Joachim, Count of Schönburg-Glauchau was the nominal successor head of the former mediatised GermanCounts of Schönburg-Glauchau until 1945. Dispossessed and expelled from his homeland in 1945, he and his family migrated to the Rhineland, where he was an author and journalist. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, he returned to his homeland, represented the district in the Bundestag, and served in local government.
Childhood
He grew up in the idyllic setting of Wechselburg in the Zwickauer Mulderiver valley, about 25 kilometers north of Chemnitz. The Schönburg family had occupied the Schloss Rochsburg there since 1637. His parents were Count Friedrich Carl von Schönburg-Glauchau, born 26 July 1899 in Wechselburg and died 12 April 1945 in the defence of Breslau, and Countess Maria Anna Baworów-Baworowska. He was the second of their eight children.
Expulsion and new life in the west
In 1945, Soviet occupation troops arrested him, expropriated his property, and he and the family were deported, living for a while in Mainz. He supported his family as a journalist and author. In 1965, he accepted an assignment to Somalia, where he established a broadcast station, and served as a foreign correspondent. His family lived with him in the Horn of Africa for five years, and two of his children were born there. Immediately after the fall of the Wall in 1990, he returned to his homeland in Saxony, and from 1990 to 1994, served as a member of the Bundestag for the representative district, which included the communities of Glauchau, Rochlitz, Hohenstein, Ernstthal and Hainichen, in Saxony, for the Christian Democratic Union. In the so-called Berlin debate on 20 June 1991, he spoke against the transfer of the capital city status to Berlin. He is known for his stance on the protection of nature, and, as an author, for his books about hunting. One of his most popular books, the humorous Der Jagdgast, tells old hunting stories from his homeland. Der deutsche Jäger is a combination of hunting stories and hunting practices. From 1991 to 1997 he lived in the former family castle of Rochsburg, and served in the city council of Lunzenau. In 1998, he became very sick, and moved to Passau, in Bavaria, where he died. He is buried in the old cloister Basilika in Wechselburg, his boyhood home.
Family members up until 1919 held the title Graf; Following the German Revolution of 1918–19, the German nobility as a legally defined class was abolished on August 11, 1919 with the promulgation of the Weimar Constitution, under which all Germans were made equal before the law, and the legal rights and privileges due to all ranks of nobility ceased. Any title, however, held prior to the Weimar Constitution, were permitted to continue merely as part of the family name and heritage, or erased from future name use.
Publications
Der Jagdgast, München : BLV-Verlagsgesellschaft, 1986, 2. Aufl.
Jagen mit dem "Uhu" Mainz : Hoffmann, 1985
Hohe Jagd in Zentral- und Südeuropa, with Días de los Reyes, Antonio. - Herrsching : Schuler, _381 1983
Der deutsche Jäger, München, Bern, Wien : BLV-Verlagsgesellschaft, 1979