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County of Isenburg

Isenburg (pink, right) and Lower Isenburg (pink, left) around 1400

The County of Isenburg was a region of Germany located in southern present-day Hesse, located in territories north and south of Frankfurt. The states of Isenburg emerged from the Niederlahngau (located in the Rhineland-Palatinate), which partitioned in 1137 into Isenburg-Isenburg and Isenburg-Limburg-Covern. These countships were partitioned between themselves many times over the next 700 years.

House of Isenburg

Ruins of the Castle at Isenburg (Lower Isenburg)

The House of Isenburg was an old aristocratic family of medieval Germany, named after the castle of Isenburg in Rhineland-Palatinate. Occasionally referred to as the House of Rommersdorf before the 12th century, the house originated in the Hessian comitatus of the Niederlahngau in the 10th century. It partitioned into the lines of Isenburg-Isenburg and Isenburg-Limburg-Covern in 1137, before partitioning again into smaller units, but by 1500 only the lines of Isenburg-Büdingen (in Upper Isenburg) and Lower Isenburg remained. In 1664 the Lower Isenburg branch died out. The Büdingen line continued to partition, and by the beginning of the 19th century the lines of Isenburg-Büdingen, Isenburg-Birstein, Isenburg-Meerholz and Isenburg-Wächtersbach existed. Today still exist the (Roman Catholic) princes of Isenburg (at Birstein), the (Lutheran) princes of Ysenburg (at Büdingen and Ronneburg) and the (Lutheran) counts of Ysenburg-Philippseich.

"Family tree" of the Isenburg countships

Büdingen Castle
Castle Ronneburg, Hesse
Birstein Castle
Wächtersbach Castle
Meerholz Castle at Gelnhausen
Philippseich Castle at Dreieich

Isenburg, the original countship was divided upon the death of Count Rembold II in 1137 into:

Principality of Isenburg

Coat of Arms of the Principality of Isenburg

It was not until 1806 that there was a state called simply "Isenburg". When the Holy Roman Empire was defeated by Napoleon I of France in that year, the empire was abolished and the Confederation of the Rhine was established amongst the various German states. As an incentive to join the Confederation, it was stated that any state which joined could mediatise their neighbours. Prince Charles of Isenburg-Birstein joined the Confederation and was granted the mediatized Isenburgian Countships of Isenburg-Büdingen, Isenburg-Meerholz, Isenburg-Philippseich, and Isenburg-Wächtersbach. His Principality was renamed to Isenburg.

The Principality continued under the rule of Prince Charles through the Napoleonic era, but was mediatised by Austria in December 1813, at the insistence of King Frederick William III of Prussia, who was angered that Isenburg had raised a regiment for French service by recruiting Prussian deserters and vagabonds.[1] Isenburg was one of only three original member princes of the Empire to be mediatized at the end of the Napoleonic era (the others being Leyen and prince-primate Dalberg, Prince of Aschaffenburg). This decision was confirmed at the Congress of Vienna. The lands of the principality were divided between the Grand Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt and the Electorate of Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel).

Rulers

House of Isenburg

Partitions of Isenburg under House of Isenburg rule

Table of rulers

Post-1815 lines of succession

Mediatized line of Birstein (1815)

[citation needed]

Mediatized line of Büdingen (1806)

Notable members of the family

References

  1. ^ Treitschke, Heinrich. History of Germany in the Nineteenth Century, Vol. I, page 609.
  2. ^ a b c d Given the uncertainty of previous counts pre-1090, the numbering of rulers in this table will start only after 1090
  3. ^ a b Hess, J. (ed.) (1901), Die Urkunde des Pfarrarchivs von St Severin in Köln, Köln, "Köln St Severin", 5, p. 8.
  4. ^ See Niederrheins Urkundenbuch, Band I, 253, p. 163, and Hess, J. (ed.) (1901) Die Urkunde des Pfarrarchivs von St Severin in Köln (Köln) ("Köln St Severin"), 5, p. 8.
  5. ^ a b c Niederrheins Urkundenbuch, Band I, 286, p. 187.
  6. ^ a b Some sources (as the English wiki article itself), conflate Gerlach IV (d.1167, documented in 1158) and Gerlach V (d.1217, documented in 1179) in one person; however, this also conflates Henry I of Cleeberg (d.1220) and Rembold IV (d.1175) in the same generation as brothers. This, given Rembold and Henry's different life-spans, is fairly unlikely. For the 1158 document, see Trier Diplomatica (Hontheim), I, CCCCI, p. 586. For the 1179 one, see Codex diplomaticus Rheno-Mosellanus, Theil I, 201, p. 431.
  7. ^ Last documented in 1210. See Mittelrheinisches Urkundenbuch II, 261, p. 302.
  8. ^ Codex diplomaticus Rheno-Mosellanus, Theil I, 247, p. 500.
  9. ^ Isenburg-Wied-Runkel (1775), Urkunden, LXXIII, p. 88
  10. ^ Sometimes counted as Gerlach IV after Gerlach III of Kobern.
  11. ^ Codex diplomaticus Rheno-Mosellanus, Theil II, 247, p. 376
  12. ^ Isenburg-Wied-Runkel (1775), Urkunden, LVI, 73.
  13. ^ Milmeister (2003), p. 60.
  14. ^ Counted as II given his father his numbered I as co-ruler of Cecilia.
  15. ^ Sometimes counted as Gerlach V.
  16. ^ Clervaux (1883), 501, p.100.
  17. ^ Sometimes numbered II in reference to his uncle, Henry, who died in 1298, even before his father's ascension.
  18. ^ Sometimes counted as Gerlach VI.
  19. ^ a b Isenburg-Wied-Runkel (1775), Urkunden, CIII, 120.
  20. ^ Sometimes numbered John V.

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