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  1. Early life. Marriage and family life. German occupation and exile. Return to Europe and post-war period. Legal controversy. Last years. Ancestry. References. Adolph Schwarzenberg (18 August 1890 – 27 February 1950) was a notable landowner, entrepreneur and philanthropist.

  2. Upon the establishment of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in 1939, the possessions of Prince Adolph of Schwarzenberg were seized by the Nazi authorities. He managed to flee, but his cousin, Heinrich, Duke of Krumlov, was arrested and deported.

  3. Count Adolf von Schwarzenberg (1547 [1] – 29 July 1600) was a renowned general of the Holy Roman Empire whose sword, along with that of his descendant Prince Karl Philipp, is preserved in the arsenal of Vienna. He fought in the wars of religion, but was chiefly distinguished in the wars against the Turks on the eastern frontier.

  4. 3 de abr. de 2020 · Published Apr 3, 2020. + Follow. Hope and fear, expectation and trepidation, optimism and desperation. These mixed emotions kept Adolph Schwarzenberg on edge when World War II ended. The Nazis...

  5. 5 de jul. de 2006 · In an extended special edition of Czechs in History we visit the town of Trebon, some 150 kilometres south of Prague. This is where the Schwarzenberg nobility resided until the Second World War....

  6. Schwarzenberg, Adolph Fürst zu (Primogenitur) (1890-1950), Großgrundbesitzer —enberg Adolph Fürst zu Schwarzenberg (Primogenitur), Großgrundbesitzer. Geb. Frauenberg, Böhmen (Hluboká nad Vltavou, Tschec

  7. Adolph Schwarzenberg-Hluboka (as opposed to the Schwarzenberg-Orlik line) was born in Hluboka, Bohemia, in 1890, the eldest son of Jan (Johann) Schwarzenberg. A Czechoslovak citizen, he received his doctorate of law from the Czech university in Prague in 1914, and served in the Czechoslovak Army. In 1923 he became his father’s delegate general.