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  1. Adolph Schwarzenberg-Frauenberg (nicht Schwarzenebrg-Worlik) wurde in Frauenberg in Böhmen 1890 als ältester Sohn von Johann Schwarzenberg geboren. Er promovierte an der tschechischen Karls Universität in Prag 1914 zum Dokter der Rechte und diente als tschechoslowakischer Bürger in der tschechoslowakischen Armee.

  2. Following the forced exile of Dr Adolph Schwarzenberg, his adoptive son Heinrich, whom Dr Adolph had made his plenipotentiary, was in charge of the management of the estate. However, due to the family’s well known opposition to the Nazi regime and loyalty to the Czechoslovak cause, the entire estate of Dr Adolph Schwarzenberg within the reach of the Reich was seized by the Gestapo on the 17 ...

  3. Friedrich Engel-Janosi; Prince Felix zu Schwarzenberg, Prime Minister of Austria, 1848–1852. By Adolph Schwarzenberg. (New York: Columbia University Press. 1946

  4. Adolph Schwarzenberg (1890 - 1950) was a descendent of the Hluboka branch of the aristocratic Schwarzenberg family. His family mainly owned property in South Bohemia and contributed for hundreds of years to the general cultural and economic development of the region.

  5. 5 de jul. de 2006 · Doctor Adolph Schwarzenberg in 1940 escaped via Switzerland to the United States where he stayed until the end of the war. They never returned to Czechoslovakia because he was informed that his property would very soon be expropriated and nationalised because of the communist and socialist development.

  6. Seen as an up-and-coming young radical, Adolph Schwarzenberg noted that 'his motto must have been "to improvise is to change, to be perfect is to change often"'. In this way, he was a well-known liberal lawyer, and was first called a "minister of barricades", before he served as Minister of Justice in 1848 and 1849, and then moving on to Minister of the Interior from 1849 to 1859.

  7. Februar 1863 wurde Adolf von Schwarzenberg in die Liste der „berühmtesten, zur immerwährenden Nacheiferung würdiger Kriegsfürsten und Feldherren Österreichs“ aufgenommen, zu deren Ehren und Andenken auch eine lebensgroße Statue in der Feldherrenhalle des damals neu errichteten k.k. Hofwaffenmuseums (heute: Heeresgeschichtliches Museum Wien) errichtet wurde.