- CountryAustria
- Town:Vienna
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Year of creation:1888
- Rider(s):Khevenhüller, Ludwig Andreas
Ludwig Andreas Khevenhüller, Graf von Aichelberg-Frankenburg (1683 – 1744) was an Austrian field-marshal who came of a noble family that was originally from Franconia and had settled in Carinthia.
(source Wikipedia)
- Sculptor(s):Zumbusch, Kaspar von
(1830 –1915) was a German sculptor, who became a pre-eminent sculptor of neo-Baroque monuments in Vienna.
He went at the age of eighteen to study in Munich. At first unsuccessfully at the Academy and then Polytechische Schule under Johann Halbig. He continued his studies in Rome. He won the competition in 1866 for a monument to Maximilian II of Bavaria in Munich, that was unveiled in 1875. In 1873 he was called to Vienna as professor in the academy, a post he held until 1901. His most important works are a statue of Count Rumford, Munich; and the monuments to Prince August of Prussia (Bellevue Park, Berlin), Beethoven (1873-1880, Vienna), Maria Theresa (1887, Vienna), and to Emperor William I (1896, Wittekindsberg, Westphalia). Also, in Vienna are his monuments to Count Radetzky (1891) and to Archduke Albrecht (1898-1899).
This statue is part of the Theresia Monument