(Redirected from Count of Hainault)
:''This article deals with the historical county of Hainaut, for other meanings see
Hainaut.''
The 'County of Hainaut' (, ) was a historical region in the
Low Countries. It consisted of what is now the
Belgian province of
Hainaut and the southern part of the French département
Nord. In
Roman times, Hainaut was situated in the Roman provinces of
Belgica and
Germania Inferior and inhabited by
Celtic tribes, until
Germanic peoples replaced them and made an end to
Roman Imperial rule. Its most important cities were
Mons (Bergen),
Cambrai (Kamerijk) and
Charleroi. Today the historic county of Hainaut is territorially divided between
Belgium and
France.
History
The county of Hainaut, located in the
west of the
Holy Roman Empire, near to the borders with the
Kingdom of France, emerged from the
refeudalisation of three counties in
1071:
★ the
county of Mons
★ the southern part of the
landgraviate of Brabant
★ the Ottonian
margraviate of Valenciennes
The unification of the county of Hainaut as imperial fief was accomplished in
1071, when
Richilde, Countess of Mons and Hainaut tried to sell her fiefs to
Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor after she was defeated in the
Battle of Kassel. Henry IV ordered the
Bishop of Liège to buy the fiefs and to give them back as a unified county in feud to the countess Richilde, by feudal intermediance however of the
Duke of Lower Lotharingia. The counts of Hainaut had several historical connections with the counts of
Flanders and
Holland, to whom they had strong family ties.
Throughout its history, the county of Hainaut formed a
personal union with other states, e.g.:
★ Hainaut and Flanders:
1067–
71 and
1191–
1246
★ Hainaut and Holland:
1299–
1436
★ Hainaut and
Bavaria-Straubing:
1356–
1429
With the early death of
Jacqueline, countess of Hainaut and Holland (presumably of
tuberculosis) in Teilingen Castle, near
The Hague (where she is buried) on
October 8 1436, her estates were acquired by
Philip III of Valois, Duke of Burgundy. After the marriage of
Mary I of Valois, Duchess of Burgundy to
Emperor Maximilian I von Habsburg, the lands became a part of the
Habsburg Southern Netherlands, whose history they followed up to and including annexation during the
French Revolutionary Wars.
See also
★
Counts of Hainaut
★
Counts of Hainaut family tree
★
Counts of Holland family tree