Adam Von Waldstein
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Adam von Waldstein the Younger, nicknamed the Long (1569/8 June 1570 – 24 August 1638), was a Czech nobleman, the supreme Prague burgrave from the Waldstein family. His preserved diary is an important historical source.


Family

His parents were Johann von Waldstein (died 1576) and his second wife Magdalena of Vartenberg (died 1592). Like his father, Adam the Younger was married twice. His first wife was Elisabeth Brtnická von Waldstein (died 1614). His second wife was Johanna Emilie of Zierotin (died after 1633), the daughter of Viktorin of Zierotin. He had five sons with both wives: Rudolf, Maximilian, Bertold, Jan Viktorin and Karl.


Life

He came from an old Utraquist family but soon converted to Catholicism. He received a below-average education, but this did not prevent him from achieving considerable career success. He first established himself at the Rudolfinian court, where he became the ''
Ober-Stallmeister The Ober-Stallmeister (russian: Обер-шталмейстер, Ober-shtalmeyster, from german: Oberstallmeister, ) was a post (rank) in the Tsardom of Russia and the Russian Empire, from 4 February 1722 – a court rank of the 3rd class in the T ...
'' in 1606, from 1608 served as the ''Oberstlandrichter'', and in 1611 was promoted to the ''Oberstlandhofmeister''. Adam gained a reputation as a conciliatory politician, a "man of compromise", which was evident both during the negotiations for the Letter of Majesty in 1609 and in the troubled times of 1611. The period of the estate uprising of 1618–1620 was an important test. He unsuccessfully tried to find common ground between the Estates and King Ferdinand II.. After that, he went into exile in Saxony after the election of Frederick of the Palatinate as King of Bohemia. After returning to Bohemia in 1621, Adam also participated in the purchase of confiscated estates and once again became ''Oberstlandhofmeister''. At the same time, he acted in some cases in favour of his Protestant relatives. In 1627, he reached the pinnacle of his career in the office of Supreme Burgrave. Although he never acquired such a magnificent fortune as his more famous relative Albrecht von Wallenstein (1583–1634), given that he managed to preserve the property for posterity, Adam's inheritance represented a crucial foundation for the family in the future.


References


Literature

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External links

{{DEFAULTSORT:Waldstein, Adam von
Adam Adam; el, Ἀδάμ, Adám; la, Adam is the name given in Genesis 1-5 to the first human. Beyond its use as the name of the first man, ''adam'' is also used in the Bible as a pronoun, individually as "a human" and in a collective sense as " ...
Habsburg Bohemian nobility Converts to Christianity 1569 births 1638 deaths Nobility from Prague Burials at St. Vitus Cathedral