Albert the Bear
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Albert the Bear | |
---|---|
Margrave of Brandenburg | |
Reign | 1157–1170 |
Successor | Otto I |
Born | c. 1100 |
Died | possibly Stendal | 18 November 1170 (aged 70)
Burial | |
Spouse | Sophie of Winzenburg |
Issue more... | Otto I, Margrave of Brandenburg Hermann I, Count of Orlamünde Siegfried, Prince-Archbishop of Bremen Bernhard, Count of Anhalt Hedwig, Margravine of Meissen |
House | House of Ascania |
Father | Otto, Count of Ballenstedt |
Mother | Eilika of Saxony |
Albert the Bear (German: Albrecht der Bär; c. 1100 – 18 November 1170) was the first margrave of Brandenburg from 1157 to his death and was briefly duke of Saxony between 1138 and 1142.
Life
[edit]Albert was the only son of Otto, Count of Ballenstedt,[1] and Eilika,[2] daughter of Magnus Billung, Duke of Saxony. He inherited his father's valuable estates in northern Saxony in 1123, and on his mother's death, in 1142, succeeded to one-half of the lands of the house of Billung. Albert was a loyal vassal of his relation, Lothar I, Duke of Saxony, from whom, about 1123, he received the Margraviate of Lusatia, to the east; after Lothar became King of the Germans, he accompanied him on a disastrous expedition to Bohemia against the upstart, Soběslav I, Duke of Bohemia in 1126 at the Battle of Kulm, where he suffered a short imprisonment.[3]
Albert's entanglements in Saxony stemmed from his desire to expand his inherited estates there. After the death of his brother-in-law, Henry II, Margrave of the Nordmark, who controlled a small area on the Elbe called the Saxon Northern March, in 1128, Albert, disappointed at not receiving this fief himself, attacked Udo V, Count of Stade, the heir, and was consequently deprived of Lusatia by Lothar.[citation needed] Udo, however, was said to have been assassinated by servants of Albert on 15 March 1130 near Aschersleben. In spite of this, Albert went to Italy in 1132 in the train of the king, and his services there were rewarded in 1134 by the investiture of the Northern March, which was again without a ruler.[3]
In 1138 Conrad III, the Hohenstaufen King of the Germans, deprived Albert's cousin and nemesis, Henry the Proud, of his Saxon duchy, which was awarded to Albert if he could take it. After some initial success in his efforts to take possession, Albert was driven from Saxony, and also from his Northern March by a combined force of Henry and Jaxa of Köpenick, and compelled to take refuge in south Germany.[3] Henry died in 1139 and an arrangement was found. Henry's son, Henry the Lion, received the duchy of Saxony in 1142. In the same year, Albert renounced the Saxon duchy and received the counties of Weimar and Orlamünde.
Once he was firmly established in the Northern March, Albert's covetous eye lay also on the thinly populated lands to the north and east. For three years he was occupied in campaigns against the Slavic Wends, who as pagans were considered fair game, and whose subjugation to Christianity was the aim of the Wendish Crusade of 1147 in which Albert took part. Albert was a part of the army that besieged Demmin, and at the end of the war, recovered Havelberg, which had been lost since 983. Diplomatic measures were more successful, and by an arrangement made with the last of the Wendish princes of Brandenburg, Pribislav-Henry of the Hevelli, Albert secured this district when the prince died in 1150. Taking the title "Margrave in Brandenburg", he pressed the crusade against the Wends, extended the area of his mark, encouraged Dutch and German settlement in the Elbe-Havel region (Ostsiedlung), established bishoprics under his protection, and so became the founder of the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1157, which his heirs — the House of Ascania — held until the line died out in 1320.
In 1158 a feud with Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony, was interrupted by a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. On his return in 1160, he, with the consent of his sons, Siegfried not being mentioned, donated land to the Knights of Saint John in memory of his wife, Sofia, at Werben on the Elbe.[4][5][6] Around this same time, he minted a pfennig in memory of his deceased wife.[citation needed] In 1162 Albert accompanied Emperor Frederick Barbarossa to Italy, where he distinguished himself at the storming of Milan.[3]
In 1164 Albert joined a league of princes formed against Henry the Lion, and peace being made in 1169, Albert divided his territories among his six sons. He died on 18 November 1170, and was buried at Ballenstedt.[3]
Cognomen
[edit]Albert's personal qualities won for him the cognomen of the Bear, "not from his looks or qualities, for he was a tall handsome man, but from the cognisance on his shield, an able man, had a quick eye as well as a strong hand, and could pick what way was straightest among crooked things, was the shining figure and the great man of the North in his day, got much in the North and kept it, got Brandenburg for one there, a conspicuous country ever since," says Thomas Carlyle, who called Albert "a restless, much-managing, wide-warring man."[7] He was also called "the Handsome."[7]
Marriage and children
[edit]Albert was married in 1124 to Sophie of Winzenburg (died 25 March 1160) and they had the following children:
- Otto I, Margrave of Brandenburg (1126/1128 – 7 March 1184)
- Count Herman I of Orlamünde (died 1176)
- Siegfried (died 24 October 1184), Bishop of Brandenburg from 1173 to 1180, Prince-Archbishop of Bremen, the first ranked prince, from 1180 to 1184
- Heinrich (died 1185), a canon in Magdeburg
- Alexander de Buxhoeveden (1125–1186)
- Count Adalbert of Ballenstedt (died after 6 December 1172)
- Count Dietrich of Werben (died after 5 September 1183)
- Count Bernhard of Anhalt (1140 – 9 February 1212), Count of Anhalt, and from 1180 also Duke of Saxony as Bernard III
- Hedwig (d. 1203), married to Otto II, Margrave of Meissen
- Daughter, married c. 1152 to Vladislav of Olomouc, the eldest son of Soběslav I, Duke of Bohemia
- Adelheid (died 1162), a nun in Lamspringe
- Gertrude, married in 1155 to Duke Děpold I of Jamnitz
- Sybille (died c. 1170), Abbess of Quedlinburg
- Eilika
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Brooke 2019, p. 268.
- ^ Krömmelbein & Brogyanyi 2002, p. 73.
- ^ a b c d e Chisholm 1911.
- ^ Freller 2010, p. 40.
- ^ Freller 2010, p. 55.
- ^ Lyon 2013, p. 35.
- ^ a b Carlyle 1869, pp. 59–61.
Works cited
[edit]- Brooke, Z.N. (2019). A History of Europe 911–1198. Routledge.
- Carlyle, Thomas (1869). History of Friedrich II. of Prussia: Called Frederick the Great. Chapman and Hall. pp. 59–61. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Albert I.". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 494. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
- Freller, Thomas (2010). The German Langue of the Order of Malta. Malta: Midsea Books. ISBN 978-99932-7-299-1.
- Krömmelbein, Thomas; Brogyanyi, Bela, eds. (2002). Germanisches Altertum und christliches Mittelalter: Festschrift für Heinz Klingenberg zum 65. Geburtstag (in German). Kovač.
- Lyon, Jonathan R. (2013). Princely Brothers and Sisters: The Sibling Bond in German Politics, 1100–1250. New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0801451300.
- Mielzarek, Christoph (2020). Albrecht der Bär und Konrad von Wettin: Fürstliche Herrschaft in den ostsächsichen Marken im 12. Jahrhundert (in German). Cologne: Böhlau Verlag. ISBN 978-3-412-51870-7.
General references
[edit]- Carlyle, Thomas (1898). History of Frederick the Great.
- Partenheimer, Lutz (2007). Die Entstehung der Mark Brandenburg: Mit einem lateinisch-deutschen Quellenanhang. Köln: Böhlau. ISBN 978-3-412-17106-3.
- Partenheimer, Lutz (2003). Albrecht der Bär (in German). Cologne: Böhlau Verlag. ISBN 3-412-16302-3.
- Schultze, Johannes (2011). Die Mark Brandenburg: (Bd. I–V in einem Band). Duncker & Humblot. ISBN 978-3428134809.
External links
[edit]- Thomas Carlyle, History of Friedrich ii Chapter iv: Albert the Bear
- The History Files: Rulers of Brandenburg