Virgil von Graben

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Virgil von Graben
Virgil von Graben (Lienz).jpg
Virgil von Graben at the Sankt Michaelskirche in Lienz (16th century)
Burggraf of Lienz, Heinfels, Sommeregg and
In office
?–1507
Preceded byAndreas von Graben as Burggraf of Sommeregg
Succeeded byRosina von Graben von Rain as Burggräfin of Sommeregg - The Prince-Bishop of Brixen Melchior von Meckau as Lord of Heinfels
Stadtholder and captain and stadtholder of Görz
In office
1490–1504
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Stadtholder of Lienz and East Tyrol
In office
1500–1507
Preceded byLeonhard of Gorizia
Succeeded by
Personal details
Born15th century
Castle Sommeregg
Died1507
Castle Sommeregg
NationalityAustrian
Spouse(s)Agnes (morganatic marriage)
RelationsAndreas von Graben (father), Barbara Hallecker (mother)
ChildrenLukas von Graben zum Stein, Rosina, and four morganatic children with Agnes
ResidenceCastles Sommeregg, Heinfels, and Bruck
OccupationBurggraf and Stadtholder

Virgil von Graben (15th century — 1507) was an Austrian noble, politician and diplomat. He was one of the most important noblemen and officials in the County of Gorizia and in the Habsburg Empire of Frederick III. and Maximilian I.[1]

Introduction[]

Virgil von Graben belonged to the Carinthian-East Tyrolean branch of the family Von Graben which held important offices at the time of the last Counts of Gorizia and through whose work Renaissance culture also found its way into East Tyrol.[2] Virgil von Graben was considered the "richest and most capable Gorizia nobleman of his time".[3] He was under the last Meinhardin Count Leonhard, whose guarantor he was, regent of the princely county and captain of Gorizia,[4] trusted councilor of Count Leonhard and the Roman-German King Maximilian. As such, he directed and completed the takeover of the County of Gorizia into the possession of the Habsburgs[5] under whom he remained governor (captain) of the County of Gorizia. In addition, von Graben was stadholder, Burgrave (or pledgee) of Lienz.[6]

Biography[]

Family[]

Virgil von Graben was the son of Andreas von Graben and his wife was Barbara von Hallegg, daughter of (Hallecker),[7] imperial counsellor and Administrator / Landeshauptmann of Carinthia. One of his nephews was , Hereditary Marshal of the duchy of Carinthia and Chamberlain of Emperor Frederik III. Virgil von Graben was married to Dorothea Arnold, née Herbst (von Herbstenburg), but their marriage was not considered legal, so Virgil's sons could not inherit his estates:[8]

  • Christof von Graben, who is mentioned as a pastor in 1498
  • Lukas von Graben zum Stein († 1550) was appointed lord of Stein in 1500 by Maximilian I, and thus the ancestor of the line am Stein, which retained the dominion until the death of Christof David von Graben zum Stein († 1664)[9]
  • Barthlmä von Graben (Bartholomeus von Graben), about whom little is known; Between 1501 and 1511 he was the owner of the Treffling farm, which he gave as a fief to his fiefdom Andreen Hohenburger; his descendants moved to [10] and formed the second Tyrolean line, which died out with the death of Felix Jakob von Graben (zum Stein) in 1776 (or 1780).
  • Virgil Lucz von Graben (named or died 1550); possibly the father of Leonhard (Lienhard) von Graben (mentioned 1507-1545), who was awarded the parish church of Gorizia in 1507

In addition to his noble born offspring, Virgil von Graben fathered four illegitimate children with his morganatic wife named Agnes, whom he endowed with rich goods[11]

Heritage[]

Since all of Virgil's sons were from his not legally binding marriage to Dorothea von Arnold (née Herbst von Herbstenburg) none of them could claim his inheritance. His brothers Heinrich, Cosmas, Wolfgang and Wolf Andrä von Graben also had no heirs. So Sommeregg, along with smaller estates, came to Rosina von Graben von Rain, the daughter of his older brother Ernst von Graben.[12]

Career[]

Around 1461, Virgil and his father Andreas von Graben were taken prisoner by the Counts of Gorizia. They had to swear feud, and Virgil then probably entered the service of the Counts of Gorizia. In addition to his fiefs of the Archdiocese of Salzburg in Upper Carinthia and East Tyrol, he appeared as a captain () of the County of Gorizia from 1474/75.[13]

In 1463 Virgil von Graben inherited the Sommeregg estate from his father Andreas von Graben.

Virgil von Graben was a feudal man in the service of the Archbishop of Salzburg and was his caretaker resp. Burgrave at Lengberg Castle in East Tyrol.[14] With his appointment, the heyday of Lengberg began. In the years 1480-85 he had the former "veste Lengenberch" converted into a representative Gothic castle at his own expense.[15]

In 1487 Sommeregg was conquered by Hungarian troops led by Matthias Corvinus, who were fighting the German-Roman Emperor Frederick III stood, conquered and destroyed. The reconstruction, which was initiated by Virgil von Graben after the withdrawal of the foreign army, gave the castle its typical irregular shape.

From the end of the 15th century until his death in 1507, Virgil von Graben was the burgrave of Gorizia and lord of Heinfels in the Puster Valley.

Controversy over the County of Gorizia[]

Virgil von Graben had great influence on the political events of this dilapidated principality as captain (governor) of the County of Gorizia. In 1476 Virgil von Graben, together with Bishop , Balthasar von Welsberg and Phoebus von Thurn, represented Count Leonhard of Gorizia at the court of Margrave Ludovico Gonzaga in Mantua in order to solemnly promise his marriage to Gonzaga's daughter Paola Gonzaga.[16]

During the reign of the ailing Count Leonhard of Gorizia, Virgil von Graben was persuaded by grand promises by King Maximilian I to end his hitherto secret association with the Venetians and instead advocate the country's accession to the Habsburg Empire.[17] The enlightened views of Venice and its decision-makers would have recognized the Gorizian (Meinhardin) bastard Virgil von Graben himself as the new Count of Gorizia (it was said that the Von Graben descendant from the House of Gorizia).[18] Another suggestion was that Von Graben would hand over the County of Gorizia to the Republic and in exchange would receive all Gorizia castles and lordships in Friuli and Venice as a [19] But it didn't come to that. In 1498, Virgil von Graben gave his son Lukas von Graben authority over the gorizian Burghut. First, the Council of Ten of the Republic of Venice considered appointing Lukas von Graben as their supreme commander in Friuli. However, since Virgil von Graben ended the contract with Venice about the succession in the County of Gorizia and negotiated with Maximilian I, this appointment did not come [20]

After the death of Count Leonhard on April 12, 1500, and the Gorizia inheritance in favor of the Habsburgs, the Venetians saw their failure solely in the actions of the lords Virgil and Lukas von Graben. After the successful conversion of the Gorizia county into the Habsburg Empire, Virgil von Graben was modestly rewarded, measured against his immense merit.[21] However, von Graben continued to act as governor and captain of Lienz and East Tyrol as well as captain of Gorizia;[22] meanwhile he also lived in Bruck Castle for a short time. Furthermore, after 1500, von Graben was also cidet as the burgrave of Lienz.[23]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Claudia Fräss-Ehrfeld: Geschichte Kärntens: Die ständische Epoche. 1994, p 197.
  2. ^ Meinrad Pizzinini: Osttirol: Der Bezirk Lienz: seine Kunstwerke, hist. Lebens- u. Siedlungsformen. 1974, p 78.
  3. ^ Johann Weichard Freiherr von Valvasor (1689): Die Ehre dess Hertzogthums Crain: das ist, Wahre, gründliche, und recht eigendliche Belegen- und Beschaffenheit dieses Römisch-Keyserlichen herrlichen Erblandes; Laybach (Ljubljana)
  4. ^ Mitteilungen des Instituts für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Band 56
  5. ^ Erich Zöllner: Geschichte Österreichs: von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart. p 159
  6. ^ www.schloss-lengberg.at
  7. ^ Walter Fresacher: Zur Geschichte des Schlosses Stein, p 130, in: Carinthia I, Band 3, 1973, by Historischer Verein Kärnten
  8. ^ Carinthia I,, Zeitschrift für geschichtliche Landeskunde von Kärnten" (geleitet von Wilhelm Neumann), 163. Jahrgang, 1973, p 128.
  9. ^ Carinthia I,, Zeitschrift für geschichtliche Landeskunde von Kärnten" (geleitet von Wilhelm Neumann), 163. Jahrgang, 1973, p 113ff.
  10. ^ Kärntner Burgenkunde: Quellen- und Literaturhinweise zur geschichtlichen und rechtlichen Stellung der Burgen, Schlösser und Ansitze in Kärnten sowie ihrer Besitzer. P 142, Google books:
  11. ^ Osttiroler Heimatblätter (Zur Geschichte des Iselhofes)
  12. ^ Carinthia I,, Zeitschrift für geschichtliche Landeskunde von Kärnten" (geleitet von Wilhelm Neumann), 163. Jahrgang, 1973, p 128/29.
  13. ^ Carinthia I,, Zeitschrift für geschichtliche Landeskunde von Kärnten" (geleitet von Wilhelm Neumann), 163. Jahrgang, 1973, p 128/29.
  14. ^ Philipp Plattner: Die Schriftfunde aus den Gewölbezwickelfüllungen von Schloss Lengberg in Osttirol. Innsbruck 2013, p 41.
  15. ^ aufgeSCHLOSSen LENGBERG. BDA - Bundesdenkmalamt Österreich
  16. ^ Tiroler Heimat 83 (2019): Zeitschrift für Regional- und Kulturgeschichte, von Christina Antenhofer
  17. ^ |wayback=20140113124200 Hermann Wiesflecker: Österreich im Zeitalter Maximilians I.: die Vereinigung der Länder zum …
  18. ^ Mitteilungen des Instituts für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Band 56
  19. ^ Mitteilungen des Instituts für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Band 56
  20. ^ Mitteilungen des Instituts für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung, Band 56
  21. ^ Hermann Wiesflecker: Die Grafschaft Görz und die Herrschaft Lienz, ihre Entwicklung und ihr Erbfall an Österreich (1500). In: Veröffentlichungen des Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum. Band 78, Innsbruck 1998, p 142, 144 (VeroeffFerd_78_0131-0149.pdf).
  22. ^ Austrian Lands before 1918
  23. ^ www.schloss-lengberg.at

External links[]

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