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Conrad III of Germany

Conrad III (German: Konrad; Italian: Corrado; 1093 or 1094 – 15 February 1152) of the Hohenstaufen dynasty was from 1116 to 1120 Duke of Franconia, from 1127 to 1135 anti-king of his predecessor Lothair III, and from 1138 until his death in 1152 King of the Romans in the Holy Roman Empire. He was the son of Duke Frederick I of Swabia and Agnes,[1] a daughter of the Salian Emperor Henry IV.[2][3]

Conrad III
King Conrad III (Cunradus rex) in a miniature from the Chronica sancti Pantaleonis, c. 1240
King of Germany
(formally King of the Romans)
Reign7 March 1138 – 15 February 1152
Coronation13 March 1138, Aachen
PredecessorLothair III
SuccessorFrederick I
King of Italy
Reign1128–1135
Coronation29 June 1128, Milan
PredecessorHenry V
SuccessorFrederick I
Born1093 or 1094
Died15 February 1152
Bamberg, Bavaria
Burial
Spouse
Issue
HouseHohenstaufen
FatherFrederick I, Duke of Swabia
MotherAgnes of Germany
ReligionRoman Catholicism

His reign saw the start of the conflicts between the Guelphs and Ghibellines. He was involved in the failed Second Crusade with Louis VII, where he would fight and lose at Doryleum and would later fall ill and return to Constantinople. After recuperating, he went to Jerusalem but would experience a string of failed sieges. Later returning from the Crusade, he was entangled in some conflicts with Welf VI's claim to the Duchy of Bavaria. On his deathbed, he designated his nephew Frederick Barbarossa as his successor instead of his son, Frederick IV, Duke of Swabia.

Descent

The origin of the House of Hohenstaufen in the Duchy of Swabia has not been conclusively established. As the name came from the Hohenstaufen Castle (built in 1105) Conrad's great-grandfather Frederick of Staufen was a count in the Riesgau and in 1053 became Swabian Count palatine. His son Frederick of Buren probably resided near present-day Wäschenbeuren and about 1050 married Countess Hildegard of Egisheim-Dagsburg from Alsace.[2]

Conrad's father took advantage of the conflict between King Henry IV of Germany and the Swabian duke Rudolf of Rheinfelden during the Investiture Controversy. When Rudolf had himself elected German anti-king at Forchheim in 1077, Frederick of Hohenstaufen remained loyal to the royal crown and in 1079 was vested with the Duchy of Swabia by Henry IV, including an engagement with the king's minor daughter Agnes. He died in 1105, leaving two sons, Conrad and his elder brother Frederick II, who inherited the Swabian ducal title. Their mother entered into a second marriage with Babenberg margrave Leopold III of Austria.[4][5]

Biography

In 1105, Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor since 1084, was overthrown by his son Henry V, Conrad's uncle. Emperor since 1111, Henry V prepared for his second campaign to Italy upon the death of Margravine Matilda of Tuscany, and in 1116 he appointed Conrad as Duke of Franconia.[6] Conrad was marked out to act as regent for Germany, together with his elder brother, Duke Frederick II of Swabia. At the death of Henry V in 1125, Conrad unsuccessfully supported Frederick II for the kingship of Germany. Frederick was placed under a ban and Conrad was deprived of Franconia and the Kingdom of Burgundy, of which he was rector. With the support of the imperial cities, Swabia, and the Duchy of Austria, Conrad was elected anti-king at Nuremberg in December 1127.[7]

Conrad quickly crossed the Alps to be crowned King of Italy by Anselmo della Pusterla, Archbishop of Milan, in the village of Monza.[8] Over the next two years, he failed to achieve anything in Italy, however, and returned to Germany in 1130, after Nuremberg and Speyer, two strong cities that supported him, fell to Lothair in 1129. Conrad continued in Lothair's opposition, but he and Frederick were forced to acknowledge Lothair as emperor in 1135, during which time Conrad relinquished his title as King of Italy. After this they were pardoned and could take again possession of their lands.[9]

 
Conrad III and his armies in Hungary. Image from the Chronicon Pictum

After Lothair's death (December 1137), Conrad was elected king at Coblenz on 7 March 1138, in the presence of the papal legate Theodwin. Conrad was crowned at Aachen six days later (13 March) and was acknowledged in Bamberg by several princes of southern Germany.[10] As Henry the Proud, son-in-law and heir of Lothair and the most powerful prince in Germany, who had been passed over in the election, refused to do the same, Conrad deprived him of all his territories, giving the Duchy of Saxony to Albert the Bear and that of Bavaria to Leopold IV, Margrave of Austria. Henry, however, retained the loyalty of his subjects. The civil war that broke out is considered the first act of the struggle between Guelphs and Ghibellines, which later extended southwards to Italy. After Henry's death (October 1139), the war was continued by his son Henry the Lion, supported by the Saxons, and by his brother Welf VI. Conrad, after a long siege, defeated the latter at Weinsberg in December 1140, and in May 1142 a peace agreement was reached in Frankfurt.[9]

In the same year, Conrad entered Bohemia to reinstate his brother-in-law Vladislav II as Duke. The attempt to do the same with another brother-in-law, the Polish prince Ladislaus the Exile, failed. Bavaria, Saxony, and the other regions of Germany were in revolt.

In 1146, Conrad heard Bernard of Clairvaux preach the Second Crusade at Speyer, and he agreed to join Louis VII in a great expedition to the Holy Land. At the imperial diet in Frankfurt in March 1147 Conrad and the assembled princes entrusted Bernard of Clairvaux with the recruitment for the Wendish crusade.[11]

Before leaving, he had the nobles elect and crown his son Henry Berengar king. The succession secured in the event of his death, Conrad set out. His army of 20,000 men went overland, via Hungary, causing disruptions in the Byzantine territories through which they passed. They arrived at Constantinople by September 1147, ahead of the French army.[12][13]

Rather than taking the coastal road around Anatolia through Christian-held territory, by which he sent most of his noncombatants, Conrad took his army across Anatolia. On 25 October 1147, they were defeated by the Seljuk Turks at the Battle of Dorylaeum. Conrad and most of the knights escaped, but most of the foot soldiers were killed or captured. The remaining 2,000 men of the German army limped on to Nicaea, where many of the survivors deserted and tried to return home. Conrad and his adherents had to be escorted to Lopadium by the French, where they joined the main French army under Louis. Conrad fell seriously ill at Ephesus and was sent to recuperate in Constantinople, where his host the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Comnenus acted as his personal physician. After recovering, Conrad sailed to Acre, and from there reached Jerusalem. He participated in the ill-fated Siege of Damascus and after that failure, grew disaffected with his allies. Another attempt to attack Ascalon failed when Conrad's allies did not appear as promised, then Conrad returned to Germany,[13] through Constantinople, where he met again with the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I to discuss the problem of two emperors,[14] and to renew their alliance against Roger II of Sicily.[15]

In 1150, Conrad and Henry Berengar defeated Welf VI and his son Welf VII at the Battle of Flochberg. Henry Berengar died later that year and the succession was thrown open. The Welfs and Hohenstaufen made peace in 1152 and the peaceful succession of one of Conrad's family was secured.

Conrad was never crowned emperor and continued to style himself "King of the Romans" until his death. On his deathbed, in the presence of only two witnesses, his nephew Frederick Barbarossa and the Bishop of Bamberg, he allegedly designated Frederick his successor, rather than his own surviving six-year-old son Frederick. Frederick Barbarossa, who had accompanied his uncle on the unfortunate crusade, forcefully pursued his advantage and was duly elected king in Cologne a few weeks later. The young son of the late king was given the Duchy of Swabia.

 
Tomb of King Conrad III in the Bamberg Cathedral

Conrad left no male heirs by his first wife, Gertrude von Komburg. In 1136, he married Gertrude of Sulzbach, who was a daughter of Berengar II of Sulzbach, and whose sister Bertha was married to the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I. Gertrude was the mother of Conrad's children and the link which cemented his alliance with Byzantium.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ Frederick I 2000, p. xii.
  2. ^ a b John Middleton (1 June 2015). World Monarchies and Dynasties. Routledge. pp. 403–. ISBN 978-1-317-45158-7.
  3. ^ Wilhelm Muschka (22 May 2012). Agnes von Waiblingen - Stammmutter der Staufer und Babenberger-Herzöge: Eine mittelalterliche Biografie. Tectum Wissenschaftsverlag. pp. 74–. ISBN 978-3-8288-5539-7.
  4. ^ Wolfram Ziegler (2008). König Konrad III. (1138–1152): Hof, Urkunden und Politik. Böhlau Verlag Wien. ISBN 978-3-205-77647-5.
  5. ^ Thomas Oliver Schindler (20 February 2003). Die Staufer - Ursprung und Aufstieg eines Herrschergeschlechts. Grin. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
  6. ^ Barber 2004, p. 193.
  7. ^ Lothar Mikulla (25 April 1997). Fürstenopposition gegen die Reichsgewalt im 12. Jahrhundert. diplom.de. pp. 41–. ISBN 978-3-8324-0032-3.
  8. ^ Marina 2013, p. 395.
  9. ^ a b Knut Görich (2006). Die Staufer: Herrscher und Reich. C.H.Beck. pp. 28–. ISBN 978-3-406-53593-2.
  10. ^ Daniel Quitz (19 May 2014). Die Königswahl Konrad III. 1138 und seine Politik gegenüber den Welfen. GRIN Verlag. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-3-656-65725-5.
  11. ^ Andrew Jotischky (21 July 2018). Pope Eugenius III (1145–1153): the First Cistercian Pope. Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 978-90-485-3720-4.
  12. ^ Jonathan Phillips (8 January 2008). The Second Crusade: Extending the Frontiers of Christendom. Yale University Press. pp. 104–. ISBN 978-0-300-16836-5.
  13. ^ a b Asst Prof Susanna A Throop (28 July 2013). Crusading as an Act of Vengeance, 1095–1216. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 73–. ISBN 978-1-4094-8211-6.
  14. ^ Petersohn 2010, p. 126.
  15. ^ P. Magdalino, The Byzantine Empire, 621
  16. ^ Johannes Bühler (2012). Die Hohenstaufen. BoD – Books on Demand. p. 78. ISBN 978-3-8460-0849-2.

Sources

  • Baldwin, M. W. A History of the Crusades: the first hundred years, 1969.[ISBN missing]
  • Barber, Malcolm (2004). The Two Cities: Medieval Europe 1050–1320. Routledge.[ISBN missing]
  • Bernhardi, Wilhelm (1883). Konrad III: Jahrbücher der Deutschen Geschichte. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot. (in German)
  • Frederick I (2000). The Crusade of Frederick Barbarossa: The History of the Expedition of the Emperor Frederick and related texts. Translated by Loud, G.A. Ashgate Publishing.
  • Magdalino, Paul (2004). "The Byzantine Empire (1118–1204)". In Luscombe, David; Riley-Smith, Jonathan (eds.). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume 4, c.1024–c.1198, Part 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 611–643. ISBN 978-1-13905402-7.
  • Marina, Areli (2013). "The Langobard Revival of Matteo il Magno Visconti, Lord of Milan". I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance. University of Chicago Press. 16 (1/2 September): 377–414. doi:10.1086/673405. S2CID 194035594.
  • Petersohn, Jürgen (2010). Kaisertum und Rom in spätsalischer und staufischer Zeit. Romidee und Rompolitik von Heinrich V. bis Friedrich II (in German). Hannover: Hahnsche Buchhandlung. ISBN 978-3-7752-5762-6.
  • Ziegler, W. König Konrad III. (1138–1152). Hof, Urkunden und Politik (= Forschungen zur Kaiser- und Papstgeschichte des Mittelalters. Band 26) Böhlau, Wien u. a. 2008
  • Roche, Jason T (2021). The crusade of King Conrad III of Germany: warfare and diplomacy in Byzantium, Anatolia and Outremer, 1146–1149. ISBN 978-2-503-53038-3. OCLC 1252629980. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
Conrad III of Germany
Born: 1093 Died: 1152
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Italy
1128–1135
Succeeded by
Preceded by German King
(formally King of the Romans)
(with Henry Berengar (1147–1150)

1138–1152

conrad, germany, conrad, redirects, here, other, uses, conrad, disambiguation, conrad, german, konrad, italian, corrado, 1093, 1094, february, 1152, hohenstaufen, dynasty, from, 1116, 1120, duke, franconia, from, 1127, 1135, anti, king, predecessor, lothair, f. Conrad III redirects here For other uses see Conrad III disambiguation Conrad III German Konrad Italian Corrado 1093 or 1094 15 February 1152 of the Hohenstaufen dynasty was from 1116 to 1120 Duke of Franconia from 1127 to 1135 anti king of his predecessor Lothair III and from 1138 until his death in 1152 King of the Romans in the Holy Roman Empire He was the son of Duke Frederick I of Swabia and Agnes 1 a daughter of the Salian Emperor Henry IV 2 3 Conrad IIIKing Conrad III Cunradus rex in a miniature from the Chronica sancti Pantaleonis c 1240King of Germany formally King of the Romans Reign7 March 1138 15 February 1152Coronation13 March 1138 AachenPredecessorLothair IIISuccessorFrederick IKing of ItalyReign1128 1135Coronation29 June 1128 MilanPredecessorHenry VSuccessorFrederick IBorn1093 or 1094Died15 February 1152Bamberg BavariaBurialBamberg CathedralSpouseGertrude of Comburg Gertrude of SulzbachIssueHenry Berengar Frederick IV Duke of SwabiaHouseHohenstaufenFatherFrederick I Duke of SwabiaMotherAgnes of GermanyReligionRoman CatholicismHis reign saw the start of the conflicts between the Guelphs and Ghibellines He was involved in the failed Second Crusade with Louis VII where he would fight and lose at Doryleum and would later fall ill and return to Constantinople After recuperating he went to Jerusalem but would experience a string of failed sieges Later returning from the Crusade he was entangled in some conflicts with Welf VI s claim to the Duchy of Bavaria On his deathbed he designated his nephew Frederick Barbarossa as his successor instead of his son Frederick IV Duke of Swabia Contents 1 Descent 2 Biography 3 See also 4 References 5 SourcesDescent EditMain article Family tree of German monarchs The origin of the House of Hohenstaufen in the Duchy of Swabia has not been conclusively established As the name came from the Hohenstaufen Castle built in 1105 Conrad s great grandfather Frederick of Staufen was a count in the Riesgau and in 1053 became Swabian Count palatine His son Frederick of Buren probably resided near present day Waschenbeuren and about 1050 married Countess Hildegard of Egisheim Dagsburg from Alsace 2 Conrad s father took advantage of the conflict between King Henry IV of Germany and the Swabian duke Rudolf of Rheinfelden during the Investiture Controversy When Rudolf had himself elected German anti king at Forchheim in 1077 Frederick of Hohenstaufen remained loyal to the royal crown and in 1079 was vested with the Duchy of Swabia by Henry IV including an engagement with the king s minor daughter Agnes He died in 1105 leaving two sons Conrad and his elder brother Frederick II who inherited the Swabian ducal title Their mother entered into a second marriage with Babenberg margrave Leopold III of Austria 4 5 Biography EditIn 1105 Henry IV Holy Roman Emperor since 1084 was overthrown by his son Henry V Conrad s uncle Emperor since 1111 Henry V prepared for his second campaign to Italy upon the death of Margravine Matilda of Tuscany and in 1116 he appointed Conrad as Duke of Franconia 6 Conrad was marked out to act as regent for Germany together with his elder brother Duke Frederick II of Swabia At the death of Henry V in 1125 Conrad unsuccessfully supported Frederick II for the kingship of Germany Frederick was placed under a ban and Conrad was deprived of Franconia and the Kingdom of Burgundy of which he was rector With the support of the imperial cities Swabia and the Duchy of Austria Conrad was elected anti king at Nuremberg in December 1127 7 Conrad quickly crossed the Alps to be crowned King of Italy by Anselmo della Pusterla Archbishop of Milan in the village of Monza 8 Over the next two years he failed to achieve anything in Italy however and returned to Germany in 1130 after Nuremberg and Speyer two strong cities that supported him fell to Lothair in 1129 Conrad continued in Lothair s opposition but he and Frederick were forced to acknowledge Lothair as emperor in 1135 during which time Conrad relinquished his title as King of Italy After this they were pardoned and could take again possession of their lands 9 Conrad III and his armies in Hungary Image from the Chronicon Pictum After Lothair s death December 1137 Conrad was elected king at Coblenz on 7 March 1138 in the presence of the papal legate Theodwin Conrad was crowned at Aachen six days later 13 March and was acknowledged in Bamberg by several princes of southern Germany 10 As Henry the Proud son in law and heir of Lothair and the most powerful prince in Germany who had been passed over in the election refused to do the same Conrad deprived him of all his territories giving the Duchy of Saxony to Albert the Bear and that of Bavaria to Leopold IV Margrave of Austria Henry however retained the loyalty of his subjects The civil war that broke out is considered the first act of the struggle between Guelphs and Ghibellines which later extended southwards to Italy After Henry s death October 1139 the war was continued by his son Henry the Lion supported by the Saxons and by his brother Welf VI Conrad after a long siege defeated the latter at Weinsberg in December 1140 and in May 1142 a peace agreement was reached in Frankfurt 9 In the same year Conrad entered Bohemia to reinstate his brother in law Vladislav II as Duke The attempt to do the same with another brother in law the Polish prince Ladislaus the Exile failed Bavaria Saxony and the other regions of Germany were in revolt In 1146 Conrad heard Bernard of Clairvaux preach the Second Crusade at Speyer and he agreed to join Louis VII in a great expedition to the Holy Land At the imperial diet in Frankfurt in March 1147 Conrad and the assembled princes entrusted Bernard of Clairvaux with the recruitment for the Wendish crusade 11 Before leaving he had the nobles elect and crown his son Henry Berengar king The succession secured in the event of his death Conrad set out His army of 20 000 men went overland via Hungary causing disruptions in the Byzantine territories through which they passed They arrived at Constantinople by September 1147 ahead of the French army 12 13 Rather than taking the coastal road around Anatolia through Christian held territory by which he sent most of his noncombatants Conrad took his army across Anatolia On 25 October 1147 they were defeated by the Seljuk Turks at the Battle of Dorylaeum Conrad and most of the knights escaped but most of the foot soldiers were killed or captured The remaining 2 000 men of the German army limped on to Nicaea where many of the survivors deserted and tried to return home Conrad and his adherents had to be escorted to Lopadium by the French where they joined the main French army under Louis Conrad fell seriously ill at Ephesus and was sent to recuperate in Constantinople where his host the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Comnenus acted as his personal physician After recovering Conrad sailed to Acre and from there reached Jerusalem He participated in the ill fated Siege of Damascus and after that failure grew disaffected with his allies Another attempt to attack Ascalon failed when Conrad s allies did not appear as promised then Conrad returned to Germany 13 through Constantinople where he met again with the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I to discuss the problem of two emperors 14 and to renew their alliance against Roger II of Sicily 15 In 1150 Conrad and Henry Berengar defeated Welf VI and his son Welf VII at the Battle of Flochberg Henry Berengar died later that year and the succession was thrown open The Welfs and Hohenstaufen made peace in 1152 and the peaceful succession of one of Conrad s family was secured Conrad was never crowned emperor and continued to style himself King of the Romans until his death On his deathbed in the presence of only two witnesses his nephew Frederick Barbarossa and the Bishop of Bamberg he allegedly designated Frederick his successor rather than his own surviving six year old son Frederick Frederick Barbarossa who had accompanied his uncle on the unfortunate crusade forcefully pursued his advantage and was duly elected king in Cologne a few weeks later The young son of the late king was given the Duchy of Swabia Tomb of King Conrad III in the Bamberg Cathedral Conrad left no male heirs by his first wife Gertrude von Komburg In 1136 he married Gertrude of Sulzbach who was a daughter of Berengar II of Sulzbach and whose sister Bertha was married to the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Gertrude was the mother of Conrad s children and the link which cemented his alliance with Byzantium 16 See also EditKings of Germany family treeReferences Edit Frederick I 2000 p xii a b John Middleton 1 June 2015 World Monarchies and Dynasties Routledge pp 403 ISBN 978 1 317 45158 7 Wilhelm Muschka 22 May 2012 Agnes von Waiblingen Stammmutter der Staufer und Babenberger Herzoge Eine mittelalterliche Biografie Tectum Wissenschaftsverlag pp 74 ISBN 978 3 8288 5539 7 Wolfram Ziegler 2008 Konig Konrad III 1138 1152 Hof Urkunden und Politik Bohlau Verlag Wien ISBN 978 3 205 77647 5 Thomas Oliver Schindler 20 February 2003 Die Staufer Ursprung und Aufstieg eines Herrschergeschlechts Grin Retrieved 29 February 2020 Barber 2004 p 193 Lothar Mikulla 25 April 1997 Furstenopposition gegen die Reichsgewalt im 12 Jahrhundert diplom de pp 41 ISBN 978 3 8324 0032 3 Marina 2013 p 395 a b Knut Gorich 2006 Die Staufer Herrscher und Reich C H Beck pp 28 ISBN 978 3 406 53593 2 Daniel Quitz 19 May 2014 Die Konigswahl Konrad III 1138 und seine Politik gegenuber den Welfen GRIN Verlag pp 1 ISBN 978 3 656 65725 5 Andrew Jotischky 21 July 2018 Pope Eugenius III 1145 1153 the First Cistercian Pope Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 90 485 3720 4 Jonathan Phillips 8 January 2008 The Second Crusade Extending the Frontiers of Christendom Yale University Press pp 104 ISBN 978 0 300 16836 5 a b Asst Prof Susanna A Throop 28 July 2013 Crusading as an Act of Vengeance 1095 1216 Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 73 ISBN 978 1 4094 8211 6 Petersohn 2010 p 126 P Magdalino The Byzantine Empire 621 Johannes Buhler 2012 Die Hohenstaufen BoD Books on Demand p 78 ISBN 978 3 8460 0849 2 Sources EditBaldwin M W A History of the Crusades the first hundred years 1969 ISBN missing Barber Malcolm 2004 The Two Cities Medieval Europe 1050 1320 Routledge ISBN missing Bernhardi Wilhelm 1883 Konrad III Jahrbucher der Deutschen Geschichte Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot in German Frederick I 2000 The Crusade of Frederick Barbarossa The History of the Expedition of the Emperor Frederick and related texts Translated by Loud G A Ashgate Publishing Magdalino Paul 2004 The Byzantine Empire 1118 1204 In Luscombe David Riley Smith Jonathan eds The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 4 c 1024 c 1198 Part 1 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 611 643 ISBN 978 1 13905402 7 Marina Areli 2013 The Langobard Revival of Matteo il Magno Visconti Lord of Milan I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance University of Chicago Press 16 1 2 September 377 414 doi 10 1086 673405 S2CID 194035594 Petersohn Jurgen 2010 Kaisertum und Rom in spatsalischer und staufischer Zeit Romidee und Rompolitik von Heinrich V bis Friedrich II in German Hannover Hahnsche Buchhandlung ISBN 978 3 7752 5762 6 Ziegler W Konig Konrad III 1138 1152 Hof Urkunden und Politik Forschungen zur Kaiser und Papstgeschichte des Mittelalters Band 26 Bohlau Wien u a 2008 Roche Jason T 2021 The crusade of King Conrad III of Germany warfare and diplomacy in Byzantium Anatolia and Outremer 1146 1149 ISBN 978 2 503 53038 3 OCLC 1252629980 Retrieved 5 November 2021 Conrad III of GermanyHouse of HohenstaufenBorn 1093 Died 1152Regnal titlesPreceded byHenry V King of Italy1128 1135 Succeeded byFrederick IPreceded byLothair III German King formally King of the Romans with Henry Berengar 1147 1150 1138 1152 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conrad III of Germany amp oldid 1143377710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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