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Lower Lotharingia

Stem duchy of the medieval Kingdom of Germany


Summary

Stem duchy of the medieval Kingdom of Germany

FieldValue
image_flagFlag of Austria (1-1).svg
conventional_long_nameDuchy of Lower Lotharingia
common_nameLower Lotharingia / Northern Lotharingia
statusPart of East Francia (until 962)
Part of the Holy Roman Empire
eraMiddle Ages
year_start959
year_end1190
p1Lotharingia
s1Prince-Bishopric of Liège
s2Electorate of Cologne
s3Bishopric of Cambrai
s4Duchy of Cleves
s5Duchy of Limburg
s6County of Namur
s7Landgraviate of Brabant
s8County of Holland
s9Prince-Bishopric of Utrecht
s10Counts of Louvain
s11Duchy of Guelders
s12Duchy of Jülich
s13Duchy of Berg
s14County of Loon
s15County of Horne
s17Frisian freedom
government_typeFeudal duchy
title_leaderDuke
leader1Godfrey I (first)
year_leader1959–964
leader2Godfrey VIII (last)
year_leader21142–1190
flag
flag_type
flag_border90px
flag_captionBanner
image_coatArms of the Archduchy of Austria.svg
symbol
symbol_typeShield
image_mapFile:Herzogtum Lothringen 1000.PNG
image_map_captionPink: Lower (Northern) Lotharingia in 977
capitalBrussels
common_languages
religionChristianity

Part of the Holy Roman Empire Orange: Friesland The Duchy of Lower Lotharingia, also called Northern Lotharingia, Lower Lorraine or Northern Lorraine (and also referred to as Lothier or Lottier in titles), was a stem duchy of the medieval Kingdom of Germany established in 959, which encompassed almost all of modern Belgium, Luxembourg, the northern part of the German Rhineland province and the eastern parts of France's Nord-Pas de Calais region. It also included almost all of modern Netherlands.

History

It was created out of the former Middle Frankish realm of Lotharingia under King Lothair II, that had been established in 855. Lotharingia was divided for much of the later ninth century, reunited under Louis the Younger by the 880 Treaty of Ribemont and upon the death of East Frankish king Louis the Child in 911 it joined West Francia under King Charles the Simple. It then formed a duchy in its own right, and about 925 Duke Gilbert declared homage to the German king Henry the Fowler, an act which King Rudolph of France was helpless to revert. From that time on Lotharingia (or Lorraine) remained a German stem duchy, the border with France did not change throughout the Middle Ages.

In 959 King Henry's son Duke Bruno the Great divided Lotharingia into two duchies: Lower and Upper Lorraine (or Lower and Upper Lotharingia) and granted Count Godfrey I of Mons (Hainaut) the title of a duke of Lower Lorraine. Godfrey's lands were to the north (lower down the Rhine river system), while Upper Lorraine was to the south (further up the river system). Both duchies formed the western part of the Holy Roman Empire established by Bruno's elder brother Emperor Otto I in 962.

Both Lotharingian duchies took very separate paths thereafter: Upon the death of Godfrey's son Duke Richar, Lower Lotharingia was directly ruled by the emperor, until in 977 Otto II enfeoffed Charles, the exiled younger brother of King Lothair of France. Lower and Upper Lorraine were once again briefly reunited under Gothelo I from 1033 to 1044. After that, the Lower duchy was quickly marginalised, while Upper Lorraine came to be known as simply the Duchy of Lorraine.

Over the next decades the significance of the Duchy of Lower Lotharingia diminished and furthermore was affected by the conflict between Emperors Henry IV and Henry V: In 1100 Henry IV had enfeoffed Count Henry of Limburg, whom Henry V, having enforced the abdication of his father, immediately deposed and replaced by Count Godfrey I of Louvain. Upon the death of Duke Godfrey III in 1190, his son Duke Henry I of Brabant inherited the ducal title by order of Emperor Henry VI at the Diet of Schwäbisch Hall. Thereby the Duchy of Lower Lotharingia finally lost its territorial authority, while the remnant Imperial fief held by the dukes of Brabant was later called the Duchy of Lothier (or Lothryk).

Successor states

After the territorial power of the duchy was shattered, many fiefdoms came to imperial immediacy in its area. The most important ones of these were:

  • Archbishopric of Cologne
  • Prince-Bishopric of Liège
  • Bishopric of Utrecht
  • Bishopric of Cambrai
  • Duchy of Limburg
  • County of Guelders (includes also the shire Teisterbant)
  • Margravate of Ename, later called Imperial Flanders or the County of Aalst
  • County of Jülich
  • County of Namur
  • County of Cleves
  • County of Hainault, including the Margravate of Valenciennes and the County of Bergen
  • County of Holland
  • County of Berg
  • County of Loon
  • County of Horne

The following successor states remained under the authority of the titular dukes of Lower Lotharingia (Lothier):

  • Margraviate of Antwerp
  • County of Leuven and Brussels
  • Duchy of Brabant

References

References

  1. (1992). "Netherlands". Pearson Education Canada.
  2. (2006). "The Numismatic Chronicle". Royal Numismatic Society..
  3. Bachrach, David S.. (2014). "Warfare in Tenth-Century Germany". Boydell & Brewer Ltd.
  4. fr In Davenport, Frances G. ''European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United States and Its Dependencies''. The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2004.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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