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House of Wassenberg

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of Wassenberg
of Guelders
of Cleves
of Heinsberg
of Falkenburg
Noble family
Coat of armsCoat of Arms
CountryNetherlands
Belgium
Germany
Founded11th century
FounderGerulf I of Frisia
Final rulerJohn I, Count of Holland (in Holland)
Otto V or Richardis (in Tecklenburg)
Bernard (in Bentheim)
Estate(s)County of Guelders
Duchy of Guelders
County of Cleves
Lordship of Heinsberg
Land of Falkenburg
Dissolution1267 (in Heinsberg)
1352 (in Falkenburg)
1368 (in Cleves)
1371 (in Guelders)
Cadet branchesHouse of Cleves
House of Heinsberg
House of Falkenburg

The House of Wassenberg (Huis van Wassenberg), was a noble family, active in the area covering parts of the Netherlands and Germany, active from 1021 until 1371. Residing initially at Wassenberg, they expanded rapidly into larger areas, and gained even others through marriage.

Origins

The first members of the family are two brothers, Gerard I Flamens and Rutger, sometimes called Rutger von Antoing.The first held the main town of Wassenberg, and the other established himself at Kleve in the the medieval Hettergau. Rutger or one of his close descendants was already elevated to countship in second half of the 11th-century. Despite that, 1092 is still the most commonly used date to refer to a ruler of Cleves.

  • Coat of arms of the County of Guelders. Coat of arms of the County of Guelders.
  • Coat of arms of the Duchy of Guelders. Coat of arms of the Duchy of Guelders.
  • Coat of arms of the County of Cleves. Coat of arms of the County of Cleves.
17th-century map showing the Duchy of Guelders and the County of Zutphen.

In 1096, Gerard IV, Lord of Wassenberg, ascended as Gerard I, Count of Guelders. His successor, Gerard II, married Ermengarde, heiress of the Count of Zutphen. By that time, Guelders and Zutphen controlled two different parts of the region of Hamaland, which were joined through this marriage.

In the 12th and 13th centuries, Guelders quickly expanded downstream along the sides of the Meuse, Rhine, and IJssel rivers and even claimed the succession in the Duchy of Limburg, until it lost the 1288 Battle of Worringen against Berg and Brabant.

In 1129, the first settlement of the family at Wassenberg had been given, through marriage, to the Dukes of Limburg, which the Guelders family tried to recover through marriage with Ermengard, heiress of Limburg. However, following the War of the Limburg Succession, Limburg ended up annexed to the Duchy of Brabant. Cleves also participated in this conflict, and helped weaken the powerful Electorate of Cologne.

Relations between the two main branches continued, as in 1355 Guelders gave Zevenaar to the county of Cleves.

In 1339, Reginald II of Guelders was raised to ducal status. But the raise only meant more conflict: the sons of Reginald II confronted each other: the elder son Reginald was imprisoned by he younger one, Edward. As both died without male succession, in 1371 Edward's daughters warred each other for the possession of the duchy. The House of Jülich, through Maria of Guelders, eventually won the dispute.

Even the Cleves branch wasn't meant to last too much long. Upon the death of John of Cleves in 1368, the fief was inherited by his nephew Adolf III of the Marck. Cleves and the Marck were then ruled in personal union by the House of La Marck after Adolf's elder brother Engelbert had died without issue in 1391.

Heinsberg and Falkenburg branches

  • Coat of arms of the Heinsberg branch. Coat of arms of the Heinsberg branch.
  • Coat of arms of the Falkenburg branch. Coat of arms of the Falkenburg branch.
  • Ruins of the Valkenburg Castle. Ruins of the Valkenburg Castle.

In 1082, Goswin, a brother of Gerard, first count of Guelders, was invested with the Lordship of Heinsberg. In 1168, in an inheritance division, emerged the Lordship of Falkenburg. One of the most famous members of this branch is Beatrice of Falkenburg, married to the King of the Romans Richard of Cornwall.

At the end of the 12th-century the heiress of Heinsberg married her cousin from Cleves; this kept the lordship within the family, and prolonged it until 1217, when it was inherited by the House of Sponheim. The Falkenburg branch, in turn, went extinct in 1368; their land was inherited by the Van Schoonvorst family.


References

  1. ^ Biographie, Deutsche. "Kleve - Deutsche Biographie". www.deutsche-biographie.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-02-11.
  2. According to the Annales Rodenses, in Flandriensi provintia duo nobiles germani fratres (...) alter Gerardus et alter (...) Rutgerus. See Annales Rodenses, MGH SS XVI, p. 689.
  3. Eberhard was referenced as Count of Cleves at least in 1074: Euerhardus comes Clivensis et matrona nobilis Berta comitissa uxor sua. See Kremer (1776), Band II, VIII, p. 203.
  4. In 1096 a document named Gerardi comitis de Gelre et fratris eius Henrici. See Miraeus (1723), Tome I, LXVII, p. 77.
  5. Monumentenboek Land van Valkenburg

External links

Bibliography

  • Jackman, Donald C. (2013). Gerhard Flamens (Part Two). Editions Enlaplage. ISBN 9781936466641.
  • Stein, Robert (2017). Magnanimous Dukes and Rising States: The Unification of the Burgundian Netherlands, 1380-1480. Oxford University Press. p. 87. ISBN 9780198757108.
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