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Hans-Adam I, Prince of Liechtenstein

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Hans-Adam I
Prince of Liechtenstein
Reign5 April 1684 – 16 June 1712
PredecessorKarl Eusebius
SuccessorJoseph Wenzel I
Born(1662-08-16)16 August 1662
Brno
Died16 June 1712(1712-06-16) (aged 49)
Vienna
Burial
Church of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, Brno
SpousePrincess Edmunda Maria of Dietrichstein-Nikolsburg
Names
Johann Adam Andreas
HouseLiechtenstein
FatherKarl Eusebius, Prince of Liechtenstein
MotherJohanna Beatrix of Dietrichstein

Hans-Adam I, Prince of Liechtenstein (Johann Adam Andreas; 16 August 1662, in Brno – 16 June 1712, in Vienna) was the son of Karl Eusebius, Prince of Liechtenstein (1611–1684) and Johanna Beatrix of Dietrichstein (1625–1676).

On 18 January 1699[1] he acquired the seigneury of Schellenberg, and on 22 February 1712 the county of Vaduz.[2] These two domains would later form the present principality of Liechtenstein. He was also Duke of Opava and Krnov.

Johann did not take up an office at the Imperial court but did case-by-case work, especially as a financial expert. He was known informally as Hans Adam the Rich. Besides managing his property, he took a great interest in art. He bought works by Rubens[3] and van Dyck for his collections and was one of the most generous patrons of his time.

Johann created two memorials to himself, a palace in Bankgasse in Vienna and a summer palace in Rossau. He was the 575th Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece in Austria.

Marriage and issue

Johann married his first cousin, Edmunda Maria Theresia, Princess of Dietrichstein-Nikolsburg (17 April 1652 – 15 March 1737) on 16 February 1681. They had seven children:

  • Princess Maria Elisabeth (8 May 1683 – 4 May 1744)
  • Prince Karl Joseph (15 October 1684 – 16 February 1704)
  • Princess Maria Antonia (10 April 1687 – 9 October 1750)
  • Prince Franz Dominik (1 September 1689 – 19 March 1711)
  • Princess Maria Gabriele (12 July 1692 – 7 November 1713, married Joseph Johann Adam, Prince of Liechtenstein
  • Princess Maria Theresia (11 May 1694 – 20 February 1772)
  • Princess Maria Dominika (5 August 1698 – 2 June 1724)

He left no male heirs at his death, both of his sons having predeceased him.

Ancestry

Family of Hans-Adam I, Prince of Liechtenstein
16. Baron Georg Hartmann of Liechtenstein, Lord of Valtice
8. Baron Hartmann II of Liechtenstein, Lord of Valtice, Lednice and Steyregg (=28.)
17. Baroness Susanna of Liechtenstein
4. Karl I, Prince of Liechtenstein (=14.)
18. Karl I, Count of Ortenburg
9. Countess Anna Maria of Ortenburg (=29.)
19. Countess Maximiliana of Frauenburg-Haag
2. Karl Eusebius, Prince of Liechtenstein
20. Baron Václav II Bučovský z Boskovic
10. Baron Jan Šembera z Boskovic a Černá Hora (=30.)
21. Anna z Ojnic
5. Baroness Anna Maria Šemberová of Boskovic and Černá Hora (=15.)
22. Baron Albert Krajíř z Krajku
11. Baroness Anna Krajířová z Krajku (=31.)
23. Marie Magdalena Kostomlatská z Vřesovic
1. Hans-Adam I, Prince of Liechtenstein
24. Baron Adam of Dietrichstein
12. Count Zikmund of Dietrichstein-Nikolsburg
25. Margarita Folch de Cardona y Requensens
6. Maximilian, Prince of Dietrichstein-Nikolsburg
26. Baron Hans Warmund von der Leiter
13. Baroness Johanna von der Leiter, Lady of Amerang
27. Baroness Elisabeth von Thurn zu Neubeuren
3. Princess Johanna Beatrix of Dietrichstein-Nikolsburg
28. Baron Hartmann II of Liechtenstein, Lord of Valtice, Lednice and Steyregg (=8.)
14. Karl I, Prince of Liechtenstein (=4.)
29. Countess Anna Maria of Ortenburg (=9.)
7. Princess Anna Marie of Liechtenstein
30. Baron Jan Šembera z Boskovic a Černá Hora (=10.)
15. Baroness Anna Marie Šemberová of Boskovic and Černá Hora (=5.)
31. Baroness Anna Krajířová z Krajku (=11.)

References

  1. ^ Principality of Liechtenstein
  2. ^ Raton, Pierre (1970). Liechtenstein: History and Institutions of the Principality. Vaduz: Liechtenstein Verlag. p. 20. ASIN B0006D0J8E.
  3. ^ His Rubens Massacre of the Innocents, later misattributed to another painter, found its way to the Art Gallery of Ontario.
Hans-Adam I, Prince of Liechtenstein
Born: 1657 Died: 1712
Regnal titles
Preceded by Prince of Liechtenstein
1684–1712
Succeeded by

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