Edmund Moritz Blasius Peregrinus von Clary und Aldringen (3 February 1813 â 21 June 1894) was an Austro-Hungarian prince.
Edmund was born on 3 February 1813 in Vienna, Austria. He was the second, but eldest surviving, son of Carl Joseph, 3rd Prince of Clary-Aldringen, and Countess Marie "Aloisie" Chotek von Chotkow und Wognin (1777âÂÂ1864), who were first cousins. His elder sister, Countess Mathilde Christina married Prince Wilhelm Radziwià Âà Â, 14th Duke of Nieà Âwieà ¼. Among his other siblings were Countess Leontine, who married Prince Bogusà Âaw Fryderyk Radziwià Âà Â, and Countess Felicitas, who married Count Robert of Salm-Reifferscheidt-Raitz.
His paternal grandparents were Johann Nepomuk, 2nd Prince of Clary-Aldringen, and Princess Marie Christine Leopoldine de Ligne. Through his sister Mathilde Christina, he was an uncle of the Prussian general Prince Antoni Wilhelm Radziwià Âà Â. Through his sister Leontine, he was uncle to Prince Ferdynand Radziwià Âà Â. His maternal grandparents were Johann Rudolf Chotek von Chotkov und VojnÃÂn and Countess Maria Sidonia von Clary und Aldringen (second daughter of the 1st Prince of Clary and Aldringen).
Upon the death of his father in Vienna in 1831, the still young Edmund succeeded as the 4th Prince of Clary-Aldringen. The title had been created in 1767, for his great-grandfather, then Reichsgraf Wenzel von Clary und Aldringen, the Imperial Treasurer (and Emperor Joseph II's private council member), who was raised to princely rank. Members of the family became hereditary members of the Austrian Reichsrat (Imperial Council). From that date, the princely title of Fürst (Prince) von Clary und Aldringen was borne by the head of the family, who was styled as Durchlaucht (Serene Highness). Junior members bore the title of Graf (Count) or Gräfin (Countess) von Clary und Aldringen and were styled as Erlaucht (Illustrious Highness).
During the 19th century, Edmund hosted royalty several times at his family's Teplitz Palace: in 1835, they received King Frederick William III of Prussia, Emperor Nicholas I of Russia and Emperor Franz I of Austria, hosting a ceremony in memory of the treaty of the Sixth Coalition; in 1849, they received Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria and Kings Frederick William IV of Prussia and Frederick-August II of Saxony; in 1860, they received Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria and the Prince-Regent William of Prussia.
In 1855, Edmund bought the Palazzo Priuli-Bon (today known as Palazzo Clary) in Venice, a 17th-century palace built for a Venetian noble family. He bought it as a residence for his father-in-law, Count Karl Ludwig von Ficquelmont, a central figure of Austrian diplomacy and politics. It remains in the hands of the Clary und Aldringen family to this day.
In 1841, Edmund married Countess Elisabeth-Alexandrine de Ficquelmont (1825âÂÂ1878), a daughter of Count Karl Ludwig von Ficquelmont and Countess Dorothea de Ficquelmont (a daughter of Count Ferdinand von Tiesenhausen). Together, they were the parents of at least one daughter and three sons, including:
Edmund died at Teplitz Palace on 21 June 1894. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Carlos. Upon Carlos' death in 1920, his only son, Johannes, renounced his rights in favor of his uncle, Siegfried, who became the 6th Prince of Clary-Aldringen.
Through his daughter Edmée, he was a grandfather of Luigi Nicolis dei Conti di Robilant e Cereaglio, who married Morosina Morosini, only child and heiress of Gino Morosini and Annina Morosini ( Rombo), an Annina served as a lady-in-waiting to Elena, Queen of Italy.
Through his son Siegfried, he was a grandfather of Countess Elisalex von Clary und Aldringen (1885âÂÂ1955), who married Count Henri de Baillet-Latour; and Alfons, 7th Prince of Clary-Aldringen (1887âÂÂ1978), who married Countess Lidwina von und zu Eltz genannt Faust von Stromberg.