Schönborn family
The Schönborn family is a noble and mediatised formerly sovereign family of the former Holy Roman Empire.
Various members of the family have held high offices of the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire over the course of centuries, including as bishops, prince bishops, cardinals and prince-electors. In addition to several family members having been elected rulers of ecclesiastical principalities — the Electorate of Mainz, the Princely-Bishopric of Würzburg, the Princely-Bishopric of Worms, the Princely-Bishopric of Speyer, the Electorate of Trier, and the Princely-Bishoprice of Bamberg — the family possessed a fief in Franconia that held imperial immediacy as a county within the Holy Roman Empire, the state of Schönborn.
The House of Schönborn, especially its ruling prelates of the Roman Catholic Church, were among the most important builders of Southern German baroque architecture. The family gave the name Schönbornzeit to an era, sometimes nostalgically remembered in the popular consciousness as an era of prosperity. Today, the term Schönbornzeit denotes a particular style of Rhenish and Franconian baroque.
History
Early History
The Schönborn family first appeared in the Rheingau region with H. von Sconenburne in 1275. Their original seat was Schönborn in the County of Katzenelnbogen. A secondary source of 1670 mentions an earlier Eucharius von Schönborn of the mid 12th century, however without documentary proof. The lion in their coat of arms may derive from the Katzenelnbogen as well as from the nearby Diez counts whose vassals they were. By the end of the 14th century, the family had split into three branches one of which extinguished soon. The elder branch resided at Schönborn and held the office of Burgmann at Burgschwalbach, a castle built between 1368 and 1371 by count Eberhard V. of Katzenelnbogen. Gilbrecht of Schönborn was mentioned there in 1373. They were also Burgmanns at Hahnstätten in the County of Nassau. Several of them became abbots, one a grand bailiff of the Knights Hospitaller. The younger branch were vassals in the Westerwald region, in the service of the Barony of Westerburg, the Electorate of Trier, the Electorate of Mainz and the county of Wied. In the 16th century many younger sons of the family became Domherren, leading to the extinction of both branches, with the exception of a side line of the younger branch that had received the fiefs of Freienfels and Eschbach.Later history
of Eschbach, son of a minor nobleman in the employ of the then Lutheran counts of Wied, became a Catholic priest in the impoverished times of the Thirty Years' War. He was admitted as a minor canon by the cathedral chapter of Wurzburg. At the time, the family consisted only of his brother and himself. These two brought the family to power and fame, founding new branches that were to become widely known throughout Europe. Johann Philipp became a priest at Wurzburg Cathedral at the age of 16, changed to Mainz Cathedral in 1625 and to Worms Cathedral in 1630. He became a provost and, in 1642, was elected prince-bishop of Wurzburg. His diplomatic skills made him an important mediator during the Peace of Westphalia negotiations that ended the Thirty Years' War in 1648. As a result, he was elected Archbishop of Mainz in 1647, thus also ruler of the Electorate of Mainz and archchancellor of the Holy Roman empire. In 1663 he also received the princely-bishopric of Worms. He was an effective administrator of his principalities and was able to bring back economic recovery. He fortified the city of Mainz and founded hospitals and high schools. His court was a center of German politics in the post-war era. Johann Philipp was the first of six members of the Schönborn family who, in the course of more than three generations, were to rule over eight of the most prestigious ecclesiastical principalities of the Holy Roman Empire.He made his brother Philip Erwein a Vogt in the Electorate of Mainz where the latter acquired the castles of Gaibach in 1650, of Geisenheim in 1654 and of Heusenstamm in 1661. In 1635 he married Maria Ursula von Greiffenclau-Vollraths, a close relative of the late archbishop and elector of Mainz Georg Friedrich von Greiffenklau; the couple had 12 children. In 1663 Philip Erwein became a baron. The family thus shifted its focus from its regions of origin, which had become predominantly Protestant, to the Catholic ecclesiastical principalities of the empire.
Philip Erwein's son, Lothar Franz von Schönborn, also became a prince-bishop of Wurzburg in 1693 and an elector-archbishop of Mainz in 1695. The latter's brother Melchior acquired the fief of Reichelsburg from the prince-bishop of Wurzburg in 1671, giving him access to the Franconian Circle of the imperial knights.
In 1701, Melchior's son, Rudolf Franz, married Eleonore von Hatzfeld, widow of the Count von Dernbach, who had left her the Herrschaft Wiesentheid in Franconia, a small imperial state raised to a county in 1701. Thus, the family obtained imperial immediacy for the first time, and since the counts of Schönborn bear the prefix Illustrious Highness. She had also inherited the Austrian fiefs of Arnfels and Waldenstein in Carinthia from her first husband. Melchior then bought some further estates in Austria in 1710, Göllersdorf with Mühlberg and Aspersdorf in Lower Austria, from the Counts of Buchheim. In 1717, his estate was partitioned into the states of Schönborn-Wiesentheid and Schönborn-Heusenstamm, both retaining immediacy. Heusenstamm was inherited by Schönborn-Wiesentheid in 1801. The state of Schönborn-Wiesentheid was mediatised in 1806.
In 1726, Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, granted Palanok Castle with Mukacheve, Chynadiyovo and 200 villages in the Kingdom of Hungary, to Elector Lothar Franz, after the latter had sent him troops to defeat Francis II Rákóczi, whose property it had been. The estate, one of the largest in Eastern Europe, remained in the family well into the 20th century.
In the year 1743, members of the family ruled the following states, all sovereign princely-bishoprics within the Holy Roman Empire: Bamberg, Würzburg, Konstanz, Speyer, Worms and Trier, and the archdiocese and electorate of Mainz were held by a close relative, Johann Friedrich Karl von Ostein. Not only were important parts of Southern Germany under their control, but also quite wealthy regions. The Schönborns were not restricted to ruling these territories. They followed through, over several generations, with one of the most ambitious building programs of the 18th century, including churches, monasteries, ecclesiastical residences, schools and hospitals. Again, in the 19th and 20th/21st centuries, two Schönborns rose to become archbishops and cardinals. Given that the family started under modest conditions with Johann Philipp in the early 17th century, this success was the result of piety, loyalty to the Catholic church and its strongest supporter in Europe, the House of Habsburg, ambition, diligence, organizational skills, grandiosity in planning, solid finances, advantageous marriages and overall, an iron will in pursuit of their goals through centuries. The House of Schönborn, initially rather impoverished knights, thus managed to surpass many of the more powerful older dynasties and to leave an enormous cultural legacy.
At the end of the 18th century, three brothers, who were great-grandsons of Rudolf Franz, established the three extant branches of the family:
- Franz Philipp founded the Austrian branch, Schönborn-Buchheim, until today owning the Göllersdorf and Weyerburg estates and Palais Schönborn-Batthyány in Vienna;
- Franz Erwein founded the Franconian branch, Schönborn-Wiesentheid, until today owning the castles at Wiesentheid, Pommersfelden, Gaibach, Geisenheim and the wine estates Hallburg near Volkach and Hattenheim, and formerly also owning property in Bohemia; and
- Friedrich founded the Bohemian branch, Schönborn, residing at Schönborn Palace, today the U.S. embassy, and until 1945 at Skalka Castle, Czech Republic.
Lords of Schönborn (1385–1663)
- Gerard
- Gerard
- John II
- John IV
- George II
- Philip
- George IV
- Philip Erwin, since 1663 Baron
Barons of Schönborn (1663–1701)
- Philip Erwin
- John Erwin, since 1701 Count, jointly with:
Counts of Schönborn (1701–1717)
- John Erwin
- Melchior Frederick
After German Mediatisation
- Hugo, Count 1772-1817
- * Franz Philipp, Count of Schönborn-Buchheim
- ** Schönborn-Buchheim Line
- * Franz Erwein, Count of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
- ** Schönborn-Wiesentheid Line
- * Friedrich, Count 1817-1849 Bohemian Line
- ** Erwein, Count 1849-1881
- *** Karl, Count 1881-1908
- **** Johann, Count 1908-1912
- ***** Karl Johann, Count 1912-1952
- ****** Hugo-Damian, Count 1952-1979
- ******* Philipp, Count 1979–present
- ******* Count Christoph, Archbishop of Vienna
- ******* Count Michael
- ***** Count Heinrich
- ****** Count Alexander
- ******* Count Damian
- **** Count Zdenko
- ***** Count Zdenko - male heirs exist
- *** Franziskus von Paula was a Czech Roman Catholic bishop of České Budějovice and later archbishop of Prague and cardinal.
Counts of Schönborn-Buchheim
- Francis George
After German Mediatisation
- Franz, 1st Count 1817-1841
- * Erwein, 2nd Count 1841-1844 - resigned rights to his brother in 1844
- * Karl, 3rd Count 1844-1854
- ** Erwein, 4th Count 1854-1903
- *** Friedrich Karl, 5th Count 1903-1932
- **** Georg 6th Count 1932-1989
- ***** Friedrich Karl, 7th Count 1989–present ∞ Isabelle d'Orleans, Princess of France
- ****** Damian, Hereditary Count of Schönborn-Buchheim
- ****** Count Vinzenz
- ******* Count Philipp
- ******* Count Clemens
- ******* Count Alexander
- ****** Count Vinzenz
- ******* Count Theodor
Counts of Schönborn-Heusenstamm (1717–1801)
- Anselm Francis
- Anselm Posthumous
Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid (1717–1806)
- Rudolph Francis Erwin
- Joseph Francis Bonaventura
- Damian Hugo Erwin
After German Mediatisation
- Franz, 1st Count 18..-1840
- * Hugo, 2nd Count 1840-1865
- * Klemens, 3rd Count 1865-1877
- ** Arthur, 4th Count 1877-1915
- *** Erwein, 5th Count 1915-1942
- **** Karl, 6th Count 1942-1998
- ***** Filipp, 7th Count 1998-2004 - renounced his title in 2004
- ***** Paul, 8th Count 1998–present
- ****** Franz, Hereditary Count of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
- ****** Count Alexander
- ****** Count Johannes
- ****** Count Georg
- ****** Count Michael
Prelates of the family
- Johann Philipp von Schönborn, Prince-elector and Archbishop of Mainz, Bishop of Würzburg and Worms. His contemporaries gave him the honourable titles of "the Wise", "the German Solomon", and "the Cato of Germany".
- Lothar Franz von Schönborn, nephew of the above, was Prince-elector and Archbishop of Mainz and Bishop of Bamberg.
- Damian Hugo Philipp von Schönborn, Prince-Bishop of Speyer and of Konstanz, and was also a cardinal. He did much for the Diocese of Speyer, and was conspicuous for his culture, learning, and piety.
- Franz Georg von Schönborn, Prince-elector and Archbishop of Trier and Bishop of Worms. Both Frederick the Great and Maria Theresa praised him as an excellent ruler.
- Johann Philipp Franz von Schönborn, Bishop of Würzburg.
- Friedrich Karl von Schönborn was Bishop of Bamberg and Würzburg. He was born at Mainz. He spent most of his time at the Imperial court in Vienna, serving as Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Empire from 1705 to 1734. The last three prelates were brothers, and nephews of Lothar Franz.
- Franziskus von Paula Graf von Schönborn.. Born in Prague, he became Archbishop of Prague in 1885, and was created cardinal in 1889.
- Christoph Cardinal Schönborn is the Archbishop of Vienna.
Baroque architecture
The ecclesiastical residences were owned by the church, and continued to be inhabited by successive bishops, while the private estates remained inheritance of the family. They were mostly acquired by the ruling prelates' brothers. Of the grand bishops' palaces, only Weissenstein Palace at Pommersfelden continues to be privately owned by the family, as it was built, from 1711, with an initial amount of 100.000 guilders which were personally granted to elector Lothar Franz by Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, in reward of his services and his continuous political support. It contains the largest private baroque art collection in Germany.
Private residences
- Burg Schönborn
- Burgschwalbach castle
- Freienfels castle near Weinbach, 1466-1687 owned by the family
- Schloss Gaibach, since 1650 to this day owned by the Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
- Schloss Geisenheim, since 1652 to this day owned by the Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
- Schloss Heusenstamm
- Schönborner Hof in Mainz
- Schönborner Hof in Aschaffenburg
- Schloss Wiesentheid, from 1701 to this day owned by the Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid
- Weissenstein Palace at Pommersfelden, still owned by the Counts of Schönborn-Wiesentheid. The palace contains the largest private Baroque art collection in Germany, containing over 600 pictures. Baroque and Renaissance artists represented include Peter Paul Rubens, Albrecht Dürer, Titian, Rembrandt, Anthony van Dyck and Artemisia Gentileschi. It also houses a collection of 17th-19th century musical manuscripts and prints, the "Musical Collection of the Counts Schönborn-Wiesentheid", mainly acquired by Count Rudolf Franz Erwein von Schönborn, a talented amateur cellist who had ordered original cello compositions from various composers including Platti and Vivaldi. This is called the "elder repertoire" and consists of 147 prints and 497 mss. Its contents are listed with RISM. The "younger repertoire" was acquired by the cellists grandson resp. grand-grandson, Hugo Damian Erwein and Franz Erwein von Schönborn. It consists of 141 prints and 98 mss. The whole library has been microfilmed
- Göllersdorf estate, Austria
- Weyerburg castle, Austria
- Palais Schönborn-Batthyány, Vienna
- Palais Schönborn, Laudongasse, Vienna
- Schönborn Palace, sold by the Bohemian branch in 1919, since then embassy of the United States
- Skalka Castle near Vlastislav, Czech Republic, expropriated in 1946
- Chynadiyovo Castle, Ukraine
Churches
- Würzburg Residence court chapel
- Basilica of the Fourteen Holy Helpers
- Court chapel of Meersburg Residence
- Pilgrimage church of the Holy Trinity at Gößweinstein
- St Mauritius
- St Cäcilia
- Basilica of St. Paulinus, Trier
- St Laurence at Dirmstein
- St. Peter at Bruchsal
- Prüm Abbey, new buildings from 1748
Ecclesiastical and official residences
- Fortress of Mainz and Mainz Citadel
- New Residence in Bamberg
- Favorite Palace in Mainz
- The Federal Chancellery of Austria, built 1717-1719 for Vice-Chancellor Friedrich Karl von Schönborn
- Blauer Hof Laxenburg
- Würzburg Residence
- Bruchsal Palace
- Imperial Chancellory Wing of the Hofburg Palace in Vienna
- Schloss Werneck
- Schloss Philippsburg, Koblenz
- Neues Schloss, completion of the palace
- Schloss Schönbornslust at Koblenz-Kesselheim
Gallery