Eleonore Schönborn | |
Birth Name: | Eleonore Freiin von Doblhoff |
Birth Date: | 14 April 1920 |
Birth Place: | Brno, Czechoslovakia |
Death Place: | Schruns, Austria |
Family: | Doblhoff (by birth) Schönborn (by marriage) |
Parents: | Baron Herbert von Doblhoff Gertrud von Skutezky |
Children: | 4, including Christoph and Michael |
Eleonore Gräfin von Schönborn (Freiin von Doblhoff; 14 April 1920 – 25 February 2022) was an Austrian politician. She and her family were expelled from Czechoslovakia in 1945, settling in Austria. She became the first woman to hold a procuriate in Vorarlberg, and to be elected to the Schruns municipal council. She was director of the Montafoner Heimatmuseum, and co-founded an association for care of senior citizens at their homes. Schönborn had four children, including Cardinal Christoph Schönborn and the actor Michael Schönborn. She received awards for her work for cultural and social improvements in the region, including the Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria.
Eleonore Ottilie Hilda Maria Freiin von Doblhoff was born in Brno, Czechoslovakia, the youngest daughter of Baron Herbert von Doblhoff (1887–1932) and his wife, Gertrud von Skutezky (1891–1945). She was member of the Doblhoff family, an Austrian noble family. She grew up in Ratschitz, where she attended a boarding school. Her father died of multiple sclerosis while she was still young.[1]
In April 1942, she met the painter Hugo-Damian Schönborn (1916–1979), a member of the House of Schönborn.[2] They married in Prague, Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, Germany, on 10 May that year and took up residence in Skalka Castle in Vlastislav.[1] Her husband was a soldier who sympathized with the resistance to the Nazis.[3] He was convinced that Hitler was a criminal, wanted to do as little as possible for the war, and stubbornly refused to become an officer in the Wehrmacht, which would have been his position.[3] In October 1944, he deserted in Belgium to the British forces.[4]
In September 1945,[5] [6] Schönborn was expelled from Czechoslovakia and fled with her two small children Philipp and Christoph.[4] [7] She found shelter first with relatives in in Lower Austria. From 1946, she lived with her sister in Graz, where she was later reunited with her husband.[4] [6] They had two more children, Barbara and Michael. The family moved to Schruns in 1950, where she found work. In 1958, the couple divorced.[8] She made a living working at the company in Bludenz, where she worked for 30 years. Due to her language proficiency, she was promoted to chief secretary, procurist and press speaker, the first woman in such positions in Vorarlberg.[9] She had a house built for her family, and was active in the council of the church parish.[4]
Schönberg was the first woman elected to the Schruns municipal council, serving from 1975 to 1985,[4] initiating the erection of museums in Montafon.[10] From 1979 to 2000, she was museum director of the .[11] She founded, together with nurse and nun Bernardis Hinrichs, an association for medical assistance and care at home (Krankenpflegeverein Außermontafon).[4] [12] In 2008, she was made an honorary member.[4] She was awarded the in 1997, and in Gold in 2013, and received the Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria in 2013.[4]
She recounted in interviews and her memoir her memories of her expulsion, the life of her son Christoph, who became Cardinal and Archbishop of Vienna, and social topics in general. Schönborn opposed the deportation of refugee families.[2] [13] She was a committed European and also a passionate card player.[2]
Due to restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic, she was unable to celebrate her centenary with her family.[14] With limited ability to move, and almost completely blind, Schönborn died in Schruns on 25 February 2022, aged 101.[1]