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User:Rajofcanada/HREStates/Margraviate

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Margraviate/Marquisate[edit]

  • "Markgraf (Markgraefin): 'Margrave / Margravine', equivalent to Marquess. Title of Imperial Counts who ruled the border territories or marches. A rank between Count and Duke. A Markgraf, or Margrave, was originally the military governor of a Carolingian 'Mark'(or March), a medieval border province. As outlying areas tended to be of great importance to the central realms of Kings and Princes, and they often were larger than those nearer the interior, Margraves assumed quit inordinate powers over those of the Counts of a realm. The jurisdiction of a Margrave was a Margraviate. The wife of a Margrave is called a Margravine. Most Marks and, consequently, Margraves were to be found on the Eastern border of the Carolingian and later, Holy Roman Empire. One notable exception is the Spanish Mark on the Muslim frontier including what is now Catalonia. In central Europe the most important provinces so called were the 'Marks of Brandenburg' and 'Austria', which in its medieval Latin version was Marchia Austriaca, the 'eastern borderland'. Here one has to bear in mind that Austria was the eastern outpost of the Holy Roman Empire, on the border to, first, Eastern Christianity and ,later, to Isalm. Similarly in the north-west there was the 'Higher March'(Hohe Mark). Marggrabova was an example of a town in the eastern Marches of the German Empire, formerly in East Prussia, (renamed Olecko in the Mazury province of Poland), that had been named after the Margrave Albrecht of Brandenburg-Ansbach. Later, the title became hereditary and is considered a higher equivalent of a Marquess in England, or Marquis in France." [1]

Margraviate of Antwerp[edit]

  • 1347: John III ceded Margraviate of Antwerp to his 2nd daughter, Margaret of Brabant, wife of Louis II of Flanders

Margraviate of Arlon[edit]

  • County
  • c1167: Margraviate
  • 1214: United with County of Luxemburg
  • 1221: Anexed to Duchy of Limburg

Margraviate of Baden (See under Grand Duchy)[edit]

Margraviate of Bergen and Walen[edit]

  • 1567/1648: To Netherlands

Margraviate of Billungenmark[edit]

Margraviate of Brandenburg (See under "Electorate")[edit]

Margraviate of Burgau[edit]

Margraviate of Hachberg[edit]

  • Hochberg

Margraviate of Hachberg-Sausenberg[edit]

  • 1232: Margraves of Hachbeg acquired Sausenberg from the Monastery of St. Blaise
  • 1306: Margraves of Hachberg-Sausenberg
  • 1315: Liuthold II, last Lord of Rotteln gave the lordship of Rotteln to the margraves of Hachberg-Sausenberg
  • 1444: John, last count of Freiburg, gave the lordship of Bedenweiler to the margraves of Hachberg-Sausenberg
  • 1503: Margrave of Baden inherited Sausenberg

Margraviate of Istria[edit]

Istrian History

Margraviate of Landsberg[edit]

Magraviate of Lusatia[edit]

  • 1367: Margraviate
  • Lower Lusatia
  • 900's: Lower Lusatia formed into a separate march
  • 1034: To Wettin dynasty of Saxony
  • 1117: Partitioned from Lusatia
  • 1131: Annexed to Meißen
  • 1303: Purchased by Margrave of Brandenburg
  • 1368: To Bohemia
  • 1378: To Upper Lusatia
  • 1415: To King of Bohemia
  • 1469-1490: Recognized Matthias Corvinus as their sovereign
  • 1490: To Bohemia again
  • 1526: To Habsburg Austria
  • 1635: Sold to Saxony
  • 1815: To Prussia
  • Upper Lusatia
  • Upper Lusatia
  • 1117: Partitioned from Lusatia
  • 1160: Granted by Emperor to Bohemia
  • 1253: To Magrave of Brandenburg
  • 1329: To King of Bohemia
  • Name of Upper Lusatia changed to Duchy of Gorlitz
  • 1526: To Habsburg Austria
  • 1620: Conquered by Elector of Saxony
  • 1635: Sold to Saxony
  • 1815: To Prussia

Imperial Margraviate of Maastricht[edit]

  • 722: "Bishop Hubertus moved the Bishop's see to Liège and Onze Lieve Vrouwe and the former Roman parts of the city then fell under the authority of the Prince Bishop of Liege who retained rights of taxation and jurisdiction over this part of Maastricht. The Carolingian part (the Vrijthof and St. Servaas) eventually passed to the Dukes of Brabant."
  • 1204: Ruled jointly by the Dukes of Brabant and the Prince-Bishops of Liege
  • 1284: The Alde Caerte (Charter), the rules for jurisdiction in the city, specified that 1) Maastricht citizens were to be divided between Liège and Brabant; 2) the city council was to contain equal numbers of representatives from each side; 3) currency, walls and gates were to be jointly administrered; and 4) the river marked jurisdiction: upstream from the bridge the Prince Bishop of Liège had authority, downstream the Duke of Brabant.

Margraviate of Meissen[edit]

  • 1088: Margraviate

Margraviate of Moravia[edit]

  • 700s: Principality of Moravia emerged
  • 830-906: Independent kingdom or duchy
  • 833: Became the state of Great Moravia
  • 833: Conquered Principality of Nitra
  • 955: Under control of Bohemia
  • 999-1019: Under rule of Boleslaw I of Poland
  • 1019: Conquered by Bohemia from Poland
  • 1182: Margraviate
  • 1349: Under House of Luxemburg
  • 1411: Annexed to Bohemia
  • 1526: To Habsburg Austria

Margraviate of Namur[edit]

Margraviate of Nomeny[edit]

  • 1551: Nomeny was detached from the Bishopric of Metz and given to Nicholas, Duke of Mercoeur
  • 1567: Emperor Maximilian II created Nicholas Marquis of Nomeny
  • 1736: To House of Lorraine

Margraviate of Tuscany[edit]

Margraviate of Upper Lusatia[edit]