Maximilian Ulrich von Kaunitz explained

Maximilian Ulrich von Kaunitz-Rietberg
Native Name:Maxmilián Oldřich z Kounic-Rietbergu
Native Name Lang:cs
Birth Date:27 March 1679.
Birth Place:Vienna, Archduchy of Austria, Holy Roman Empire
Death Place:Vienna, Archduchy of Austria, Holy Roman Empire
Governor of Moravia
Term:1721–1746
Children:16, including
Wenzel Anton, Prince of Kaunitz-Rietberg
Honours:Knight of the Golden Fleece

Count Maximilian Ulrich von Kaunitz-Rietberg (Czech: Maxmilián Oldřich z Kounic-Rietbergu; 27 March 1679 – 10 September 1746[1] [2]) was an Austrian diplomat and politician who served as governor of Moravia from 1720 until his death.[3] He was the father of the powerful state chancellor of Maria Theresa, Holy Roman Empress and Queen Regnant of Bohemia and Hungary, Wenzel Anton, Prince of Kaunitz-Rietberg.

Early life

Maximilian Ulrich was born in Vienna to a wealthy Moravian noble family as the third son of Count (1655–1705), Baron of Šlapanice and Countess Maria Eleonora von (died 2 December 1706),[4] daughter of Count Adolph of Sternberg, the Supreme Burgrave of Bohemia. He was appointed an imperial chamberlain at a young age, and in 1706, he was made an imperial councillor.

Career

At least from the summer of 1716, Maximilian Ulrich was active as imperial envoy to various German princely courts. On 21 September 1720, he was named geheimrat, imperial secret councillor. In 1721, he served as imperial ambassador to Rome, witnessing the papal conclave that elected Benedict XIII after the death of Innocent XIII. In the same year he returned to the place of origin of his family, Moravia, becoming its governor.

He laid claim to the ancestral lands of his wife, the County of Rietberg, fighting a long and costly legal battle against the princely family of Liechtenstein and the king of Prussia. After he had won the suit in 1718, he changed the name of his family to 'Kaunitz-Rietberg' and was admitted to the . As part of the Rietberg inheritance, he and his descendants also assumed the lordship of Esens, Stederdorf, and Wittmund in East Frisia, despite these lands being under Prussian occupation.

Governor of Moravia

Maximilian Ulrich was a devoted governor who established and oversaw many beneficial and charitable institutions, among them the State Academy of Olomouc. He worked on making the river Morava navigable and had a road built between Brno and Olomouc; he regularised the tax system of Moravia, increasing royal income and enacted a partial reform of the provincial administration. He also introduced restrictions on the lives of the significant Jewish population of the region and ordered the expulsion of Romani people.

Personal life

On 6 August 1699, he married Prinzess (1683[5] /1686–1758), heiress of the House of Cirksena as the only child of, Count of Rietberg and Countess Johanna Franziska von Manderscheid-Blankenheim.[6] One source claims that the two had been betrothed in 1697 and that Maria was fourteen and Maximilian Ulrich seventeen, while another states that the groom was twenty and the bride thirteen at the time of their wedding. Maximilain Ulrich died in Vienna in 1746, aged sixty-seven.

Issue

From his marriage, Maximilian Ulrich had sixteen children, eleven sons and five daughters:

Honours

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Felgel, Anton Victor . Historische Kommission bei der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften . 1882 . 978-3-7537-1114-0 . München . 486–487 . de . The Universal German Biography . Kaunitz-Rietberg, Max Ulrich . https://www.deutsche-biographie.de/sfz40238.html . Wikisource.
  2. Book: Wurzbach, Constantin von . 1856–1891 . 978-3-7434-3954-2 . Vienna . de . Biographical Dictionary of the Austrian Empire . Kaunitz-Rietberg, Maximilian Ulrich Graf . https://de.wikisource.org/wiki/BLK%C3%96:Kaunitz-Rietberg,_Maximilian_Ulrich_Graf.
  3. Book: Jeřábek . Tomáš . Brněnské paláce. Stavby duchovní a světské aristokracie v raném novověku . Kroupa . Jiří . Barrister a Principal - Národní památkový ústav . 2005 . 80-7364-016-3 . 1st . Brno . cs . The Brno Palaces. The Buildings of the Clergy and Wordly Aristocracy in The Early Modern Times.
  4. Book: Wurzbach, Constantin von . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaisertums Österreich . 1864 . 978-3-7434-3954-2 . 11 . Vienna . Vienna . de . Biographical Dictionary of the Austrian Empire . Genealogische Tafel des Fürsten- undGradenhauses Kaunitz . Genealogical Table of the Princely and Countly House of Kaunitz . http://www.literature.at/viewer.alo?objid=11814&viewmode=fullscreen&rotate=&scale=3.33&page=92 . Austrian Literature Online.
  5. Book: Wurzbach, Constantin von . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich . 1856–1891 . 978-3-7434-3954-2 . Vienna . de . Biographical Dictionary of the Austrian Empire . Zirksena-Rietberg, Maria Prinzessin . https://de.wikisource.org/wiki/BLK%C3%96:Zirksena-Rietberg,_Maria_Prinzessin . Wikisource.
  6. Book: Zeitschrift für vaterländische Geschichte und Altertumskunde . Verein für Geschichte und Altertumskunde Westfalens . 1852 . Münster . 175 . de . Journal of Patriotic History and Antiquities . Google Books.
  7. Book: Kroupa, Jiří . Alchymie štěstí. Pozdní osvícenství a moravská společnost 1770-1810 . Era . 2006 . 80-7366-063-6 . 2nd, expanded and revised . Brno . cs . The Alchemy of Happiness. The Late Enlightenment and the Moravian Community 1770-1810.