'Henry I of Hesse' (
German: 'Heinrich I "das Kind" (the child)' (
24 June 1244 –
21 December 1308,
Marburg),
Landgrave of
Hesse. He was the youngest son
Henry II, Duke of
Brabant and
Sophie of the
Thuringian house of the Ludowingians
Life
In
1247, as
Heinrich Raspe,
Landgrave of Thuringia, died without issue, conflict arose about the future of Thuringia and Hesse. The succession was disputed between Heinrich Raspe's nephew and his niece:
Sophie was the daughter of Heinrich Raspe's brother
Ludwig IV and claimed the territories on behalf of her son Henry, while
Henry the Illustrious, margrave of Meissen, was the son of Heinrich Raspe's sister
Jutta. Another competitor were the
Archbishops of Mainz, who could claim Hesse was a fiefdom of the Archbishop and now, after the extinction of the
Ludowingians, demanded its return to them. Sophie, supported by the Hessian nobility, succeeded in retaining Hesse against her cousin, who in
1264 accepted the division of the Ludowingian inheritance: Henry of Meissen received Thuringia, while Sophie's son Heinrich would inherit
Hesse. In the following year, the Archbishop Werner II von Eppenstein acceeded to this outcome in the Treaty of Langsdorf, accepting Henry as his liege-man and Landgrave of Hesse.
At this time, the landgraviate of Hesse consisted of the region between
Wolfhagen,
Zierenberg,
Eschwege,
Alsfeld,
Grünberg,
Frankenberg and
Biedenkopf. In the same year, Henry acquired a part of the county of
Gleiberg with
Gießen from the
Counts palatine of
Tübingen. The landgraviate was centred around the towns of
Kassel, where Henry took up his residence since
1277, and
Marburg, where his grandmother
Saint Elisabeth was buried and where Henry built the Castle Marburg.
Henry again got into conflict with his liege-lord, the Archbishop, about the possession of
Naumburg. On behalf of the Archbishop, Henry was outlawed in 1274 by King
Rudolf I of Habsburg, but after Henry had supported Rudolph in the war against
Otakar II of Bohemia and had helped to conquer
Vienna 1276, Rudolph reinstated Henry. In 1290 Henry defeated the Archbishop in the battle of
Fritzlar and could henceforth maintain his territory.
Though Henry never relinquished his own claim on
Brabant, he supported his nephew
John of Brabant against
Guelders and
Luxembourg in the
Limburg succession war.
On 12 May 1292, Henry was made a ''Reichsfürst'' (prince of the realm) by King
Adolf of Nassau, freeing Hesse of the supremacy of the Archbishop of Mainz. Henry was bestowed with
Eschwege and the Boyneburg (with Sontra), stengthening his position in Hesse. By skillful diplomacy he gained the cities of
Sooden-Allendorf,
Kaufungen,
Witzenhausen,
Immenhausen,
Grebenstein,
Wanfried,
Staufenberg,
Trendelburg and
Reinhardswald.
In 1263 Henry had married Adelheid of Brunswick, daughter of Duke
Otto of Brunswick, who bore him four daughters and the sons Henry ("the Younger") and
Otto. After Adelheid's death in 1274, Henry had married Mechthild, daughter of Count
Thierry VI of Cleves, who bore him another four daughters and the sons
John and Louis.
In 1292 internal conflict arose about the question of Henry's successor. Mechthild of Cleves demanded on her sons receiving a share of the heritage, while Henry and Otto, Henry's sons by his first wife, insisted on excluding their step-brothers from the inheritance. This led to civil war lasting throughout the rest of Henry lifetime. After his death, the inheritance was divided between
Otto, who received ''Lover Hesse'' centred around Kassel, and
John, who received ''Upper Hesse'' around Marburg. Henry the Younger had died during the conflict, while Johann's younger brother Ludwig had entered the clergy and became
bishop of Münster in 1310
Henry was buried there in St. Elisabeth's Church in Marburg, which became the graveside of the succeeding Landgraves.
Children
'First marriage' (
1263) to Adelheid, daughter of
Otto I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (
1244–
1274)
#Sophia (
1264–after
12 August 1331), married
1276 to Count
Otto I of Waldeck.
#Henry the Younger (
1265–
23 August 1298).
#Matilda (
1267–after
1332), married to:
##
1283 Count
Gottfried of Ziegenhain;
##after
11 October 1309 Philipp III of Falkenstein-Munzenberg.
#Adelheid (
1268–
7 December 1315), married
1284 to Count
Bertold VII of Henneberg.
#Elisabeth (1269/70–
19 February 1293), married ca.
1287 to Count
Johann of Sayn.
#a unnamed son (ca.
1270–ca.
1274).
#
Otto (ca
1272–
17 January 1328).
'Second marriage' (
1276) to
Mechtild of Cleves,
#
John (d.
1311,
Kassel).
#Elisabeth (ca.
1276–after
6 July 1306), married to
##
1290 Duke
Wilhelm of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel;
##
1294 Gerhard of Eppstein.
#Agnes (ca.
1277–
1335), married to Burgrave
John I of Nuremberg.
#Louis (1282/83–
18 August 1357), Bishop of
Münster in 1310-57.
#Elisabeth (d. after
30 October 1308), married
1299 to Count
Albrecht III von Görz.
#Katharina (d.
1322), married to Count
Otto IV of Orlamünde.
#Jutta (d.
13 October 1317), married
1311 to Duke
Otto of Braunschweig-Göttingen.
External links
★
Article at Meyers Konversationslexikon