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Prince Adolf of Auersperg

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Adolf Hereditary Prince of Auersperg
Felix, Eugen. Adolf Fürst Auersperg. Oil on wood. 1883. Belvedere, Vienna
Minister-President of Austria
In office
28 November 1871 – 15 February 1879
MonarchFrancis Joseph I
Preceded byLudwig von Holzgethan
Succeeded byKarl von Stremayr
Provincial President of Salzburg
In office
1870–1871
MonarchFrancis Joseph I
Preceded byErnst Graf Gourcy-Droitaumont
Succeeded bySigmund Graf Thun-Hohenstein
Personal details
Born(1821-07-21)21 July 1821
Vlašim, Bohemia, Austrian Empire
Died5 January 1885(1885-01-05) (aged 63)
Goldegg Castle, Neidling, Lower Austria, Austria-Hungary
Spouse(s)Baroness Johanna Aloysia Mladota von Solopisk
Countess Johanna Festétics de Tólna

Adolf Wilhelm Carl Daniel, Hereditary Prince of Auersperg (German: Adolf Wilhelm Carl Daniel Erbprinz von Auersperg; 21 July 1821 in Schloss Vlašim, Bohemia – 5 January 1885 in Schloss Goldegg, Neidling) was a Bohemian and an Austrian nobleman and statesman. He served as eighth prime minister of the western part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire (Cisleithania) and ninth provincial president of Salzburg.

Biography

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On the death of his father (Wilhelm II, 7th Prince of Auersperg, Duke of Gottschee), Prince Adolf became heir to one of the most prominent princely families of the Holy Roman Empire, whose sovereign principality was mediatized in the Austrian Empire following the German Mediatisation of the post-revolutionary era.

After studying law, he served as an imperial cavalry officer from 1841 to 1860 and attained the rank of major in Prince Eugene's Dragoons regiment. In 1867 he entered political life as a member of the Bohemian Landtag (provincial assembly), being elected by the Liberal land proprietors. Ten months later, on the resignation of Count Hartig, he was appointed Supreme Marshal of the Kingdom of Bohemia, continuing in that office until 1870.[1] In January 1869 he was nominated life member of the Upper Chamber of the Austrian Reichsrat, in which he took a conspicuous part.

He was provincial president of Salzburg from 1870 to 1871, and proved in that position, as well as in his subsequent political life, a staunch supporter of the constitution. Auerspergstraße is a street in the center of Salzburg that was named after Prince Adolf and his family in 1873. The street is almost 1,000 meters long and runs in a quarter circle from Schwarzstrasse to Schallmooser Hauptstrasse. Due to anti-Aristocratic sentiment during Austria's membership of the German Reich (1938–1945), Auerspergstraße was officially called Straße der SA, however the street was immediately renamed after Austria gained sovereignty in 1945.[2]

In 1871 he succeeded Karl von Hohenwart as prime minister for the western half of the empire (Minister-President of Cisleithania). Auersperg's ministry enacted a measure of electoral reform (1873), secured direct elections to the lower chamber of the Reichsrat, and strengthened the political entente with Hungary. Intraparty controversies over Austrian occupation of Bosnia finally forced him to resign in 1879. Auersperg's resignation marked the end of German liberalism in Austrian politics throughout the remaining years of the Empire.

Family

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Coat of Arms of the Princely House of Auersperg

Prince Adolf's brother, Karl Wilhelm, 8th Prince of Auersperg, Duke of Gottschee, also served as Minister-President of Cisleithania and as the first President of the Austrian House of Lords (Herrenhaus). His other siblings were Aglae (1812–1899), Wilhelmine (1813–1886), Alexander (1818–1866) and Leopoldine (1820–1821).

Adolf was married twice:

Honours

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References

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  1. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica. (2018). Adolf, prince von Auersperg | prime minister of Austria. [online] Available at: https://www.britannica.com/biography/Adolf-Karl-Daniel-Prince-von-Auersperg-Duke-von-Gottschee [Accessed 12 Nov. 2018].
  2. ^ "Auerspergstraße - Salzburgwiki". sn.at.
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