Anton Alexander von Auersperg (Anastasius Grün) - Stadtpark (City Park), Graz, Austria
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member vraatja
N 47° 04.599 E 015° 26.560
33T E 533605 N 5213777
Marble statue of Alexander Anton Graf von Auersperg (1806 - 1876) Austrian politican and poet (known as Anastasius Grün) from 1887 in Stadtpark (City Park) in Graz.
Waymark Code: WM1520D
Location: Steiermark, Austria
Date Posted: 09/29/2021
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 1

The over-life size marble statue of Count Anton Alexander von Auersperg, also known under the name Anastasius Grün (1806 – 1876), an Austrian poet and liberal politician, was erected in Stadtpark (City Park) in Graz was erected here 1887. The statue was sculpted by an Austrian sculptor Carl Kundmann (1838 - Wien). Standing statue of Anton Alexander von Auersperg depicts him as an older, bearded man, dressed in long trousers and a long coat, holding a book unedr his left arm.

Biography

Count Anton Alexander von Auersperg, also known under the name Anastasius Grün (1806 – 1876), was an Austrian poet and liberal politician from Carniola, a former Habsburg crown land in today's Slovenia.

He was born in Laibach (Ljubljana), and was head of the Thurn am Hart/Krain branch of the Carniolan line of the house of Auersperg. Anton Alexander was the only child of his parents, Count Alexander von Auersperg and Baroness Maria Rosalia Cecilia von Billichgrätz. He received his education first at the University of Graz and then at Vienna, where he studied jurisprudence.In Vienna, he met with fellow Carniolan countryman France Prešeren, who would later become the national poet of the Slovenes. The two established a close friendship which lasted till Prešeren's death in 1849. Prešeren also dedicated an ironic short poem to Auersperg, called Tri želje Anastazija Zelenca ("Three Wishes of the Green Anastasius"), in which he made fun of the friend's bohemian lifestyle.

In 1830, Auersperg succeeded to his ancestral property, and in 1832 appeared as a member at the Estates of Carniola in the Lords' Bench of the diet in Laibach. Here he distinguished himself by his outspoken criticism of the Austrian government, leading the opposition of the duchy to the exactions of the central power. In 1832 the title of Imperial Chamberlain was conferred upon him, and in 1839 he married Countess Maria Rosalia, daughter of Count Ignaz Maria von Attems, Governor of Styria and Countess Aloysia Inzaghi von Kindberg .They had one son, Count Theodor Ignaz von Auersperg (1859–1881).

After the Revolution of 1848 in Vienna he represented the district of Laibach in the German Frankfurt Parliament, to which he tried in vain to persuade his Slovene compatriots to send representatives. After a few months, however, disgusted with the violent development of the revolution, he resigned his seat, and again retired into private life. In 1860 he was summoned to the remodelled Reichsrat by the emperor, and next year nominated him a life member of the Austrian upper house (Herrenhaus), where, while remaining a keen upholder of the German centralized empire, as against the federalism the Slavs and Magyars, he greatly distinguished himself as one of the most intrepid and influential supporters of the cause of Realism, in both political and religious matters. He also served in the Diet of Carniola, where he was among the leaders of the Austrian Constitutionalists in Carniola, together with Karl Deschmann.
URL of the statue: Not listed

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