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350:. In the first half of the nineteenth century, the family again split, into the Lower Silesian line of Warmbrunn-Kynast and the Upper Silesian of Koppitz. Due to the hot springs at Warmbrunn, the counts built a spa house and a theater in the early 19th century which became a fashionable retreat. When the Cistercian provost that Gotsche II Schoff had founded at Warmbrunn in 1381 was secularized in 1810, it became owned by the comital family and housed their library with abour 80,000 volumes and other collections.
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395:. During the resort's construction, he returned to Austria to recruit instructors for the Sun Valley ski school, who he confided to actor David Niven were, "all Nazis." Felix Schaffgotsch returned to the U.S. in time for the resort's opening, and remained a central figure in Sun Valley's early development. He returned to Europe after the
391:, chairman of the Union Pacific Railroad, tasked Felix von Schaffgotsch (of Austria) with finding a location for a Union Pacific "resort investment" in the western United States. In January 1936, Felix notified Harriman that he had found a location outside Ketchum, Idaho, that would soon become the site of Union Pacific's
212:
The branch established by Hans's son Ulrich (1453–1543) ceased to exist in 1661; Christoph (1552–1601), grandson of Kaspar (1476–1534), had already succeeded to Ulrich's domain of
Greiffenstein as early as 1578. Christoph, a
521:
376:. In the 1930s, the last lord of the Warmbrunn-Kynast estate, Friedrich (1883–1947), owned 27,668 hectares, the sixth largest enterprise in Prussia. In 1923 Anna Schaffgotsch inherited
138:
to the
Cistercian provost. His family cherished the memory of Gotsche II Schoff, the originator of their wealth, by adopting the sobriquet "Gotsch". Later, both names were connected as
582:
through her mother, Princess Anna Marie of Anhalt-Zerbst, who was the daughter of
Joachim Ernst, Duke of Anhalt; through her father, Barbara Agnes descended from dukes of
372:
The Lower
Silesian line, with its large possessions in and around the Giant and Jizera Mountains, was considered the second wealthiest family of the region before
168:
branch, whose
Seifersdorf and Kreppelhof-Reußendorf-Ullersdorf lines died out in the seventeenth century. This branch became Bohemian barons in 1674 and counts (
551:
463:
290:
as the ambassador of the emperor. He was court tutor and court judge in
Schweidnitz and Jauer, and later president of the Silesian (royal) High Office (
494:
247:(1595–1635), a Protestant like his father, was the only Schaffgotsch who married into a dynastic house: his wife, Barbara Agnes was a princess of
346:
In the following generation, Johann
Nepomuk Gotthard (1732–1808) received the title of "Erblandhofmeister". The family gained a seat in the
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411:
30:
654:
690:
675:
404:
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from their homes because they were ethnic
Germans, while Polish and Czechoslovak authorities confiscated their properties.
271:, which the emperor considered a betrayal. Hans Ulrich was beheaded and the family were deprived of all their possessions.
217:, was the first ancestor of the Silesian branch of the family, which in 1766 split into the lines of Kynast-Warmbrunn and
718:
278:
and recovered all estates except
Trachenberg. In 1654, Christoph Leopold became a count and was made imperial legate in
197:
309:
Castle, an early 17th-century renaissance building. It also burnt down in 1777 and was replaced from 1784 with a large
279:
106:
One of
Sibotho's successors, the knight Gotsche II Schoff (†1420), bought extensive possessions in the foreland of the
479:
421:
View of the Giant Mountains (from the north side) and the Schaffgotsch-owned comital estates in the eighteenth century
396:
328:
320:
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and thus became one of the most important industrialists in Prussia. Their descendants, the Upper Silesian line, or
751:
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161:(Schweidnitz-Jauer). With his sons Anton, Kaspar, and Ulrich, the Schaffgotsch family split into three branches.
761:
218:
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433:
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135:
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which dates back to the thirteenth century. Some of its members played important roles in the public life of
610:
244:
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17:
663:
Das schlesische Elysium, Arne Franke, Deutsches Kulturforum östliches Europa e. V., p. 16–19 (German)
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226:
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and Greiffenstein dominions. The Schaffgotsch family thus became the most important noble family in the
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Gotsche II's son Hans (†1469) was the first of the family to be chancellor, court judge, and governor (
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After Kynast Castle had burnt down, struck by lightning in 1675, the family moved to nearby
232:
343:, the bishop went into exile in Bohemia, the king banned him for lifetime from returning.
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as a first-lieutenant. He was killed fighting in the Caucasus on 11 August 1942, aged 38.
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255:. Hans Ulrich received all rights of a Silesian sovereign and was awarded the title
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294:), i.e. governor of Silesia. His son Johann Anton Gotthard (1675–1742), created an
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222:
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The branch, which until 1945 resided chiefly in eastern Bohemia, died out in 1993.
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53:
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Das Haus Schaffgotsch. Das wechselvolle Schicksal einer schlesischen Adelsdynastie
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palace which remained the main residence of the head of the family until 1945.
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by the Holy Roman emperor. As an imperial general, he served during the
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Around 1240, the first Schaffgotsch appears in a Silesian document as
400:
369:
branch of the family, owned this huge business empire until 1945.
49:
84:). According to tradition, Sibotho came in the entourage of Duke
80:
is the Latin word for "sheep", the translation of the German word
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558:
410:
After World War II, most members of the Schaffgotsch family were
165:
123:
95:
61:
46:
724:
Palace in Kopice, destroyed by fire in 1958, Polish Knowledge
158:
353:
Count Hans Ulrich von Schaffgotsch (1831–1915) had married
698:
Schaffgotschowie. Dzieje wielkiego rodu z Europy Środkowej
229:), died out in the first half of the twentieth century.
176:) in 1681. The most notable members of the branch were:
683:
Schaffgotschowie. Zmienne losy śląskiej arystokracji
274:His son Christoph Leopold (1632–1703) converted to
658:, Bd 22 (Rohmer-Schinkel), München 2005, p.536-538
738:
357:in 1858, the adopted daughter and sole heir of
339:who also made him a prince. When, during the
134:). In 1403, Gotsche II donated the church at
611:Duchess Barbara Agnes von Schlesien-Liegnitz
122:) at the end of the fourteenth century: the
384:, which is still owned by her descendants.
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315:
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719:Polish Knowledge: Family seat in Kopice
327:After the Prussian capture of Silesia,
180:Christoph Wilhelm (1687–1768), who was
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45:is the name of an old and influential
221:; Wildschütz line, which resided in
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397:German invasion of Czechoslovakia
329:Philipp Gotthard von Schaffgotsch
321:Philipp Gotthard von Schaffgotsch
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187:Johann Ernst Anton (1685–1768),
184:(provincial governor) of Silesia
730:Silesian gentry and aristocracy
282:. In 1683, he accompanied king
74:Sibotho de nobili Familia Ovium
757:German Bohemian noble families
615:
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323:(1715–1795), Bishop of Breslau
164:Anton (†1508) established the
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1:
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578:A descendant of the House of
237:Hans Ulrich von Schaffgotsch
7:
189:Supreme Burgrave of Bohemia
10:
783:
67:
399:in 1939, and entered the
153:) of the Principality of
670:, Tarnowskie Góry 2009,
656:Neue Deutsche Biographie
565:
469:Greiffenstein Castle at
752:Austrian noble families
557:Schaffgotsch palace in
528:Hermsdorf unterm Kynast
348:Prussian House of Lords
202:Anton Ernst (1804–70),
34:Coat of arms of Counts
767:Silesian-German people
588:Władysław II the Exile
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324:
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762:German noble families
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267:but signed the first
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27:Silesian noble family
696:A. Kuzio-Podrucki,
681:A. Kuzio-Podrucki,
666:A. Kuzio-Podrucki,
515:Warmbrunn Monastery
337:Frederick the Great
331:(1715–1795) became
196:(1748–1813), first
128:Jelenia Góra Valley
86:Henry I the Bearded
43:Schaffgotsch family
623:"Sun Valley Guide"
423:
325:
241:
104:
39:
747:Silesian nobility
700:, Katowice 2024,
691:978-83-923733-1-5
676:978-83-61458-32-6
393:Sun Valley Resort
333:Bishop of Breslau
284:John III Sobieski
276:Roman Catholicism
261:Thirty Years' War
243:Christoph's son,
198:Bishop of Budweis
90:Hedwig of Andechs
58:Habsburg monarchy
16:(Redirected from
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706:978-8367152-61-7
649:U. Schmilewski,
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457:(Chojnik) Castle
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389:Averell Harriman
341:Seven Years' War
288:Battle of Vienna
280:Poland-Lithuania
223:Austrian Silesia
132:Hirschberger Tal
116:Jizera Mountains
102:(Chojnik) Castle
36:von Schaffgotsch
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644:Further reading
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355:Johanna Gryczik
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182:Landeshauptmann
151:Landeshauptmann
108:Giant Mountains
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227:Czechoslovakia
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651:Schaffgotsch
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630:. Retrieved
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18:Schaffgotsch
486:Trachenberg
374:World War I
265:Wallenstein
245:Hans Ulrich
239:(1595–1635)
120:Isergebirge
741:Categories
708:, (polish)
693:, (Polish)
632:2022-04-21
598:References
380:Castle in
378:Niederleis
257:Semperfrei
219:Wildschütz
215:Protestant
60:and later
733:(English)
586:and from
501:Warmbrunn
473:(c. 1870)
403:division
401:Waffen-SS
387:In 1935,
359:zinc mine
307:Warmbrunn
136:Warmbrunn
678:(German)
660:(German)
412:expelled
249:Liegnitz
166:Bohemian
155:Świdnica
82:Schaf(f)
50:nobility
47:Silesian
584:Silesia
580:Ascania
559:Breslau
543:Koppitz
488:Castle
367:Koppitz
300:Prussia
292:Oberamt
286:at the
225:(later
68:History
62:Prussia
56:, then
54:Bohemia
704:
689:
674:
653:, in:
545:Palace
530:Castle
503:Palace
455:Kynast
442:Castle
263:under
147:German
124:Kynast
114:) and
100:Kynast
566:Notes
253:Brieg
174:hrabě
170:Czech
159:Jawor
78:ovium
702:ISBN
687:ISBN
672:ISBN
41:The
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