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Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg

Prince
Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg
HansUlrichvonEggenberg.jpg
Prince Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg, Giovanni Pietro de Pomis, after 1625
President of the Geheimen Rates (Privy Council)
In office
1615–1634
Monarch Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor
Succeeded by Count Maximilian von Trautmansdorff
Personal details
Born June 1568
Graz, Austria (Styria)
Died 18 October 1634(1634-10-18) (aged 66)
Ljubljana, Slovenia (Carniola)
Nationality Austrian
Spouse(s) Sidonia Maria Thannhausen
Children Maria Sidonia, Maria Franziska, Maria Anna, Maria Margarita, Johann Anton
Parents Seyfried von Eggenberg
Anna Benigna Galler von Schwanberg
Residence Schloss Eggenberg (Graz)
Alma mater Tübinger Stift
Occupation Diplomat, governor, financier
Profession Statesman, nobleman
Religion Roman Catholicism

Prince Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg (1568 – 18 October 1634) was an Austrian statesman, a son of Seyfried von Eggenberg, Lord of Erbersdorf (1526-1594), and great-grandson of Balthasar Eggenberger (died 1493). He was a prominent member of the House of Eggenberg and gained the title of Duke of Krumau.

Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg may only have been of simple parentage and had a Protestant upbringing, but by his own means, he succeeded in becoming one of the most influential Catholic princes in the Holy Roman Empire within just a few decades, outshining even his successful cousin, Ruprecht von Eggenberg.

His career, however, developed too quickly and too successfully for it to go unnoticed and unenvied. Contemporaries and historians have had differing opinions regarding Eggenberg's character: seeing him as a man ... who is successful at everything he does, a fellow of good fortune, with a reputation of being completely loyal to the Emperor, highly gifted and reliable, but also a corrupt and slippery customer. Both contemporaries and historians are, however, in agreement about his brilliant diplomatic talent, his personal charm and cleverness, and his extraordinary manner of dealing with people.

Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg was born in June 1568 in Graz and had a Protestant upbringing. However, little is known about his childhood and youth. In 1583, he traveled to Tübingen, the heartland of German Protestantism, to study at the renowned Protestant university, Tübinger Stift, where he received a profound education. A famous associate of Hans Ulrich's, Johannes Kepler, also received a first-rate education at the Tübinger Stift and went on to write his first work, Mysterium Cosmographicum, while teaching in Graz. The intellectual dimensions of this education were to later form the basis of the complex programmatic orientations of his new residence, Schloss Eggenberg.


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