Lords of Walsee

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Family coat of arms of those of Walsee

The Lords of Walsee (also from Wallsee , Walchsee , Walse , Walsse , Wallssee , Waldze , originally from Waldsee , Italian Valsa ) came from Swabia . With Eberhard von Walsee († 1288), a follower of Count Rudolf von Habsburg , the future German king, the family also took root in the southeast. While Eberhard did not yet play a political role, four of his sons and their descendants soon stood in the front row of the Habsburg court nobility. A total of four lines of the family came to great wealth and reputation within a short time: the Linzer line (extinct around 1400), the Enns line, which was the last to go out in 1483 and had the largest extent of ownership, the Graz line (extinct in 1363) and the Drosendorfer line (extinguished around 1400). Soon they assumed influential positions in Austria. A line acquired the hereditary marshal office and another the Erbkämmereramt in Austria. After the Emmerbergs went out , they were hereditary rulers in Styria . Through marriage, inheritance and donations from sovereigns, she acquired large estates in Lower and Upper Austria , in Styria, in Carinthia , in Carniola and in Istria . In 1331 the people of Walsee sold their Swabian ancestral seat Waldsee to the Habsburgs. The lords of Walsee were relatives of the lords of Duino and their main heirs.

history

Walsee-Linz line

Eberhard IV./II. († 1325), the founder of the Linzer line, was one of the most influential advisers to Duke Albrecht I. In 1291 he appeared as a district judge above the Enns and remained so until the end of his life. He is considered to be the builder of the Linz Franciscan Church.

His son Eberhard V./III. († 1371) was 1322-1361 and 1369-1371 also district judge, but was also appointed (regional) captain ob der Enns in 1353 . He had to lead feuds against the Neuhauser and Rosenberger who had penetrated as far as the Danube. He founded the Cistercian monastery Säusenstein in 1334/36 , dedicated his Schlierbach castle to a Cistercian convent around (1355) and built the Oberwallsee fortress . With his sons Eberhard, Heinrich and Georg († 1400/1401) the Linzer line became extinct.

Walsee-Enns line

The founder of the Enns line was Heinrich I († 1326), (castle) captain of Enns on the Ennsburg , who fought bravely for Habsburg in the battle of Mühldorf (1322). His eldest son was Heinrich II , who remained childless. His younger sons Reinprecht I († 1361) and Friedrich II. († around 1355) were patrons of the Enns Minorite Monastery and, according to a document from 1331, became lien owners of Waxenberg and Burg and Markt Ottensheim ; this insured the pro-rata sales price for their Swabian traditional estates of 11,000 silver marks. Reinprecht and Friedrich were together burgraves of Enns.

A younger son of Friedrich, Heinrich VI. († 1398) 1374–79 was governor of the Enns, maybe 1395 adviser to Duke Wilhelm . Heinrich's older brother Friedrich VI. († 1372) was 1367–68 Land Marshal of Lower Austria and 1369 Governor of Styria.

The main branch of the Enns river consists of the sons of Reinprecht: Rudolf I († 1405), first appeared in the western Habsburg territories, but in 1373 he was governor of Styria, and in 1397 district marshal of Lower Austria. His younger brother Friedrich V († 1408, had an accident) was Land Marshal of (Lower) Austria from 1403 and mediated in the dispute over the guardianship of Duke Albrecht V. In February 1408, he came to a violent end by being a victim of carelessness of his own people at his Neu-Wallsee Castle was blown up with a powder vault and died after three days.

Property of the Walsee family when Reinprecht II died.

Reinprecht II. († 1422), the middle brother, since 1380 (regional) captain ob der Enns, besiegedthe family castle of the Schaunberger ("Schaunberger Feud")on behalf of Duke Albrecht II . Above all, in 1410/11 he achieved the elimination of guardianship over the minor Duke Albrecht V. From 1411 to 1417 there wasa hostile relationshipbetween Reinprecht II and Duke Ernst , which resulted in raids and pillage in Styria ("Walseer Feud" ). After the extinction of the other Walsee lines, he united all power in his hand.

A list of the dominions and possessions pledged to Reinprecht II in 1416 names: Grafschaft Mitterburg ( Pisino ) and castle dominion "Frayn" in Istria, Oberstein and Görtschach in Carniola, Windischgraz and Mahrenberg in Styria, Waxenberg , Frankenburg , Puchheim , Säusenstein (where there was also a Cistercian monastery whose founders and patrons were the Walseers), the counties of Peilstein , Seisenegg , Freienstein / Freyenstein on the Danube , Wuldersdorf and Pernstein .

After the equalization between Duke Albrecht V and Duke Ernst (end of the Walsee feud) Reinprecht got the castles Riegersburg , Gonowitz , Stattenberg, Eibiswald and Windischgraz in Styria, Görtschach and Neuberg an der Kanker in Krain, which Duke Ernst gave him Let time be snatched from the feud. In addition, in 1418 Reinprecht was given the Rothenfels fortress , the town of Oberwölz and the Waxenegg castle , which Reinprecht had taken from Hanns von Stubenberg .

In 1418 he was also enfeoffed with the inheritance of Styria.

In the generation of Reinprecht II, the enormous inheritance of the Tybein relatives also fell (1399), with which the possessions of the Walsee extend to the Adriatic Sea (lordship Duino / Tybein, Guteneck, Fiume , Castua , Veprinaz - later spelling Veprinac - and Moschenitz ) . With the possession of Duino also seat and vote in the Reichstag were connected and Reinprecht was thus almost imperial directly .

All this property came from Reinprecht to his only son Reinprecht IV († 1450), who in 1434 Emperor Sigismund of Luxembourg bestowed the blood spell over all his dominions, and from this on the last rungs of the Walsee: Wolfgang V. († 1466) and Reinprecht V. († 1483).

Reinprecht V signed a contract of inheritance with the Counts of Cilli in 1451 , but this did not apply because the last Cillier died in 1456.

In his will in 1465, Wolfgang bequeathed all of his castles, towns, markets and villages on the Karste and in Istria to the Emperor Friedrich as “Lord of Duino and on the Karste, Supreme Marshal of Austria, Schenk von Styria and Captain of the Land above the Enns” namely St. Veit am Pflaumb (Fiume), Veprinaz, Moschenitz, "Sabinach", Guteneck with everything that came to him according to the division of the estate with his brother Reinprecht V.

Reinprecht V, holder of the same offices, sold the two lords of the castle Upper and Lower Duino, San Giovanni near Duino, Senosetsch and Prem and all their accessories to the Emperor Friedrich in 1472 . In this way the Habsburg was able to win the rule of the Walsee in the coastal area.

Reinprecht V died in 1483 and was buried on his Seissenberg / Seisenburg estate . His daughter Barbara was able to take over the Upper Austrian estate of the Walseers: Scharnstein , Pernstein , Oberwallsee , Wildenstein , Windeck , Ruttenstein and Ort am Traunsee , as well as Waxenberg (Wechsenberg) and the Frankenburg pledge . Waxenberg fell to the sovereign, Barbara brought the other goods to her husband Sigmund von Schaunberg .

Walsee-Graz line

Ulrich I. von Walsee († around 1329), founder of the Styrian or Graz line, usually acted together with his eldest brother Eberhard IV. An Old High German poem praises "Uolreich the folk sword" in the battle of Göllheim . In 1308–13 he foundedthe first women's monastery in Graz, a Dominican convent, which also served as his grave,on the Grillbühel in Graz (then outside the city walls, now the old technology is located there). The former sovereign areahad been donated tohim by Duke Friedrich in 1307. From 1299 Ulrich I. von Walsee was governor of Styria. In 1309 he organized the suppression of a noble revolt against the dukes Friedrich and Leopold . Ulrich was governor of Padua from 1320 to 1321. In 1322 Ulrich rode with the Styrians and his brother Heinrich von der Ennser Linie together with their older sons with the Austrians in the fight against King Ludwig den Baier ( Battle of Mühldorf ); Ulrich's son of the same name was taken prisoner there as a wounded man. In 1328 Walseers of all lines were involved in the peace agreement between King Frederick the Fair and the Hungarians in Bruck an der Leitha, after Ulrich had conquered large areas between the Mur and Drava.

Ulrich II von Walsee († 1359) was awar hero celebratedby Peter suchtwirt . In 1318 he fought in front of Colmar, in 1320 with his father and brother-in-law Ulrich V. von Pfannberg about Padua, in 1322 in Mühldorf. From 1329 he succeeded his father as Governor of Styria. In 1339 he founded the Minorite Monastery in Pettau ( Ptuj ).

All three sons of Ulrich I (Ulrich, Hanns † 1342 and Friedrich † 1362) were called "Captains in Styria" in 1331 and helped their brother-in-law Friedrich I von Cilli in his fight for the Heunburg inheritance after he gave them his castles, Rohitsch , Kostreiniz in 1330 , Lengenberg (Lemberg) , Sanneck , Osterwitz, Flödnig / Smlednik, Schönstein and Prassberg had pledged Graz currency for 8,000 marks in exchange for redemption.

Ulrich II's only son, Eberhard VIII von Walsee, was Governor of Styria from 1359 to 1361 and died in 1363. Most of the inheritance fell temporarily to the Linzer line.

Walsee-Drosendorf line

The Drosendorf line was founded by Friedrich I. († 1318) and went out with Ulrich IV. Von Walsee († 1400). The Drosendorfer were related by marriage to the gentlemen von Lichteneck, Lippa, Maisburg and Dachsberg, but above all to the Kuenringers . Pope Boniface IX allowed Ulrich IV. von Walsee in the last decade of the 14th century to build a church on the Ptujska Gora (on the Neustift near Pettau) (today the pilgrimage church, the Basilica of the Madonna in Protection ).

coat of arms

Family coat of arms of those of Walsee
  • The later coat of arms of the Walseer is quartered: In fields 1 and 4 two (also) three silver diamonds in diagonal bar form, in fields 2 and 3 a silver bar in the black field. There are several - very similar - variants of the coat of arms.

Tribe list

Pedigree of the Walseer:

Swabian ancestors

Swabian descent of the Lords of Walsee
  • Eberhard I.
    • Eberhard II. († 1248)
    • # Wolfgang I. von Zell († 1281), founder of the Walsee-Dachsperg line
    • # * Wolfgang II of Zell († 1291)
    • # ** Adelheid († 1299), ⚭ Eberhard von Jungingen
    • # Eberhard III./I. in Austria († 1288), ⚭ Adelheid von Waldburg († 1275)
    • ## Eberhard IV./II., Founder of the line → Walsee-Linz (†† 1400/1401, Georg)
    • ## Heinrich I., founder of the line → Walsee-Enns (†† 1483, Reinprecht V.)
    • ## Ulrich I., founder of the line → Walsee-Graz (†† 1363, Eberhard VIII.)
    • ## Friedrich I., founder of the line → Walsee-Drosendorf (†† 1400, Ulrich IV.)
    • ## Conrad III. († April 11, 1311), pastor in Piber , killed for cruelty
    • ## Gebhard II. († August 3, 1315), 1295 Canon and Hochstifts-Vizedom, 1313–1315 Bishop Elect in Passau
    • ## Preyde / Brigida († 1315), ⚭ Ortolf von Kranichberg
    • ## Gertrud (1316), ⚭ Heidenreich, Burgrave of Gars am Kamp

Walsee-Linz

Walsee-Linz line (after Doblinger 1906); Attention number errors: instead of Eberhard VIII. It should correctly read Eberhard VII. († 1351).
  1. Eberhard IV./II. († 1325), advisor to Duke Albrechts , (1288) enfeoffed together with brother Heinrich von König Rudolf with Sindelburg and Sommerau , from 1288 district judge alias captain ob der Enns , ⚭ Maria von Kuenring († 1320)
    1. Kunigunde († 1342), ⚭ Jans von Kapellen († 1354)
    2. Agnes, ⚭ Amelrich von Pettau († 1336)
    3. Dorothea, ⚭ Reinprecht II. Von Ebersdorf († 1343)
    4. Margareta († 1334), ⚭ Alber von Volkersdorf (†† 1334)
    5. Eberhard V./III. († 1371), from 1322 district judge ob der Enns , 1353–61 and 1369–71 captain ob der Enns ; 1355 Foundation of Schlierbach Abbey ; 1333 purchase of the Freudenstein lordship , 1334/36 foundation of the Cistercian monastery at Säusenstein , 1364 construction of Oberwallsee Castle on Freudenstein; (I.) ⚭ Elisabeth von Gutrat ; (II.) ⚭ Anna von Losenstein († 1355); (III.) ⚭ Flormei (Floringa) from Pettau
      1. (II.) Eberhard VII. († 1351), ⚭ Anna von Neuhaus († 1350)
      2. (II.) Henry V († 1342)
      3. (II.) Agnes († 1355), ⚭ Iban von Pernstein and von Bernstein († 1382)
      4. (III.) Georg von Walsee († 1400/01), 1363 heir from the Grazer line , 1395 letter of gift to Schlierbach; ⚭ Margret, daughter of Count Jörg von Curbaw; †† Legacy of the Enns line
        1. Eberhard X. († before 1400)
      5. (III.) Katharina († 1399), ⚭ Alber IV. Von Puchheim († 1399)

Walsee-Enns

Walsee-Ens line (after Doblinger 1906)
  1. Henry I († 1326), in 1288 together with his brother Eberhard von King Rudolf with Sindelburg and Sommerau invested, (castle) Captain to Enns , ⚭ Elisabeth von Starhemberg († 1326)
    1. Guta († 1331), ⚭ Hartnid II. Von Stadeck († 1336)
    2. Heinrich II. († 1333), ⚭ Adelheid von Aichen (Aychaim)
    3. Reinprecht I († 1361), Burgrave of Enns ; (I.) ⚭ Elisabeth von Starhemberg († 1368?); (II.) ⚭ Elisabeth von Lengenbach († 1347?); (III.) ⚭ Elisabeth von Kapellen
      1. (I.) Rudolf I. († 1405), 1366 Vogt and captain in Front Austria , 1376–79 Governor of Styria , 1397 Land Marshal of Lower Austria and Hofmeister Duke Wilhelm , ⚭ 1374 Agnes von Leipa / Leipp / Lipa († after 1407)
      2. (I.) Reinprecht II. († 1422), from 1380 captain ob der Enns , 1382–1386 Schaunberg feud , 1412 court master Duke Albrechts V , 1411–17 Walsee feud with Duke Ernst , 1418 hereditary truchess of Styria , inherited in 1399 the Lords of Duino (†† Hugo / Haug IX.) And in 1046 the Kapeller (†† Eberhard II.) (I.) ⚭ Katharina von Liechtenstein-Nikolsburg († 1397); (II.) ⚭ Anna von Kapellen b. von Tybein (Duino) , widow after Eberhard II von Kapellen ; (III.) ⚭ Katharina von Duino († 1435), daughter of Haug von Tybein (Hugo IX. Von Duino)
        1. (I.) Agnes ⚭ Otto von Zelking
        2. (III.) Barbara († 1430), ⚭ Nikola [us] jun. Frangepan de Veglia († 1458), Ban of Croatia
        3. (III.) Reinprecht IV. († 1450), Colonel Marshal in Austria (from 1440), Colonel truchsess in Steier , Captain von Enns , ⚭ Katharina von Rosenberg († 1455)
          1. Agnes († 1470), ⚭ Bernhard von Schaunberg († 1473)
          2. Rudolf II.
          3. Wolfgang V. († 1466), 1465 Supreme Marshal of Austria , Schenk or Truchsess of Styria , Supreme Captain in Austria below and above the Enns, Councilor of Friedrich III. , ⚭ Veronika von Ortenburg / Ortenberg († 1461), daughter of Alram II.
          4. Reinprecht V. († 1483, †† extinction in the male line), 1467 Supreme Marshal of Austria , Schenk von Styria and (until 1478) Governor of the Enns , ⚭ Margareth von Starhemberg († 1466), ⚭ Katharina von Starhemberg († after 1484 )
            1. Barbara († 1506), ⚭ Siegmund I. von Schaunberg († 1498) → inheritance to the Schaunberger
      3. (I.) Anna († 1373), ⚭ Hugo VII. Von Duino († 1390)
      4. (I.) Dorothea († 1398), ⚭ Wulfing von Stubenberg († 1398)
      5. (I.) Friedrich V. († 1408, accident), 1403 Land Marshal of (Lower) Austria , 1407 Hofmeister to Duke Leopold IV ; (I.) ⚭ Anna von Winkel († 1389); (II.) ⚭ Ida von Weinsberg ; (III.) ⚭ Dorothea von Starhemberg († 1419)
        1. (I.) Christoph
        2. (I.) Catherine
      6. (II.) Agnes († 1402), ⚭ Jobst I. von Rosenberg († 1369)
    4. Friedrich II. († October 27, 1355), Burgrave of Enns , ⚭ Kunigunde von Liechtenstein-Murau
      1. Anna († 1368), ⚭ Johann II. Von Kuenring († 1349)
      2. Agnes († 1351), ⚭ Niklas von Chiau († 1355)
      3. Elisabeth (1360), ⚭ Konrad von Maissau († 1396), Supreme Marshal in Austria
      4. Ursula († 1370), ⚭ Gundacker von Polheim
      5. Friedrich VI. († 1372), 1362 market rights for Sindelburg (with brother Heinrich), 1367–68 Land Marshal of (Lower) Austria , 1369 Governor of Styria
        1. Afra († 1430), ⚭ Hartnid von Liechtenstein-Nikolsburg († 1395)
      6. Wolfgang († 1361)
      7. Henry VI. († 1398), 1374–79 Governor above the Enns , built 1368–88 Nieder-Wallsee Castle , ⚭ Anna von Hohenberg († 1418)

Walsee-Graz

Walsee-Graz line (after Doblinger 1906)
  1. Ulrich I († around 1329), governor of Styria from 1299 ; (I.) ⚭ Elisabeth; (II.) ⚭ Diemut von Rohrau († 1319); (III.) ⚭ Katharina von Görz (or Schärfenberg ?) († 1329)
    1. (I.) Ulrich II. († around 1359), 1322 Battle of Mühldorf : wounded in captivity, captain in Styria, from 1329 Governor of Styria , ⚭ Adelheid von Weinsberg († 1357)
      1. Eberhard VIII. († 1363, extinction Walsee-Graz, inheritance to Linz ), 1359–1361 Governor of Styria , ⚭ Elisabeth von Kuenring († 1379)
    2. (II.) Jans / Hanns I. († around 1342/1345), captain in Styria
    3. (II.) Friedrich III. († 1362) "ab der Steiermark", captain in Styria, 1259–61 Oberster Schenk , 1261 Supreme Truchsess of Styria ⚭ Agnes von Kuenring († 1368)
    4. (II.) Agnes († 1329), ⚭ Ulrich V. von Pfannberg († 1354)
    5. (II.) Diemut († 1357), ⚭ (I.) Andreas von Güssing (noble family von Héder ), chief clan von Zala , ⚭ (II.) Friedrich I. von Sanneck / Cilli († 1360)

Walsee-Drosendorf

Walsee-Drosendorf line (after Doblinger 1906)
  1. Friedrich I (* 1298; † 1318), ⚭ Alheid von Werde († 1328)
    1. Eberhard VI. († 1356), Burgrave of Weitra ; (I.) ⚭ Alheid von Falkenberg († 1349), 2. ⚭ Agnes von Ortenburg († 1386)
      1. (I.) Friedrich VII. Zu Potenstein († 1371/1392), ⚭ Klara von Kuenring († 1359)
        1. Wolfgang († 1374)
        2. Ulrich († 1374)
        3. Friedrich IX. († 1392,? Extinction Weitra)
        4. Agnes, ⚭ Heinrich von Zelking
        5. Johanna, ⚭ Jan von Meseritsch
      2. (I.) Heinrich V. zu Merkenstein († 1373), ⚭ Margarete Nagymartoni
        1. Margarete († 1439), ⚭ Ulrich von Dachsberg (Daxberg) († 1439)
    2. Friedrich IV. († 1335), ⚭ Margarete
      1. Anna, ⚭ Otto V. von Maissau († 1359)
    3. Heinrich / Heidrich / Heidenreich III. († 1367), "von Enzesfeld " ⚭ Barbara von Klingenberg, noble from Cheiau / Kyau ( Kaja Castle )
      1. Reinprecht III. († 1353)
      2. Eberhard IX. († 1371), (I.) ⚭ Flormei von Pettau , 2nd Elisabeth von Kuenring († 1379)
      3. Jans / Hanns II. († 1370), "von Enzesfeld ", ⚭ Elisabeth von Pettau
        1. Ulrich IV. († 1400, Drosendorfer line extinguished), 1384 Governor of Styria , ⚭ Elisabeth von Neitberg († 1411)
          1. Catherine († 1428)
        2. Rudolf
        3. Friedrich
      4. Frederick VIII († 1364)
      5. Henry VIII († 1377)
      6. Wolfgang IV. († 1382), ⚭ Katharina von Maidburg († 1400)
      7. Alheid / Adelheid, ⚭ Leutold von Kuenring-Dürnstein († 1355); (II.) ⚭ Zdenko / Zdenek / Čeněk von Leipa / Leipp / Lipa († 1359)
    4. Katharina († 1354), ⚭ Weichard von Winkel († 1348); the date of death is between 1353 and 1360, because he attests to a document on September 1, 1353 (Fontes XXI, 2, S 231, No. CCXXXIX)
    5. Anna, joined the Imbach / Minnebach monastery in 1332

Ministerials of the Walsee

Feuders of the Walsee were:

  • that of Thurn
  • the Hollenecker
  • the little ones
  • the Weißenecker
  • the houses
  • the Winkler
  • that of ditch

Spiritual foundations

Monasteries Chapels
  • Katharinenkapelle near the former Dominican Church in Imbach (1285-1300, burial chapel for the Drosendorf line)
  • George's Chapel at the Augustinian Church in Vienna (founded by Duke Otto the Fröhlichen , the Societas Templois and the Grazer Walseer before other noble families, around 1337)
  • Castle chapel on Pernstein (around 1340, Linz line)
  • Wallseerkapelle at the parish church of St. Maria in Enns (around 1343, Enns line)
  • Almshouse Chapel Enzesfeld (1396, Drosendorf-Enzesfeld line)

possession

Upper Austria

Bohemia

Styria

(with Lower Styria )

^ Rule of Marburg an der Drau

Carinthia

Carniola

Istria, Aquilea and the surrounding area
(later coastal lands)

Lower Austria

In 1466 the possession of the Quarnerobusen with Fiume, Castau, Veprinac and Moschenitz came to the Habsburgs. In 1472 (Reinprecht V. Declaration on March 12, 1472 in favor of Emperor Frederick), Duino (lordship of Upper and Lower Tibein), Bremp and Senosetsch - with land near San Giovanni di Duino, the Habsburgs had owned on the Adriatic since 1366, and now they have consolidated the Austrian coastal lands .

Others

Occasionally the lords of Walsee are referred to as counts . There is no documentary evidence for this.

Walseer in documents of the parakeet monastery
The Walseer also appear in documents of the parakeet monastery and are thus among the benefactors of the monastery.

  • Rudolf von Walsee, Land Marshal of Austria, confirmed a document from his relative in Duino (sui affinis a Thybein) in Vienna in 1390 , according to which the Parakeet Monastery was allowed to transport twelve loads of salt through Senosetsch from Fiume without tolls and customs duties, where it would then cost one and a half marks Aglar pennies receives. (The text goes on to say: R. v. Walsee at the time Land Marshal Austria and Gerhab of the children of Thybein in Vienna 1390).
  • Reinpertus von Walsee, Land Marshal of Austria, hands over a house (to the Sittich Monastery) in Laibach in 1448 for two annual commemorative masses (Reinprecht von Walsee zu Thybein died in 1451).

See also

literature

  • Max Doblinger : The Lords of Walsee. A contribution to the Austrian aristocratic history. From the archive for Austrian history (Vol. XCV, II. Half, p. 235) reprinted separately (= Archive for Austrian history. Volume 95, pp. 235–578, I-15103/95, ISSN  0003-9322 ). Vienna 1906, 344 pages.
  • Karel Hruza: The Lords of Walsee. History of a Swabian-Austrian noble family (1171–1331). Dissertation, Konstanz 1994, Linz 1995.

In reference works and compendia:

Web links

Commons : Herren von Walsee  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Note sheet. Supplement to the archive for customers of Austrian historical sources. Volume 1, Vienna 1851, p. 15 at Google Books .
  2. ^ RI 1472 sale of Tybein to Friedrich III.
  3. Robert Baravalle: The Grillbühel. In: Journal of the Historical Association for Styria. Self-published, Graz 1969.
  4. ^ RI 1328 .
  5. The Walsee family coat of arms in Volume 2, Johann Siebmacher's Wappenbuch from 1701.
  6. in the Zurich coat of arms roll (around 1350): red a silver bar. Walse is No. 136, plate VI, in antiquarian society in Zurich, Heinrich Runge: The roll of arms of Zurich. A heraldic monument of the fourteenth century in a true color replica of the original with the coat of arms from the house of the hole. Self-published / Bürkli, 1860 and 1930; No. 49 in the count according to The Zurich coat of arms: strips of parchment II front , Gerrit Bigalski, 1996.
    This resembles the shield of the Habsburgs. There in the helmet a red two-lobed cap with white balls ( Inful , Bischofsmütze), perhaps as an Austrian branch line.
  7. after Josef Kraßler: Styrian coat of arms key (= publications of the Steiermärkisches Landesarchiv. Volume 6). Graz 1968.
  8. Wappen der Walsee in Volume 5, Johann Siebmacher's Wappenbuch from 1701.
  9. This master list is based on: Lit. Alfons Huber 1865; Franz von Krones; as well as 1896 wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com (link broken 11/2011) the indexing (number) is based on the current literature.
  10. a b The historical development. In: schloss-wallsee.at, accessed on August 17, 2019.
  11. Entry about Wolkersdorf on Burgen-Austria .
  12. cf. Note 10 to Regest 1395 IV 24, Collection: Aggsbach, Kartäuser (1281–1780) , after Fuchs: Aggsbach (= FRA II / 59) 1906, pp. 131–132, no. 129. Document: Aggsbach, Kartäuser (1281 -1780) Aggsbach, Carthusians (1281-1780) 1395 IV 24 in the European document archive Monasterium.net .
  13. probably Velké Meziříčí (Great Meseritsch), in the Bohemian Heights.
  14. perhaps Klingenberg (noble family) , in the service of the Counts of Kyburg and later the Habsburgs.
  15. ^ A b Carl Schmutz: Historically Topographical Lexicon of Steyermark. 4th part. Graz 1823, p. OA
  16. a b c Desislava Zagorov-Kostova: Studies on the architectural history of the George Chapel at the Augustinian Church in Vienna. Diploma thesis, Vienna 2008 ( PDF; 376 kB ).
  17. Entry about Alt-Pernstein on Burgen-Austria .
  18. RI 1472 Seusenburg .
  19. a b c d e f g Anno MCCCC male extinctis DD de Tybein, seu de Duino, investitur Reinpertus de Walsee de bonis eorum Duino, Senoseza, Gueteneg, Flumine, Castum, Vaprinitz & Moscheniza, de quibus ultimis, olim spectantibus ad Polensem Episcopum investitus fuit ab Episcopo ea lege, ut quemquis novum Praesulem nova donatione honoraret duorum canum venaticorum unius Asturis & pulli elegant ornati ”(Fiumar epitaph from 1400; quoted in Valvasor : Die Ehre Hertdeszogthums Crain . XI. Book, p. 470–479 , German: “After the Lords of Tybein, including Duino, had expired in 1400, Reinprecht von Walsee was enfeoffed with their goods - Duino, Senosetsch, Guteneck, Fiume, Castua, Veprinaz and Moschenitz. The latter he received from the Bishop of Pola to the fiefdom with the condition that each of his successors be given two hunting dogs, a falcon and an elegantly harnessed colt ”).
  20. ^ A b c Franz von Krones:  Walsee: Eberhard v. W. (Wallsee) († 1288) and his descendants in the Habsburg lands until 1483 . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 41, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1896, pp. 5-16 (family article).
  21. Majda Smole: Graščine na nekdanjem Kranjskem. Ljubljana 1982, p. OA
  22. Jože M. Grebenc: Gospodarska USTANOVITEV Stične ali njena dotacija leta 1135. Samostan, Stična 1973 (Slovenian).