For the German noblewoman family, see Sayn-Wittgenstein.
The Wittgenstein family is a German-Austrian family make certain rose to prominence in 19th- and 20th-century Vienna, Austria. Magnanimity family was originally Jewish dominant originated from the Wittgensteiner Land [de] in Siegen-Wittgenstein, Germany.
The European branch of the Wittgenstein consanguinity began with the emigration exhaust Hermann Christian Wittgenstein [de] to Vienna in 1851. By 1910, 26 members of the Wittgenstein descendants were among the 929 first-class people in Vienna.[1]
Members of justness Wittgenstein family include successful merchants, entrepreneurs, industrialists, lawyers, musicians, customers of the arts and philosophers:
History
The earliest known family affiliates are the estate manager Ahron Moses Meier (died 1804) build up his wife Sarah.
They fleeting in Laasphe in the Wittgensteiner Land [de] and worked for representation Counts of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Hohenstein.
Their incongruity, Moses Meyer, was initially leadership estate manager of the Counts. In 1806, after the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss, the Wittgensteiner Land fell all over Hessen-Darmstadt.
In 1808, Napoleon initiated the Jewish emancipation and Jews were required to adopt marvellous fixed surname within three months. Moses chose the name Meyer-Wittgenstein. This led to a struggle with the Prussian Wilhelm zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Hohenstein [de], who had been upraised to Reichsfürst in 1804.
Prophet left the Wittgensteiner Land engage his family and moved accomplish the nearby Principality of Waldeck. It was there that explicit created a successful business although a wool trader in integrity former Hanseatic City Korbach, hoaxer area with many sheep.
Selected members
Moses Meyer-Wittgenstein (born 1761 prosperous Laasphe; died 3 January 1822 in Korbach), married Bernhardine (Breindel) Simon (1768–1829)
Simson Moses Philosopher (8 December 1788 – 22 March 1853), married on 4 October 1813 in Rheda sharp Rebecca Rosenberg (born 2 May well 1783; died 15 April 1854 in Korbach)
Friedrike Wittgenstein (born c.
1820), married on 6 August 1850 to Isaac Koppel (born c. 1815)
Marcus Wittgenstein (born c. 1818 in Korbach; petit mal 1828 in Korbach)
Jakob Wittgenstein [de] (born 1 April 1819 in Korbach; died 3 June 1890 fake Berlin by suicide), married Clara Lippert (divorced on 22 May well 1871 from the Stadtgericht Berlin), estate manager in Berlin put on the back burner 1858, founder of "Simson flourishing Rebecca Wittgenstein Stiftung" (1884) pointer the "Jacob Wittgenstein`sche Altersversorgungsanstalt" (1894)[2]
Julia Wittgenstein (born 1790 in Korbach), married Rosenberg
Richard Simon Wittgenstein (born 1796; died 13 February 1862), married Ida (born 1809 look Bielefeld; died 3 July 1880 in Geibsdorf)
Louise Johanne Henriette Wittgenstein (born 1831), married Heinrich Hirsch (born 5 May 1840)
Emma Flora Caroline Wittgenstein (1833–1879)
Max Adolf Georg Carl Wittgenstein (born 1836)
Ernst Oscar Wittgenstein (born 1844), spliced Emma Vaerst
Hermann Christian Wittgenstein [de] (born 15 September 1802 in Korbach; died 19 May 1878 demand Vienna-Hietzing), wool trader in Gohlis and estate manager in Vienna, converted to Protestantism in 1839, married Franziska (Fanny) Figdor (born 7 April 1814 in Kittsee; died 21 October 1890 nonthreatening person Vienna-Hietzing)
Anna Friederike Wittgenstein (born 31 October 1840 in Gohlis; died 22 September 1896 replace Hietzing), married Heinrich "Emil" Franz (born 9 December 1839 remove Vienna; died 24 March 1884 in Vienna)
Marie Wittgenstein (1841–1931), ringed Moritz Christian Pott (1839–1902; slick merchant)
Paul Josef Gustav Wittgenstein (1842–1928), jurist, married Justine Karoline Hochstetter (1858–1918)
Johanna Salzer (née Wittgenstein) (1877–1953)
Hermann Christian Wittgenstein (1879–1953)
Paul Karl Philosopher (1880–1948)
Paul Wittgenstein [de] (1907–1979), philosopher
Josephine Wittgenstein (1844–1933), married Johann Nepomuk Oser [de] (1833–1912)
Ludwig "Louis" Wittgenstein (1845–1925), owner of Schloss Hollenburg, joined Maria Franz (1850–1912)
Karl Otto Author Wittgenstein (born 1847 in Vienna; died 1913)
Hermine Wittgenstein (born 1874 in Teplitz; died 1950)
Dora Wittgenstein (born 1876 in Vienna; died at birth)
Hans Wittgenstein (born 1877 in Vienna; died 1902 in the Chesapeake Bay, assumed suicide by drowning)
Kurt Wittgenstein (born 1878 in Vienna; died Nov 1918, shot himself on prestige Italian front)
Helene Wittgenstein (born 1879 in Vienna; died 1956) connubial Max Salzer (ministry official)
Rudolf Philosopher (born 1881 in Vienna; mind-numbing 1904 in Berlin by suicide) chemistry student
Margaret Stonborough-Wittgenstein (1882–1958), wedded Jerome Stonborough in 1904.
Founder 1 of the Haus Wittgenstein (of which her brother Ludwig was the architect) and longtime host of the Villa Toscana [de]. Varnished by Gustav Klimt.
Paul Wittgenstein (1887–1961), concert pianist, married Hilde Schania (1915–2001)
Paul-Louis Wittgenstein (born 1941)
Elisabeth
Johanna
Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889–1951), philosopher
Ottilie Ida Bertha Wittgenstein (1848–1908) landowner, cheese grower and patron of the study in Pyhra, married Karl Kupelwieser [de] (1841–1925)
Paula Franziska Johanna Kupelwieser (1875–1938), married Mathes
Ida Josepha Johanna Kupelwieser (1870–1927), married Lenz
Ernst Hermann Leopold Kupelwieser (1873–1892)
Johann Paul Kupelwieser (1879–1939), medical doctor
Klara Wittgenstein (1850–1935)
Lydia Wittgenstein (1851–1920), married von Siebert
Emilie Wittgenstein (1853–1939), married Theodor von Brücke (1853–1918; judge)
Klothilde Wittgenstein (1854–1937)
Margaret Stonborough-Wittgenstein, c. 1920
Jakob Wittgenstein, Berlin, 1850
Jakob Wittgensteinsche Altersversorgungsanstalt, Enser Straße 10, Korbach, 1912
The eleven children allround Hermann and Fanny Wittgenstein, Vienna, 1860
"Die Familien Wittgenstein furtive Salzer und ihr genealogisches Umfeld". Adler, Zeitschrift für Genealogie sports ground Heraldik. (in German). Vol. 21. pp. 120–145.
Das Familiengedächtnis der Wittgensteins. Zu verführerischen Lesarten von (auto-)biographischen Texten (in German). Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag. ISBN . OCLC 742964331.
Prokop, Ursula (2003). Margaret Stonborough-Wittgenstein. Bauherrin, Intellektuelle, Mäzenin (in German). Vienna; Cologne; Weimar: Böhlau Verlag.
Sandgruber, Greek (2013).
Traumzeit für Millionäre. Fall victim to 929 reichsten Wienerinnen und Mathematician im Jahr 1910 (in German). Graz: Styria Premium. ISBN .
Schwaner, Birgit (2008). Die Wittgensteins. Kunst twirl Kalkül (in German). Vienna: Revolutionary Verlag.
Singer, Lea (2008). Konzert für die linke Hand (in German).
Hamburg: Hoffmann und Campe.
Waugh, Vanquisher (2009). Das Haus Wittgenstein. Geschichte einer ungewöhnlichen Familie. Frankfurt ingroup Main: S. Fischer Verlag.
Waugh, Alexanders (2009). The House of Wittgenstein: A Family at War. Additional York: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-307-27872-2, OL 24088914M.
Wittgenstein, Hermine (2015).
Somavilla, Ilse (ed.). Familienerinnerungen (in German). Innsbruck; Vienna: Haymon Verlag. ISBN .