House of Hatzfeld

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Hatzfeld(t) coat of arms

Hatzfeld, also spelled Hatzfeldt, is an ancient German noble family.

History[]

They belonged to high nobility originally from Hesse. The family is first mentioned in 1138 and has its ancestral seat in Hatzfeld. In 1418 the family inherited Wildenburg Castle near Friesenhagen, a Lordship with Imperial immediacy, from the Lords of Wildenburg.

Melchior von Hatzfeld (1593–1658), Imperial field marshal in the Thirty Years' War, became the first count in 1635. He was enfeoffed with Trachenberg Castle in Silesia in 1641, and Gleichen Castle with the town of Wandersleben in Thuringia in 1651.

Franz Phillip Adrian became the first Prussian Fürst (Prince of Hatzfeld-Gleichen-Trachenberg) in 1741 (the branch extinguished in 1794). The Hatzfeldt-Werther-Schönstein branch inherited Trachenberg and became Prussian Princes of Hatzfeldt and Trachenberg in 1803 and Prussian Dukes of Trachenberg in 1900 (still existing). They lost their estates, including Trachenberg, when Silesia became part of Poland in 1945, whose Communist government expelled most of Silesia's German population.

The Hatzfeld-Wildenburg-Weisweiler branch inherited Crottorf, Schönstein, Kalkum as well as numerous other properties in 1794 and became Prussian Princes of Hatzfeld-Wildenburg in 1834 (the branch extinguished in 1941 and was inherited by Count Hermann Dönhoff who took on the name of his mother's family: Count von Hatzfeldt-Wildenburg-Dönhoff). He is one of the largest landowners in Rhineland-Palatinate, also owning the castles of Crottorf and Schönstein.

Members[]

Count Melchior von Hatzfeldt (1593–1658), field marshal in the Thirty Years' War
  • Melchior von Hatzfeld (1593–1658), field marshal in the Thirty Years' War
  • Franz von Hatzfeld (1596–1642), Prince-Bishop of Bamberg
  • (1718–1793), Austrian statesman
  • (1756−1827), Prussian general
  • Sophie von Hatzfeldt (1805–1881), "The Red Countess"
  • Max von Hatzfeld (1813–1859), diplomat
  • Paul von Hatzfeld zu Wildenburg (1831–1901), diplomat and Foreign Secretary of Germany
  • (1839–1914), Princess of
  • Hermann von Hatzfeldt zu Trachenberg (1848–1933), politician
  • Prince Franz Edmund J.G.V. von Hatzfeldt zu Wildenburg (1853-1910), race-horse owner.
  • Princess Clara von Hatzfeldt zu Wildenburg (1860-1928), heiress.
  • (1929–2000), publisher, politician

Residences[]

See also[]

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