(Redirected from Adolf of Nassau-Weilburg)
Adolf of Nassau.
'Adolf' or 'Adolph' (c.
1255 –
2 July 1298) was the
King of Germany from
1292 until
1298. His title in his lifetime was ''
rex Romanorum'', but he is usually known as 'Adolf of Nassau'.
Adolf of
Nassau was a member of the minor nobility, born about 1255 as son of count
Walram II of Nassau and
Adelheid of Katzenelnbogen.
He had neither influence nor power, and was elected to become
Holy Roman Emperor because of the electors' preference for a weak emperor. His election was largely secured through the influence of the elector-archbishops of
Mainz and
Cologne. He was crowned
King of the Germans (Emperor-Elect) on
June 2,
1292, at
Aachen. He was never crowned by the pope in Rome, which would have secured him the title of Emperor.
He founded the convent of Clarenthal near
Wiesbaden in
1296.
His pursuit of territorial claims in
Thüringen turned his supporters against him, and they elected
Albert I of Habsburg in his place in
1298. Adolf refused to accept this decision but was killed in the
Battle of Göllheim (near
Speyer) against
Albert I of Habsburg on
July 2, 1298.
"A stalwart but necessitous Herr"
Carlyle calls him. He seems to have been under the pay of
Edward Longshanks.
Family and children
He married
Imagina of Isenburg-Limburg, daughter of
Gerlach I of Isenburg and Imagina of Blieskastel. Their children were:
# Heinrich, died young.
# Ruprecht, died
2 December 1304
#
Gerlach I of Nassau-Wiesbaden.
# Adolf (
1292 –
1294).
#
Walram III of Nassau-Wiesbaden.
# Adelheid, Abbess of
Klarenthal, died
26 May 1338.
# Imagina, died young.
#
Matilde (before 1280 –
19 June 1323,
Heidelberg), married
Rudolf I "der Stammler", Duke of Upper-Bavaria.
References
★ Alois Gerlich: Adolf von Nassau (1292 - 1298). ''Aufstieg und Sturz eines Königs, Herrscheramt und Kurfürstenfronde'', in: Nassauische Annalen 105, 1994, S. 17 - 78.
★ Bernd Schneidmüller/Stefan Weinfurter (Hrsg.): ''Die deutschen Herrscher des Mittelalters, Historische Porträts von Heinrich I. bis Maximilian I.'', Verlag C.H. Beck : München 2003, 624 S., 5. Abb., 3 Karten und 7 Stammtafeln.