Origin Born at
Kornberg Castle in the
Duchy of Styria, Andreas von Graben was a descendant of the noble (
edelfrei)
House of Graben family. He was the son of Friedrich I von Graben (d. 1422 at Kornberg Castle) and Katharina von Sumerau (Saurau); Burgrave
Friedrich II von Graben was a brother of him. Andreas' nephew
Ulrich III von Graben became a confidant of the Habsburg emperor
Frederick III. Andreas` sister (?) Veronica von Graben (d. 1467) was married to Philipp
Breuner (d. 1458), and Elisabeth von Graben married with Georg von
Auersperg (d. 1488).
Marriage and issue Andreas von Graben married Barbara von Hallegg, daughter of
Jörg von Hallegg (Hallecker), imperial counsellor and
Landeshauptmann of the Duchy of Carinthia. The couple had at least eight children • Heinrich von Graben (d. 1507) • Ernst von Graben (d. 1513), nobleman, served the
Archbishops of Salzburg •
Virgil von Graben (1430/1440-1507), succeeded his father as Burgrave of Sommeregg, administrator in the
County of Gorizia, served the
Habsburg emperors
Frederick III and
Maximilian I • Ruth von Graben •
Cosmas von Graben (d. 1479), nobleman, Burgrave of
Sanneck (
Žovnek), served the
Counts of Celje and the
House of Habsburg • Wolfgang von Graben, priest •
Wolfgang Andreas von Graben, knighted by King Maximilian I in 1486 at his coronation in
Aachen • Barbara von Graben, married to
Ladislaus Prager Coat of arms Originally, the family of Andreas von Graben of Kornberg carried the coat of arms with the shovel (silver shovel on red), but adopted the oblique beam coat of arms (red, split by blue and silver) in
Ortenburg services. Von Graben Wappen.jpg|Coat of arms Andreas von Graben Heraldische Stammtafel der Herren von Graben sowie deren Abstammungen.jpg|Heraldic family tree of the Graben and their descendants
Career With the
Sommeregg line, Andreas von Graben founded the branch of the family based in the
Duchy of Carinthia and the
County of Gorizia (in today's East Tyrol), which also had a different coat of arms; split by red and split three times by silver and blue (silver-white oblique bar equal to Graben's lineage at Graben Castle in
Krain / Carniola). Andreas von Graben was in the service of the
Counts of Cilli for over four decades. In 1423 he was Burgrave of
Landskron, and in a military conflict between Count
Hermann III von Cilli with the Burgamt, the city of
Villach, he also led the Cillian forces against the surrounding area, which was in fiefdom of the bishops of Bamberg. At the intervention of Prince-Bishop
Friedrich III von Aufseß with Archduke
Ernest "the Iron" of Austria, Von Graben had to withdraw from Bamberg areas on the orders of the Cillier. In 1433, Von Graben served as a
captain (
Hauptmann, a sort of
stadtholder) of the former
Ortenburg Estate which belonged to the
Counts of Celje. In 1436, Count
Frederick II of Celje gave Andreas von Graben the
burgraviate (a sort of viscount) and rulership of
Sommeregg as a pledge. In 1442 the Cillier gave him and his legitimate sons Sommeregg with the usual castle hat for life, which he chose as his new family residence In 1445 he was involved in the fierce feud between Count
Henry VI of Gorizia and his wife Catherine von Gara and later supported the military campaigns of his bellicose liege lord Count
Ulrich II of Celje. On interventions and demands of the Emperor
Friedrich III to Count Heinrich II and Ulrich II von Cilli, Andreas von Graben had to return the conquests he had made for the Cilliers to the now reconciled Gorizia ruling couple. In 1450 he was also named as Burggraf of Sternberg, near
Wernberg. Upon the extinction of the Counts of Celje in 1456, their estates were seized by Emperor Frederick III of the Habsburg dynasty. He enforced a settlement with the Counts of Gorizia, whereupon Andreas von Graben had to renounce his conquests and also lost his office as stadtholder of the Ortenburg estates. Nevertheless, he still is documented as a liege lord around
Vellach in 1458, and owner of
Falkenstein Castle in 1462. In addition to Sommeregg, Andreas von Graben also expanded the parish churches of Treffling (Seeboden municipality) and Lieseregg (in present-day
Seeboden) near his Sommeregg residence rebuilt. A winged altar created by
Thomas von Villach contains the coat of arms of Andreas von Graben, who died in 1463, in the image of the crowning with thorns. Various coats of arms of Andreas and his family can still be found in the area around
Lienz, Sommeregg and Ortenburg. ==References==