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County of Gützkow

The County of Gützkow (German: Grafschaft Gützkow) was a county located within the Duchy of Pomerania in the High Middle Ages. It was established in 1129 from the Castellany of Gützkow. Following the death of its last count in 1359, it was re-established into the Vogtei Gützkow.

County of Gützkow
Grafschaft Gützkow (German)
County of Duchy of Pomerania
Coat of arms
CapitalGützkow
Government
Count 
• 1129–? (last)
Dobrosława of Pomerania
• 1351–1359 (last)
Johann III of Gützkow
History 
• Dobrosława of Pomerania being titled the Countess of Gützkow
1129
Contained within
 • CountryDuchy of Pomerania
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Vogtei Gützkow

County of Gützkow (1219-1359) edit

Wartislaw was castellan of Gützkow until his death in 1219. His wife Dobroslawa, daughter of Bogislaw II, Duke of Pomerania, was styled Countess of Gützkow in a 1226 document approving the transfer of various lands to the nearby Stolpe Abbey. In 1234, Dobroslawa married the German noble Jaczo von Salzwedel, who expanded the old burgh on Gützkow's Schlossberg hill with stone buildings.[1]

Around 1230, German settlers were invited to the sparsely settled central and northern areas devastated by earlier warfare. The German settlement was part of the pattern of larger migrations and social changes known as Ostsiedlung ("eastwards settlement"). Hanshagen was named after Count Johann I of Gützkow. Konrad II von Salzwedel, Jaczo's brother and since 1233 bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cammin (under the name Konrad III), advanced his relatives by enfeoffing them with lands belonging to Usedom Abbey (Grobe, Pudagla).[2] Gützkow evolved into a town and was granted Lübeck law.

To oppose Eldena Abbey, which dominated the northern areas, Jaczo and Dobroslawa in 1242 founded a Franciscan friary (Grey Friars) in Greifswald, at this time the marketplace of Eldena. Hence this friary housed the tombs of the von Gützkow family. An inscription on the ceiling read:

"Anno MCCLXII [...] Fratres minores primo intraverunt hanc civitatem ad obtinendum. Vocati a Domino Jackecen comite generoso de Gutzkow, [...] quorum corpora hic in choro requiescunt. Nota: quod generosus Comis Jackecen de Gutzkow hanc aream dedit fratibus in honorem sanctorum Petri et Pauli [...][3]"

The Counts of Gützkow also minted their own coins.[4]

Jaczo's sons Johann I, Konrad and Jaczo II were until 1270 called Herren von Gützkow (lords of Gützkow), thereafter Grafen von Gützkow (Counts of Gützkow). The marriage of Jaczo II and Cecislawa of Putbus was already arranged by the time they were aged five and two, respectively, Cecislawa being a princess of a branch of the family of the princes of Rügen who ruled the areas north of Gützkow. Other arrangements connected the Gützkow family with the House of Pomerania. In 1295, Jaczo II was a witness to the internal partition of the Duchy of Pomerania, which made Gützkow a part of Pomerania-Wolgast. Jaczo's grandson, Nikolaus of Gützkow, was in 1319 appointed by Wartislaw IV of Pomerania-Wolgast to lead a court.

Johann III and Johann IV were involved in a conflict with the Pomeranian dukes about their mother Margarete's possessions. Margarete's brother, Bogislaw IV, Duke of Pomerania, had handed over the areas of Konsages, Schlatkow and Bünzow as dowry. Probably when Wartislaw IV, Duke of Pomerania, claimed these areas, they joined Pomerania's opponent Mecklenburg in the first war for the Rugian succession. After the Battle of Griebenow, the Counts of Gützkow settled the conflict, changed sides and fought for the dukes of Pomerania. In 1327 they besieged the town of Barth. In April 1328, an army led by the Counts of Gützkow and assisted by troops from Demmin and Altentreptow won the decisive Battle of Völschow against the troops of Heinrich II of Mecklenburg (the Lion).

In 1329 - 1334, Counts Johann III and Johann IV assisted the dukes of Pomerania-Stettin in the Pomeranian-Brandenburgian War against the Margraviate of Brandenburg. In 1331 (1334), they participated in the Battle of Kremmer Damm. Due to the high war costs, they sold many areas to the town of Greifswald, e.g. in 1334 - 1351 Sanz, Müssow and Guest.

Count Johann V of Gützkow died on October 25, 1351, during the Battle of Schoppendamm near Loitz fighting in the Second War for the Rugian Succession. When his uncle Johann III died soon afterwards in 1359, the House of Gützkow became extinct in the male line. Until 1378, the sisters of Johann V continued to live in Burg Gützkow. The Counts of Gützkow were succeeded by the Dukes of Pomerania, who hence added "Count of Gützkow" to their title. The Gützkow coat of arms was incorporated into the arms of Pomerania. Subsequent to the dissolution of Pomerania as independent dukedom, the line Pommern-Stettin continued the use of the subsidiary title e.g. Erich v. Gützkow-Peglow.[5]

Vogtei Gützkow (1359-c.1600) edit

 
Gützkow represented in the 17th century coat of arms of the Duchy of Pomerania (bottom, center)

The name Grafschaft Gützkow (County of Gützkow) was further used to describe the area that the Pomeranian dukes had turned into a Vogtei. The last Vogt was Hans Owstin, who is mentioned in the 1480s. In the beginning of the 16th century, the Vogtei Gützkow was made part of Amt Wolgast, that comprised the area of the former Vogtei, the territory of Wusterhusen and the areas east of Gützkow. Even after the Vogtei was dissolved, the area was still referred to as Grafschaft Gützkow.[6]

Territory edit

The area of the principality, castellany, county and Vogtei of Gützkow did not change significantly over time. In the north, it was bordered by the rivers Ryck and Ziese. In the east, the border ran east of Züssow, Ranzin, Vitense and Owstin. In the west, the border ran west of Dersekow. In the south, the county was bordered by the Peene river, from time to time including the territories of Miserez and Ploth south of the Peene. At the end of the 12th century, the territory of Loitz was for some time part of Gützkow.

Stolpe Abbey received many gifts of land on both sides of the Peene River shortly after the principality was subdued by the Pomeranians. Jaromar I, Prince of Rügen, donated vast areas on both sides of the Ryck River to Eldena Abbey while he was appointed by the king Canute VI of Denmark to rule in the place of the infant sons of the subdued Bogislaw I, Duke of Pomerania, in 1189 - 1212. Thus, Gützkow's territory was sandwiched between that of Eldena in the north and that of Stolpe in the south.

The Counts of Gützkow gave parts of their county in fee to the knightly families of Behr, von Horn and von Heyden.

Gützkow branch of the House of Salzwedel edit

  1. Jaczo von Salzwedel (b. c.1180, d. c.1248), married Dobroslawa of Pomerania
    1. Johann I
    2. Konrad I (III),married N.N. von Werle, daughter of Nikolaus I von Werle
    3. Jaczo II (b. 1244, d. before 1297) married Cecislawa von Putbus (b. 1247, d. after 1295)
      1. Jaczo III married N.N. von Werle, daughter of Johann I von Werle
        1. Nikolaus
        2. Bernhard, mentioned 1317 in the Peace of Templin
      2. Johann II married Margarete von Pommern, daughter of Barnim I, Duke of Pomerania-Stettin
        1. Jaczo IV (d. 1319 in the Battle of Wöhrden)
        2. Johann III der Ältere (the Elder) (d. 1359)
        3. Johann IV der Jüngere (the Younger) (Henning) (d. 1334 after the Battle of Kremmer Damm), married Mechthild von Schwerin, daughter of Gunzelin V von Schwerin
          1. Johann V (d. 25.October 1351 in the Battle of Schoppendamm near Loitz
          2. Elisabeth (d. about 1378)
          3. Mechthild (d. about 1378)
  2. Konrad II von Salzwedel (d. 1241), as Konrad III Bishop of Cammin (1233–1241)

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ W. Wöller, Heimatgeschichte von Gützkow und Umgebung Heft 2, p.15 "Bei Ausgrabungen 1932 freigelegte Fundamentreste (um 1 m stark) und große Feldsteine wurden auf Anordnung des damaligen Eigentümers des Schlossbergs, eines Baumeisters, herausgebrochen und verkauft, bevor eine wissenschaftliche Untersuchung stattfinden konnte."
  2. ^ Wöller, p.17
  3. ^ K. Theodor Pyl, Pommersche Geschichtsdenkmäler, p.198
  4. ^ "1937 wurden beim Münzfund von Karrin 47 Münzen mit dem Wappen der Grafen von Gützkow entdeckt" (Wöller, p. 21)
  5. ^ Staatsarchiv-Stettin XXIII Fol.5,456
  6. ^ Ivo Asmus, Heiko Droste, Jens E. Olesen, Helmut Backhaus, Gemeinsame bekannte: Schweden und Deutschland in der frühen Neuzeit, 2003, p.255, ISBN 3-8258-7150-9, ISBN 978-3-8258-7150-5, [1]

Sources and references edit

  • Theodor Pyl (1881), "Jaczo von Salzwedel", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 13, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 632–636
  • Theodor Pyl (1881), "Johann III. und IV.", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 14, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 218–221
  • Roderich Schmidt (1966), "Gützkow, Grafen von", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 7, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 290–291
  • Wächter, Joachim: Zur Geschichte der Besiedlung des mittleren Peeneraums. In: Beiträge zur Geschichte Vorpommerns: die Demminer Kolloquien 1985–1994. Thomas Helms Verlag, Schwerin 1997, ISBN 3-931185-11-7 (in German)
  • Wächter, Joachim: Das Fürstentum Rügen - Ein Überblick. In: Beiträge zur Geschichte Vorpommerns: die Demminer Kolloquien 1985–1994. Thomas Helms Verlag, Schwerin 1997, ISBN 3-931185-11-7 (in German)
  • Wöller, Werner: Vor- und Frühgeschichte, Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit. In: Ortsgeschichtskommission Gützkow beim Rat der Stadt Gützkow (publ.): Heimatgeschichte von Gützkow und Umgebung. Heft 2/1990, pp. 4–23 (in German)

External links edit

  • bei (in German)

county, gützkow, german, grafschaft, gützkow, county, located, within, duchy, pomerania, high, middle, ages, established, 1129, from, castellany, gützkow, following, death, last, count, 1359, established, into, vogtei, gützkow, grafschaft, gützkow, german, cou. The County of Gutzkow German Grafschaft Gutzkow was a county located within the Duchy of Pomerania in the High Middle Ages It was established in 1129 from the Castellany of Gutzkow Following the death of its last count in 1359 it was re established into the Vogtei Gutzkow County of GutzkowGrafschaft Gutzkow German County of Duchy of PomeraniaCoat of armsCapitalGutzkowGovernmentCount 1129 last Dobroslawa of Pomerania 1351 1359 last Johann III of GutzkowHistory Dobroslawa of Pomerania being titled the Countess of Gutzkow1129Contained within CountryDuchy of PomeraniaPreceded by Succeeded by Castellany of Gutzkow Vogtei Gutzkow Contents 1 County of Gutzkow 1219 1359 2 Vogtei Gutzkow 1359 c 1600 3 Territory 4 Gutzkow branch of the House of Salzwedel 4 1 Footnotes 5 Sources and references 6 External linksCounty of Gutzkow 1219 1359 editWartislaw was castellan of Gutzkow until his death in 1219 His wife Dobroslawa daughter of Bogislaw II Duke of Pomerania was styled Countess of Gutzkow in a 1226 document approving the transfer of various lands to the nearby Stolpe Abbey In 1234 Dobroslawa married the German noble Jaczo von Salzwedel who expanded the old burgh on Gutzkow s Schlossberg hill with stone buildings 1 Around 1230 German settlers were invited to the sparsely settled central and northern areas devastated by earlier warfare The German settlement was part of the pattern of larger migrations and social changes known as Ostsiedlung eastwards settlement Hanshagen was named after Count Johann I of Gutzkow Konrad II von Salzwedel Jaczo s brother and since 1233 bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cammin under the name Konrad III advanced his relatives by enfeoffing them with lands belonging to Usedom Abbey Grobe Pudagla 2 Gutzkow evolved into a town and was granted Lubeck law To oppose Eldena Abbey which dominated the northern areas Jaczo and Dobroslawa in 1242 founded a Franciscan friary Grey Friars in Greifswald at this time the marketplace of Eldena Hence this friary housed the tombs of the von Gutzkow family An inscription on the ceiling read Anno MCCLXII Fratres minores primo intraverunt hanc civitatem ad obtinendum Vocati a Domino Jackecen comite generoso de Gutzkow quorum corpora hic in choro requiescunt Nota quod generosus Comis Jackecen de Gutzkow hanc aream dedit fratibus in honorem sanctorum Petri et Pauli 3 The Counts of Gutzkow also minted their own coins 4 Jaczo s sons Johann I Konrad and Jaczo II were until 1270 called Herren von Gutzkow lords of Gutzkow thereafter Grafen von Gutzkow Counts of Gutzkow The marriage of Jaczo II and Cecislawa of Putbus was already arranged by the time they were aged five and two respectively Cecislawa being a princess of a branch of the family of the princes of Rugen who ruled the areas north of Gutzkow Other arrangements connected the Gutzkow family with the House of Pomerania In 1295 Jaczo II was a witness to the internal partition of the Duchy of Pomerania which made Gutzkow a part of Pomerania Wolgast Jaczo s grandson Nikolaus of Gutzkow was in 1319 appointed by Wartislaw IV of Pomerania Wolgast to lead a court Johann III and Johann IV were involved in a conflict with the Pomeranian dukes about their mother Margarete s possessions Margarete s brother Bogislaw IV Duke of Pomerania had handed over the areas of Konsages Schlatkow and Bunzow as dowry Probably when Wartislaw IV Duke of Pomerania claimed these areas they joined Pomerania s opponent Mecklenburg in the first war for the Rugian succession After the Battle of Griebenow the Counts of Gutzkow settled the conflict changed sides and fought for the dukes of Pomerania In 1327 they besieged the town of Barth In April 1328 an army led by the Counts of Gutzkow and assisted by troops from Demmin and Altentreptow won the decisive Battle of Volschow against the troops of Heinrich II of Mecklenburg the Lion In 1329 1334 Counts Johann III and Johann IV assisted the dukes of Pomerania Stettin in the Pomeranian Brandenburgian War against the Margraviate of Brandenburg In 1331 1334 they participated in the Battle of Kremmer Damm Due to the high war costs they sold many areas to the town of Greifswald e g in 1334 1351 Sanz Mussow and Guest Count Johann V of Gutzkow died on October 25 1351 during the Battle of Schoppendamm near Loitz fighting in the Second War for the Rugian Succession When his uncle Johann III died soon afterwards in 1359 the House of Gutzkow became extinct in the male line Until 1378 the sisters of Johann V continued to live in Burg Gutzkow The Counts of Gutzkow were succeeded by the Dukes of Pomerania who hence added Count of Gutzkow to their title The Gutzkow coat of arms was incorporated into the arms of Pomerania Subsequent to the dissolution of Pomerania as independent dukedom the line Pommern Stettin continued the use of the subsidiary title e g Erich v Gutzkow Peglow 5 Vogtei Gutzkow 1359 c 1600 edit nbsp Gutzkow represented in the 17th century coat of arms of the Duchy of Pomerania bottom center The name Grafschaft Gutzkow County of Gutzkow was further used to describe the area that the Pomeranian dukes had turned into a Vogtei The last Vogt was Hans Owstin who is mentioned in the 1480s In the beginning of the 16th century the Vogtei Gutzkow was made part of Amt Wolgast that comprised the area of the former Vogtei the territory of Wusterhusen and the areas east of Gutzkow Even after the Vogtei was dissolved the area was still referred to as Grafschaft Gutzkow 6 Territory editThe area of the principality castellany county and Vogtei of Gutzkow did not change significantly over time In the north it was bordered by the rivers Ryck and Ziese In the east the border ran east of Zussow Ranzin Vitense and Owstin In the west the border ran west of Dersekow In the south the county was bordered by the Peene river from time to time including the territories of Miserez and Ploth south of the Peene At the end of the 12th century the territory of Loitz was for some time part of Gutzkow Stolpe Abbey received many gifts of land on both sides of the Peene River shortly after the principality was subdued by the Pomeranians Jaromar I Prince of Rugen donated vast areas on both sides of the Ryck River to Eldena Abbey while he was appointed by the king Canute VI of Denmark to rule in the place of the infant sons of the subdued Bogislaw I Duke of Pomerania in 1189 1212 Thus Gutzkow s territory was sandwiched between that of Eldena in the north and that of Stolpe in the south The Counts of Gutzkow gave parts of their county in fee to the knightly families of Behr von Horn and von Heyden Gutzkow branch of the House of Salzwedel editJaczo von Salzwedel b c 1180 d c 1248 married Dobroslawa of Pomerania Johann I Konrad I III married N N von Werle daughter of Nikolaus I von Werle Jaczo II b 1244 d before 1297 married Cecislawa von Putbus b 1247 d after 1295 Jaczo III married N N von Werle daughter of Johann I von Werle Nikolaus Bernhard mentioned 1317 in the Peace of Templin Johann II married Margarete von Pommern daughter of Barnim I Duke of Pomerania Stettin Jaczo IV d 1319 in the Battle of Wohrden Johann III der Altere the Elder d 1359 Johann IV der Jungere the Younger Henning d 1334 after the Battle of Kremmer Damm married Mechthild von Schwerin daughter of Gunzelin V von Schwerin Johann V d 25 October 1351 in the Battle of Schoppendamm near Loitz Elisabeth d about 1378 Mechthild d about 1378 Konrad II von Salzwedel d 1241 as Konrad III Bishop of Cammin 1233 1241 Footnotes edit W Woller Heimatgeschichte von Gutzkow und Umgebung Heft 2 p 15 Bei Ausgrabungen 1932 freigelegte Fundamentreste um 1 m stark und grosse Feldsteine wurden auf Anordnung des damaligen Eigentumers des Schlossbergs eines Baumeisters herausgebrochen und verkauft bevor eine wissenschaftliche Untersuchung stattfinden konnte Woller p 17 K Theodor Pyl Pommersche Geschichtsdenkmaler p 198 1937 wurden beim Munzfund von Karrin 47 Munzen mit dem Wappen der Grafen von Gutzkow entdeckt Woller p 21 Staatsarchiv Stettin XXIII Fol 5 456 Ivo Asmus Heiko Droste Jens E Olesen Helmut Backhaus Gemeinsame bekannte Schweden und Deutschland in der fruhen Neuzeit 2003 p 255 ISBN 3 8258 7150 9 ISBN 978 3 8258 7150 5 1 Sources and references editTheodor Pyl 1881 Jaczo von Salzwedel Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie in German vol 13 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 632 636 Theodor Pyl 1881 Johann III und IV Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie in German vol 14 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 218 221 Roderich Schmidt 1966 Gutzkow Grafen von Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 7 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 290 291 Wachter Joachim Zur Geschichte der Besiedlung des mittleren Peeneraums In Beitrage zur Geschichte Vorpommerns die Demminer Kolloquien 1985 1994 Thomas Helms Verlag Schwerin 1997 ISBN 3 931185 11 7 in German Wachter Joachim Das Furstentum Rugen Ein Uberblick In Beitrage zur Geschichte Vorpommerns die Demminer Kolloquien 1985 1994 Thomas Helms Verlag Schwerin 1997 ISBN 3 931185 11 7 in German Woller Werner Vor und Fruhgeschichte Mittelalter und fruhe Neuzeit In Ortsgeschichtskommission Gutzkow beim Rat der Stadt Gutzkow publ Heimatgeschichte von Gutzkow und Umgebung Heft 2 1990 pp 4 23 in German External links editBurg Gutzkow bei Kulturportal Mecklenburg Vorpommern in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title County of Gutzkow amp oldid 1210736373, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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