Abstract
One of the hallmarks of absolutist rule in the Baroque era was the
construction or refurbishment of elaborate summer residences. One such
palace was Schloss Hof in Lower Austria, about 30 km (20 miles) east of
Vienna. In the 1720s, Prince Eugene of Savoy, the victorious Austrian
general in the Turkish wars, hired the famous Baroque architect Johann
Lucas von Hildebrandt (1668-1745) to design Schloss Hof as a country
seat and hunting retreat. (Not only had Hildebrandt already completed
other building commissions for Eugene, including the Belvedere palace in
Vienna, he had also served under him as a volunteer engineer in three
military campaigns in Piedmont in 1695-96.) This painting shows the
palace in 1759-60, approximately five years after it was purchased by
Empress Maria Theresa. Oil on canvas by Bernardo Bellotto (1720-80),
1759-60.