg-November 11th, 1936 Auf der Glatzen / Kladská ). In 1875-1876 he had "Auf der Glatzen", a hunting lodge and a sawmill built near Marienbad. Around 1900 five wooden houses were built here in the Swiss-Tyrolean style. The place bald or "on the bald" is created. Otto Sigismund was a nature lover, game breeder and passionate hunter. Here was the second largest hunting ground in Bohemia. The half-timbered castle and other buildings have been preserved and serve as restaurants and pensions. Otto Sigismund is buried near the village in the forest under the mountain Lydna (Glatzenberg) - probably without his wife Emilie Friederike (1876-1964), née Handschke. His wife was a diva at the Potsdam Opera (source: information board in Kladská). His father was Otto Friedrich von Schönburg-Waldenburg, who bought the Glatzen area in 1873 and bequeathed it to his son. In 1906 Otto Sigismund gave the two bears "Ruschi" and "Ajax" to Prince Adolf Josef von Schwarzenberg, which were then kept in the castle of Český Krumlov.
  • Count Joachim (Maria Joseph Franz de Paula Anton Alfred Alfons) von Schönburg-Glauchau (* July 20, 1873 Wechselburg; † July 3, 1943 Leipzig). It comes from the Fordglauchau line, which was renamed Schönburg-Glauchau in 1900. On the initiative of Glauchau's Lord Mayor Dr. Walter Flemming (1890–1947) made rooms in Schloss Hinterglauchau available to Joachim von Schönburg-Glauchau in order to be able to reopen (from 1932/33?) The former city museum / trade museum here. In 1940 the museum was reopened in Hinterglauchau Castle.
  • Prince Otto Viktor II of Schönburg-Waldenburg (1882–1914). From 1907 to 1910 he went on hunting trips to Abyssinia, Egypt, Sudan, Jerusalem and Constantinople. He brought hunting trophies, art objects, weapons, carpets, East Asian porcelain and glass objects with him from these trips. In 1890 he bought the manor and Pomßen Castle with the town of Naundorf and the Fuchshain and Eicha farms .
  • Princess Sophie (Helene Cecilie) von Schönburg-Waldenburg (May 21, 1885 - February 3, 1936). Sister of Prince Günther von Schönburg-Waldenburg. After marrying Wilhelm zu Wied , she was appointed Princess of Albania in 1914 .
  • Prince Günther von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1887–1960). In 1921 he founded the “Waldenburg Round Table” in Waldenburg Castle, which met here regularly. It consisted of permanent members of personalities from science, business and culture. They debated, gave lectures in Waldenburg Castle and published publications a. a. to the history of Schönburg. In 1939 the last round of the table took place with a reduced number of participants. The newly graduated medieval historian Dr. Walter Schlesinger had been commissioned by Prince Günther to work out the monograph "The Lordship of the Lords of Schönburg". This work was only partially completed and published in Münster in 1954. On October 23, 1945, he was arrested by Russian soldiers in Waldenburg and interned on the island of Rügen. He manages to escape from Rügen (Greifswald according to other sources) to the British occupation zone. His sister was Sophie von Schönburg-Waldenburg , who later became Princess of Albania.

From the 20th century

  • Karl Leopold von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1902–1992). Grandson and heir of Carl Ernst von Schönburg-Waldenburg (1836–1915). In 1945 he is owned by the manor and castle Gauernitz and is expropriated here by the land reform.
  • Prince Alfred von Schönburg-Hartenstein (* 1953). Czech name: "Alfred princ ze Šumburku-Hartenštejna". Businessman, Chairman of the Union of German Nobles, Ambassador of the Order of Malta in Bratislava.
  • Princess Maya Felicitas von Schönburg-Glauchau (born August 15, 1958 Berlin-Steglitz; † January 27, 2019 Munich). She became Maya Flick through her marriage to Friedrich Christian Flick.
  • Princess Gloria von Schönburg-Glauchau (born February 23, 1960 in Stuttgart), through marriage to Johannes von Thurn and Taxis in 1980 she became Princess of Thurn and Taxis. Entrepreneur.
  • Graf Christoph von Schönburg-Glauchau (* 1962), sound designer, winner of the Federal Film Award (2005), Oscar winner for The Lives of Others (2007).
  • Count Alexander von Schönburg-Glauchau (* 1969), journalist, writer, head of the Count's House of Schönburg-Glauchau.

Extinct bohemian lines

Before the middle of the 13th century, the Schönburgers also settled in northern Bohemia. These Schönburgers are closely related to the Lords of Riesenburg at Osek Castle . The giant burgers are also believed to be the founders of Lichtenstein Castle in Saxony . A rectangular donjon foundation excavated here in the castle courtyard before 2019 proves the unusually early foundation of this castle in today's Saxony (otherwise almost only round donuts occur in Saxony). In 1349/50 Friedrich XIII. (First mentioned 1341, died around 1367) and Albrecht I (first mentioned 1349, died around 1353) of Schönburg-Pirsenstein in Bohemia are the owners of the castles Ponitz and Lichtenstein (located within Saxony / Margraviate of Meißen) listed in the loan book of Friedrich des Strengen . These are royal Bohemian fiefs. Before that, however, other Schönburgers (Friedrich I and Friedrich II) from the Glauchau line had already owned Lichtenstein.

At the Bohemian-royal Kaaden Castle , Schönburgers (there is evidence of a Friedrich von Schönburg († 1312) ) also sat as bailiffs or burgraves. Around 1449 the royal castle and royal city Kaaden became the hereditary property of the lords of Lobkowitz.

In 1295 Friedrich III. von Schönburg (?) appointed district judge of the Egerland by the Bohemian King Wenceslaus II . In 1426 Frederick XVI fell. von Schönburg near Aussig in the fight against the Hussites.

For a short time the Bohemian castles Neu-Seeberg (and Altseeberg ?) Are said to have been Schönburgish, because in 1437 Veit II von Schönburg-Glauchau (1418–1472) acquired the Seeberg rule , but in 1454 at the latest it is in the hands of the burgraves of Leisnig and is resold by these in 1454.

In 1472 a Friedrich von Schönburg came into the possession of the dominions and castles of Trautenau and Schatzlar. His sons inherit the dominions. In 1521 his son Hermann von Schönburg was forced to sell the Lordship of Trautenau and Schatzlar because of indebtedness. But he lived at Schatzlar Castle until 1523.

In 1557 Kaspar von Schönburg bought the Bohemian castle Graupen on the southern slopes of the Ore Mountains from Thimo V. von Colditz. This castle is badly damaged in the Thirty Years War.

Pürstein line and rule

The aforementioned Bohemian castle Pürstein / Pirsenstein / Birsenstein on the southern slope of the Erzgebirge was probably originally a building by the Lords of Riesenburg, because the Riesenburger Borso is said to have built the castle of the same name on the northern slope of the Erzgebirge (in today's Saxony). Later the Schönburgers, who were related to them, came into possession of the Bohemian castle Pürstein on the southern slopes of the Erzgebirge. Frederick VII of Schönburg came into possession of the Bohemian castle Pürstein around 1330. In 1446, Alesch von Schönburg, lord of Pürstein Castle, sold the half of the Pressnitz lordship belonging to the Pürstein line of Schönburg to Nikolaus II von Lobkowitz, lord of Hassenstein Castle. Thus the second part of Pressnitz was lost to the Schönburgers (see text below).

Line and rule Neuschönburg

Apparently the Pürstein line of the Schönburgers had the nearby Neuschönburg near Klösterle (Nový Šumburk or today also called Šumburk) built around / before 1435 , to whose new rule the town of Klösterle an der Eger belongs. This rule of Neuschönburg was split off from the previous rule of Pürstein Castle in an inheritance division in 1431 between Alesch ( CZ : Aleš; identical with Albrecht IV?) And Wilhelm I (Vilém) von Schönburg. Wilhelm calls himself in 1435 "Vilém ... zcu Nuenschonenburg". In 1442 Wilhelm I acquired the rulership and castle of Hoyerswerda in Neuschönburg in the (now Saxon) Upper Lusatia. In 1443 Wilhelm I sold the Egerberg Castle in Bohemia, which had come into his possession and was adjacent to Neuschönburg , but in 1444, through betrayal, he returned to Egerberg Castle. As early as 1449 Wilhelm I von Schönburg sold the Bohemian Neuschönburg with the rulership that belonged to him and the city of Klösterle to Wilhelm the Elder of Ileburg (Eulenburg). Apparently the Schönburgers came into the possession of the castle and rule Neuschönburg again later, because in 1559 they finally sold this "rule Klösterle with Neuschönburg". It was not until 1571 that the rule of Hoyerswerda (in Upper Lusatia, which later became Saxon ) came from the Schönburgers into the hands of Heinrich von Maltitz.

In addition, an older "Schönburg" is said to have originally existed near Neuschönburg , about which little is known so far. No remains of this are visible.

Under Wilhelm I von Schönburg auf Neuschönburg, the small Funkstein castle , east of Lestkov (Leskau) near Klösterle on a ridge, is said to have belonged to his rule of Neuschönburg. Only minimal remains / heaps of stones remained from her as a ground monument. Egerberg Castle was probably only part of Schönburg for a short time under Wilhelm I of Schönburg.

Line and rule Hassenstein

The Lords of Schönburg - on a royal Bohemian order - are believed to be responsible for the construction of the Bohemian Hassenstein Castle on the southern slopes of the Erzgebirge. This castle is first mentioned in the law book "Majestas Corolina" of the Bohemian King Charles IV, which was written between 1348 and 1353. In 1348 Friedrich von Schönburg, Herr auf Hassenstein, was enfeoffed with the town of Geithain in Saxony. In 1357 this Frederick left Geithain as well as the city and castle Kohren to the Lords of Reuss.

In the High Middle Ages, all Schönburgers shared the rule of Glauchau, so they had claims to it. Therefore, during the so-called Schönburg Fratricidal War (1347–1355), the Lords of Schönburg- Hassenstein in 1349 in an inheritance dispute between the Glauchau brothers Hermann VIII († 1356) and Friedrich XI. († 1389) for the inheritance of her brother Dietrich II, who joined the Teutonic Order (life data?), From Bohemia, soldiers marched to Glauchau to besiege Glauchau.

With a document from 1351 Charles IV awarded the royal castle Hassenstein together with part of Preßnitz as well as the then still Bohemian Schlettau (castle!) And Hagensdorf (with knight seat) near Komotau to Friedrich and Bernhard von Schönburg. In 1396 Fritz ("Friczko") from Schönburg auf Hassenstein was in the service of Margrave Wilhelm von Meißen. With this he violated his feudal obligation to the Bohemian king. In 1417 Friedrich von Schönburg on Hassenstein ceded this castle (as a pledge?) To his brother-in-law Heinrich Reuss the Younger von Plauen, a knight of the Teutonic Order. In 1418 he behaved illegally or was in feud with the Bohemian king. February 1418, King of Bohemia Wenceslaus IV initially besieged Hassenstein without success. After the capture of Hassenstein in 1420, the castle came into the possession of the Lords of Lobkowitz. The reason for this is said to have been Veit I von Schönburg's participation in a revolt against King Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia. In 1437 the Schönburgers sued the Bohemian court court for the return of the Hassenstein castle and rule, apparently without success. The Hassensteiner Schönburger have Hassenstein and the associated goods, u. a. Half of the town of Pressnitz (as well as the Bohemian rule and Schlettau Castle on the northern slopes of the Erzgebirge) was finally lost. As early as 1413 Friedrich XIII. ceded by Schönburg city and care Schlettau to the monastery Grünhain .

The place (and knight seat / festival house ?) Hagensdorf (Czech: Ahníkov ) near Komotau was owned by the Schönburgers in the 14th century. He was part of the Hassenstein-Pressnitz rule. The place and moated castle were devastated due to lignite mining in the 20th century .

Extinct line between Schönburg and Rochsburg

The Rochsburg Castle Museum announced: According to the current state of research, the son of Count Otto Ernst von Schönburg- Remissau (d. 1746), Count Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg (-Rochsburg) (1711-1777) founded the Schönburg-Rochsburg line. With Count Heinrich Ernst II von Schönburg-Rochsburg (April 29, 1760 Rochsburg - April 19, 1825 Rochsburg), lord of Rochsburg Castle, fourth son of Heinrich Ernst I von Schönburg-Rochsburg, the Schönburg-Rochsburg line expires with his death in 1825, since he has no son. The Electoral Saxon feudal lordship Rochsburg of the Lords of Schönburg then came into the possession of the Schönburg-Hinterglauchau line and when it expired in 1900 with the death of Richard Clemens von Schönburg-Hinterglauchau (-Rochsburg) into the possession of the Schönburg-Fordglauchau line, which now renamed Schönburg-Glauchau.

Extinct (old) line Schönburg-Hartenstein

  • With the death of Count Friedrich Albert von Schönburg-Hartenstein (* ?, † December 18, 1786) the old Schönburg-Hartenstein line expires in 1786 . His property (rule Hartenstein) is now in the hands of Otto Carl-Friedrich von Schönburg-Waldenburg. All ownership of the (later princely) line of Waldenburg is now in one hand.

Extinct (old) line Schönburg-Glauchau

Many gentlemen from Schönburg called themselves von Glauchau (and Waldenburg) as early as the High Middle Ages. Often they were only co-owners of Glauchau, or were allowed to use this title in accordance with the contract, although they did not own a share in Glauchau (and Waldenburg).

A real line, which was called “Schönburg-Glauchau”, only emerged with the partition contract of May 1, 1556, through which Georg I von Schönburg became the sole owner of the dominions of Glauchau and Remse . With Georg I von Schönburg-Glauchau (1529–1585) this first line Schönburg-Glauchau therefore begins in 1556. The Bohemian rule of Greßla also came into possession of this line on June 27, 1575 and March 30, 1577. On August 4th, 1601, August von Schönburg-Glauchau issued a mountain order for Greßlas. On October 3, 1610, the Schönburg-Glauchau line expires in the male line with the death of August (us) von Schönburg-Glauchau (1583–1610).

In 1900 a new line Schönburg-Glauchau was created, as the line Schönburg-Fordglauchau was renamed Schönburg-Glauchau. The cause was the extinction of the Schönburg-Hinterglauchau line in the male line with the death of Count Richard Clemens.

Notes on the Schönburg-Penig line and the younger Schönburg-Glauchau line

When an inheritance was divided in 1556 among the three brothers Georg I, Hugo I and Wolf II, the latter received the Saxon feudal lords of Penig, Rochsburg and Wechselburg. Wolf II von Schönburg founded the main line Schönburg-Penig. When his son Wolf III. when he received Glauchau, he renamed the Schönburg-Penig line to Schönburg-Glauchau.

Extinct Eastern-Thuringian line

The first known representative was Ulrich von Schönburg: "Ulricus de Schunenburg" (first mentioned in 1130, last mentioned or † 1166). It was first mentioned as a witness in a document that Countess Helinburg von Gleichen issued to the Volkenroda monastery in 1130. The coat of arms of this line was a St. Andrew's cross on the shield. According to other sources, the coat of arms of the Thuringian line is said to be unknown. This line must have expired in the male line by 1394 at the latest, because on May 8, 1394 the Lords of Schönburg sold the Schönburg possessions in the dioceses of Naumburg and Merseburg.

The Muldenland / Markmeißnischen Schönburgers, who were resident in Geringswalde, Glauchau, Waldenburg and Hartenstein since Hermann I, are said to be closest related to the Thuringian-Eastern Schönburgers, who died out in the male line, although they had a different coat of arms.

Not to be confused with the Thuringian Schönburgers are the gentlemen of Schönberg , who presumably also descended from Schönburg near Naumburg , as well as the episcopal Naumburg ministerials mentioned since 1174, who were resident in Schönburg near Naumburg as bailiffs and named themselves “Schönburg” after this castle.

Sources / literature on the Thuringian Schönburgers are:

  • Felix Rosenfeld (editor): Document book of the Hochstift Naumburg, part 1 (967–1207) (historical sources of the Province of Saxony No. 1), Magdeburg 1925.
  • Otto Posse : The ancestors of the Princely and Countess House of Schönburg. Dresden 1914.

Extinct line between Schönburg and Mittelglauchau

In 1623 the well-known offices and lines Schönburg-Hinterglauchau and Schönburg-Fordglauchau were created through a fraternal division of inheritance from the Glauchau office. According to Walter Schlesinger , there was a third Glauchau office “Schönburg-Mittelglauchau” with the line of the same name between 1681 and 1763, which apparently expired in 1763.

People:

  • Count Wolf Heinrich von Schönburg-Penig-Mittelglauchau († 1704)
  • Count August Siegfried von Schönburg-Penig-Mittelglauchau (1678–1763). He was probably musically inclined, because in 1760 he gave the church "a pair of beautiful and large drums".
  • Countess Charlotte Elisabeth von Schönburg-Mittelglauchau (1698–1738). Her husband (name, dates?) Died in 1727 and she had the so-called “war scaffolding” erected in his honor in the St. Georgen Church in Glauchau , which is still there today.

With Count August Siegfried von Schönburg-Penig-Mittelglauchau, this line expires in 1763.

Extinct line between Schönburg and Crimmitschau

With the extinction of the Reichsministeriale von Crimmitschau in the male line in 1301, the lords of Schönburg, who were related to them, inherited the rule and castle of Crimmitschau with the town of the same name. They then called themselves Herren von Schönburg-Crimmitschau . The best-known representative of the Crimmitschau line was Friedrich IV († around 1324/1326) , who on March 31, 1307 was the leader of the Plenian imperial cities of Altenburg, Zwickau and Chemnitz in the battle of Lucka (against the Wettins) and of the Wettins after their victory was captured. He was only released from captivity when, in a contract with the Wettins, he renounced the imperial immediacy of his rule Crimmitschau - in favor of the Wettins. Crimmitschau had thus become the Wettin fiefdom of the Schönburger.

In the Orlamünder feud (1334/1335 and 1342/1343) the Crimmitschauer line of the Schönburger was again opponent of the Wettins, while the Glauchau line stood on the side of the Wettins.

In 1413, with the extinction of the lords of Schönburg-Crimmitschau in the male line, the dominion, town and castle of Crimmitschau finally passed to the margraves of Meißen (Wettiner). Since 1413 the city of Crimmitschau was therefore part of the Wettin / (Electoral) Saxon region.

The Lords of Schönburg-Crimmitschau owned the Meerane lordship as a royal Bohemian fiefdom. This is documented for 1361. With the extinction of this line, the dominion of Meerane (as a Bohemian fiefdom?) Came to the other Schönburg lines and was ultimately united with the dominion of Glauchau before 1493. Meerane was mentioned for the last time as an independent rule in 1459.

The coat of arms of the Lords of Schönburg-Crimmitschau corresponded to that of the Muldenland line (red and white alternately falling to the right), as the coat of arms of the city of Crimmitschau proves.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Wolf-Dieter Röber : Castles and palaces . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , (Castle) Hinterglauchau, p.   21 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  2. Saxon Biography , accessed December 28, 2009.
  3. ^ Wolf-Dieter Röber : Castles and palaces . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , (Castle) Hinterglauchau, p.   22 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  4. ^ Wolf-Dieter Röber : Castles and palaces . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg regional rule . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , (Castle) Fordglauchau, p.   31 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  5. a b Wolf-Dieter Röber : Castles and palaces . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , (Castle) Hartenstein, p.   27 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  6. ^ Wolf-Dieter Röber : Castles and palaces . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , (Castle) Hinterglauchau, p.   22 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020] Comments on the construction of the Glauchau and Waldenburg castles by Ernst II.).
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  94. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte. A timetable. (Brochure), edited by Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker, Chemnitz 2005, ( DNB 974872156 ?), Pp. 27–29, without ISBN
  95. ^ Walter Schlesinger , edited by Thomas Lang: Contributions to the history of the city of Glauchau . Ed .: Enno Bünz. Thelem, Dresden 2010, ISBN 978-3-939888-59-8 , Basic features of the history of the city of Glauchau, p.  60 (154 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  96. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 28 (44 pages).
  97. Rolf Scheurer: "The great Glauchau town church St. Georgen", In: Historische Sacralbauten in Glauchau, series of publications by the Denkmalverein eV Glauchau, Glauchau 2007, p. 2
  98. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, classicism room and its anteroom, Glauchau, 2020
  99. a b c d e Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 30 (44 pages).
  100. a b c d Robby Joachim Götze: Count Alban von Schönburg (1804–1864) in portraits of his time . In: Series 10, Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1994, p. 43
  101. K. Fleck, S. Mehlhorn, S. Winkler, R. Zenker: Waldenburg. On the history of the city and its sights: local history museum and natural history cabinet Waldenburg . Ed .: City administration Waldenburg. Waldenburg 1990, DNB  1070540080 , p. 19 (47 pages, revised edition).
  102. a b c d Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 29 (44 pages).
  103. ^ Wolf-Dieter Röber : Art . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , Grünstelder Park, p.   95 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  104. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte. A timetable. (Brochure), edited by Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker, Chemnitz 2005, ( DNB 974872156 ?), Entry “1793 January 12.” p. 30, without ISBN
  105. K. Fleck, S. Mehlhorn, S. Winkler, R. Zenker: Waldenburg. On the history of the city and its sights: local history museum and natural history cabinet Waldenburg . Ed .: City administration Waldenburg. Waldenburg 1990, DNB  1070540080 , p. 20 (47 pages, revised edition).
  106. Robby Joachim Götze: Aspects of the history of construction and use of the south wing of Hinterglauchau Castle. In: Series of publications. Issue 12. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 2008, p. 6 u. 17 number 3
  107. ^ Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, Classicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  108. ^ Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, Classicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  109. ^ Walter Hüttel: Musical life and music care . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB  942830121 , p. 113 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  110. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the classicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  111. a b c d e f Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 31 (44 pages).
  112. ^ Wolf-Dieter Röber : Art . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and art collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , Schönburg collections, p.   96 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  113. a b c d e f g Robby Joachim Götze, Steffen Winkler : Flyer for the exhibition: "Between Count's Crown and Parade Helmet, On the 100th Anniversary of the Death of the Last Count of Schönburg-Hinterglauchau", exhibition from March 31 to October 21, 2001, museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 2001
  114. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 32 (44 pages).
  115. a b c d Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 34 (44 pages).
  116. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 37 (44 pages).
  117. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 33 (44 pages).
  118. Various authors (including Stanislav Ded): Přísečnice - zatopena, ale nezapomenuta / Preßnitz - lost but not forgotten. Anthology, bilingual. Regional Museum Chomutov, 2004, ISBN 80-239-3286-1 , p. 30
  119. K. Fleck, S. Mehlhorn, S. Winkler, R. Zenker: Waldenburg. On the history of the city and its sights: local history museum and natural history cabinet Waldenburg . Ed .: City administration Waldenburg. Waldenburg 1990, DNB  1070540080 , p. 33 (47 pages, revised edition).
  120. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the classicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  121. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the classicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  122. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the classicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  123. Robby Joachim Götze: Aspects of the history of construction and use of the south wing of Hinterglauchau Castle. In: Series of publications. Issue 12. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 2008, p. 6 u. 17 number 3
  124. ^ Robby Joachim Götze: Count Alban von Schönburg (1804–1864) in portraits of his time. In: Series of publications, issue 10, Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1994, p. 43, short biography of Count Alban von Schönburg
  125. ^ Robby Joachim Götze: Count Alban von Schönburg (1804–1864) in portraits of his time. In: Series of publications, issue 10, Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1994, p. 45 u. P. 46
  126. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the Biedermeier room, Glauchau, 2020
  127. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the Biedermeier room, Glauchau, 2020
  128. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the Biedermeier room, Glauchau, 2020
  129. ^ Robby Joachim Götze: Count Alban von Schönburg (1804–1864) in portraits of his time . In: Series of publications, issue 10, Museum und Kunstsammlung Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1994, pp. 42-66 (Moving into Wechselburg and painting of Emilie with her three children in a salon of the New Schloss Wechselburg around 1837, p. 44)
  130. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the Biedermeier room, Glauchau, 2020
  131. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the large historicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  132. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the large historicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  133. Author collective: Series of publications, issue 12, Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau, 2008, p.72 and front cover picture "Hof in Glauchau"
  134. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the large historicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  135. ^ A b Walter Hüttel: Musical life and music care . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg regional rule . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB  942830121 , p. 112 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  136. Schloss Hinterglauchau, Museum and Art Collection, Schnell Art Guide No. 2296, 1st edition 1998, Schnell u. Steiner GmbH Regensburg, p. 16
  137. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the large historicism room, Glauchau, 2020
  138. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the Historicism Salon, Glauchau, 2020
  139. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the Biedermeier room, Glauchau, 2020
  140. Robby Joachim Götze: Aspects of the history of construction and use of the south wing of Hinterglauchau Castle. In: Series of publications. Issue 12. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 2008, p. 6 u. 13
  141. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the Historicism Salon, Glauchau, 2020
  142. Exhibition in the Museum Schloss Hinterglauchau, north wing, 1st floor, information board in the Biedermeier room, Glauchau, 2020
  143. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 39 (44 pages).
  144. a b Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 38 (44 pages).
  145. Reiner Groß: "Schönburgische Geschichte, Eine Zeittafel", editors: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker, Chemnitz 2005, entry "1845–1861", p. 35
  146. ↑ Biographical data based on Hermann Georg Viktor Adolf Prince von Schönburg-Waldenburg on www.geneall.net
  147. Schönburg. In: Genealogical manual of the princely houses. Volume 1 (= Genealogical Handbook of the Nobility , Volume 1). Verlag von CA Starke, Glücksburg / Ostsee, 1951, pp. 362–374, especially p. 365
  148. Schloss Hinterglauchau, Museum and Art Collection, Schnell Art Guide No. 2296, 1st edition 1998, Schnell u. Steiner GmbH Regensburg, p. 4
  149. ^ Wolf-Dieter Röber : Art . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and art collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , Schönburg collections, p.   97–98 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  150. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 41 (44 pages).
  151. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 42-43 (44 pages).
  152. ^ Wolf-Dieter Röber : Art . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , Waldenburger Round Table, p.   98 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  153. ^ Walter Schlesinger , edited by Thomas Lang: Contributions to the history of the city of Glauchau, editor: Enno Bünz, Thelem Verlag, Dresden 2010, table of contents and p. 11
  154. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 44 (44 pages).
  155. Dobroslava Menclová : "The Hassenstein Castle Ruins", 1988, published by Státnít Zámek Klášterec nad Ohří (Castle Museum Klösterle an der Eger), Czechoslovakia, German-speaking, p. 5
  156. Dobroslava Menclová : "The Hassenstein Castle Ruins", 1988, published by Státnít Zámek Klášterec nad Ohří (Castle Museum Klösterle an der Eger), Czechoslovakia, German-speaking, p. 5
  157. ↑ Information board in front of Lichtenstein Castle / Sat., 2019
  158. Wolf-Dieter Röber : Chapter "(Castle) Lichtenstein" in: The Schönburger, Economy, Politics, Culture . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name 1990–91 in the Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, pp. 23–24
  159. Dobroslava Menclová : "Die Burgruine Hassenstein", 1988, published by Státnít Zámek Klášterec nad Ohří (Castle Museum Klösterle an der Eger), Czechoslovakia, German-speaking, p. 7
  160. Viktor Karell : Castles and palaces of the Ore Mountains and Egertal. Vol. 1, Vinzenz Uhl Verlagbuchhandlung, Kaaden, 1935. (Seeberg Castle p. 70)
  161. Various authors (including Stanislav Ded): Přísečnice - zatopena, ale nezapomenuta / Preßnitz - lost but not forgotten. Anthology, Chomutov Regional Museum, 2004, ISBN 80-239-3286-1 , p. 18
  162. Dobroslava Menclová : "Die Burgruine Hassenstein", 1988, published by Státní Zámek Klášterec nad Ohří (Castle Museum Klösterle an der Eger), Czechoslovakia, in German, p. 5
  163. ^ Author collective: Die Schönburger, Wirtschaft, Politik, Kultur. Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name 1990–1991 in the Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, chap. The territory in wartime, p. 69 ( Ernst-Günter Lattka ).
  164. ^ Jan Koutek and Roman Paleček: Flyer (castle) "Hasistejn", probably published by the city of Kadaň , Czech Republic around / before 2010, bilingual, first German-language page
  165. Various authors (including Stanislav Ded): Přísečnice - zatopena, ale nezapomenuta / Preßnitz - lost but not forgotten. Anthology, Chomutov Regional Museum, 2004, ISBN 80-239-3286-1 , p. 17
  166. reply of the Castle Museum Rochsburg from 24/07/2020 upon written request to the genealogy of the line Schönburg-Rochsburg
  167. ^ Matthias Donath : 100 Years of Waldenburg Castle 1912–2012. Zwickau 2012, ISBN 978-3-98-11118-7-3 , p. 9
  168. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte, Eine Zeittafel , editors: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker, Chemnitz 2005, chronologically ordered list, pp. 16-19
  169. ^ Matthias Donath: Castle and Lordship Rochsburg, Sax Verlag 2006, p. 29
  170. Steffen Winkler : The coat of arms of the Schönburger . In: Special edition series: Legends and legendary stories from Glauchau and the surrounding area , Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau, 1981, here p. 9 and p. 31 No. 2
  171. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 9 , entry "8. May 1394 ”in a chronologically ordered list (44 pages).
  172. Steffen Winkler : The coat of arms of the Schönburger . In: Special edition series: Legends and legendary stories from Glauchau and the surrounding area , Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau, 1981, here p. 9
  173. ^ Walter Schlesinger , edited by Thomas Lang: Contributions to the history of the city of Glauchau . Ed .: Enno Bünz. Thelem, Dresden 2010, ISBN 978-3-939888-59-8 , Basic features of the history of the city of Glauchau, p.  58 (154 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  174. a b Steffen Winkler : Overview of Schönburg possessions . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB 942830121 , p.   13 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  175. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 8 , entry “31. March 1307 “in a chronologically ordered list (44 pages).
  176. Ernst-Günter Lattka: The territory in wartime . In: The Schönburger economy, politics, culture. Contributions to the history of the Muldenland territory and the county of Hartenstein under the conditions of the Schönburg sovereignty . Brochure for the special exhibition of the same name from 1990–1991 in the museum and art collection of Schloss Hinterglauchau. 1st edition. Museum and Art Collection Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1990, DNB  942830121 , p. 68–69 (116 pages, table of contents [PDF; accessed April 27, 2020]).
  177. Reiner Groß: Schönburgische Geschichte: a time table . (Brochure). Ed .: Britta Günther, Michael Wetzel, Tommy Schmucker. Chemnitz 2005, DNB  974872156 , p. 9 , entry “1413” in a chronologically ordered list (44 pages).
  178. Walter Schlesinger , edited by Thomas Lang: Contributions to the history of the city of Glauchau, publisher: Enno Bünz, Thelem Verlag, Dresden 2010, notes on the rule of Meerane, p. 86

literature

  • Hermann Grote : Lords, Counts and Princes of Schönburg. In: Stammtafeln , Leipzig 1877, reprint: ISBN 3-921695-59-7 , p. 252 f.
  • Theodor Schön: History of the Princely and Countess Entire House Schönburg. Document book, volumes I - VIII digital copy of the SLUB Dresden (accessed on August 11, 2017)
  • Robby Joachim Götze: Count Alban von Schönburg (1804–1864) in portraits of his time , In: Schriftenreihe Heft 10, Museum und Kunstsammlung Schloss Hinterglauchau, Glauchau 1994, pp. 42–66 (complete family tree of the descendants of Count Alban von Schönburg-Fordglauchau -Penig-Wechselburg until around 1993, p. 58)
  • Theodor Schön: Family table of the former imperial house Schönburg. Stuttgart, 1910
  • KG Eckardt: Genealogy of the Princely and High Counts House of Schönburg. Hinterglauchau Castle Museum
  • Otto Eduard Schmidt: Prince Otto Carl Friedrich von Schönburg and his people. Leipzig, no year ( Otto Carl Friedrich von Schönburg -Waldenburg (1758–1800), imperial prince from 1790, was the father of Otto Victor I. von Schönburg ; among other things on the genealogy of the Schönburg-Waldenburg line)
  • Family tree of the Schönburg family, pen and ink drawing around 1760 (with images of castles and palaces), owned by the museum and the Hinterglauchau castle art collection
  • Matthias Frickert: The descendants of the 1st Prince of Schönburg. Klaus Adam, Glauchau 1992.
  • Otto Posse: The ancestors of the Princely and Countess House of Schönburg. Dresden 1914.

Web links