Christoph von Wydenbruck | |
Honorific Suffix: | Count of Wydenbruck-Loë |
Office: | Austro-Hungarian Ambassador to Spain |
Term Start: | 1911 |
Term End: | 1913 |
Predecessor: | Rudolf von Welserheimb |
Successor: | Hans von Wagner (as Envoy) |
Office1: | Austro-Hungarian Ambassador to the Netherlands |
Monarch1: | Franz Joseph I |
Term Start1: | 1908 |
Term End1: | 1911 |
Predecessor1: | Otto zu Brandis |
Successor1: | Karl von Giskra |
Office2: | Austro-Hungarian Ambassador to Denmark |
Monarch2: | Franz Joseph I |
Term Start2: | 1889 |
Term End2: | 1907 |
Predecessor2: | Konstantin von Trauttenberg |
Successor2: | Iván von Rubido-Zichy (as Charge d'Affaires) |
Birth Date: | 5 February 1856 |
Birth Place: | Vienna, Austria |
Death Place: | Reichenhall, Upper Bavaria |
Parents: | Ferdinand von Wydenbruck Isabella Blacker |
Relations: | Hermynia Zur Mühlen (niece) Georg, 6th Prince Fugger von Babenhausen (nephew) |
Count Christoph Anton Maria von Wydenbruck (5 February 1856 – 4 October 1917), was an Austrian diplomat.
Count von Wydenbruck was born on 5 February 1856 in Vienna, Austria. He was the eldest son of diplomat Count Ferdinand von Wydenbruck and Isabella (née Blacker). Among his siblings were Count August von Wydenbruck (who married Countess Maria Esterházy de Galántha) and Countess Isabella von Wydenbruck (who married Count Folliot de Crenneville-Poutet, parents of writer Hermynia Zur Mühlen).[1]
His paternal grandparents were Baron Franz von Wydenbruck-Loë and Alexandrina Arrazola de Oñate.[2] His maternal grandparents were Lt.-Col. St John Blacker, a member of the Anglo-Irish gentry, and Anne Hammond Morgan (only child of Sir Thomas Charles Morgan). After his grandfather's death in 1842, his grandmother married Hon. George Augustus Browne (a younger son of the 2nd Barone Kilmaine).[3]
While his father was the Austro-Hungarian Envoy in Washington, D.C. from 1865 to 1867,[4] Wydenbruck attended school in the United States.[5]
During the reign of Emperor Franz Joseph I, he served as an Austro-Hungarian diplomat. After serving in minor positions in London, he was appointed Austro-Hungarian Ambassador to Japan,[6] then from 1889 to 1907 he was the Ambassador to Denmark, followed by Ambassador to the Netherlands from 1908 to 1911, and Ambassador to Spain from 1911 to 1913.[7] [8]
On 25 July 1880 at Meiselberg Castle, Count von Wydenbruck married Countess Marie Franziska Fugger von Babenhausen (b. 1858), only daughter of Countess Friederike von Christalnigg von und zu Gillitzstein and Karl, 4th Prince Fugger von Babenhausen. Her brother, Karl, 5th Prince Fugger von Babenhausen, was married to Princess Eleonora of Hohenlohe-Bartenstein. Together, Christoph and Marie were the parents of:
Count von Wydenbruck died on 4 October 1917 at Reichenhall, a spa town in Upper Bavaria. In 1919, his widow acquired Meiselberg Castle from her mother's family. It passed to their daughter, Helene, Countess Desfours. In 1941, Helene left it to her cousin, Maria Theresia Fugger von Babenhausen (wife of Prince Heinrich von Hanau-Horowitz, a grandson of Frederick William, Elector of Hesse).[11]