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Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg

Landgravine Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg (May 1466 – 17 January 1523), German: Elisabeth Landgräfin von Hessen-Marburg, was a landgravine from the House of Hesse-Marburg and through marriage Countess of Nassau-Siegen. She was heiress to the County of Katzenelnbogen, which after her brother’s death was claimed both by her and the Landgraviate of Hesse. The legal dispute for the County of Katzenelnbogen between the House of Nassau and the House of Hesse lasted until well after her death and is known as the Katzenelnbogische Erbfolgestreit.

Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg
Countess Consort of Nassau-Siegen
Coat of arms
Native nameElisabeth Landgräfin von Hessen-Marburg
BornMay 1466
Marburg
Died17 January 1523
Cologne
BuriedSt. John’s Church, Franciscan monastery, Siegen
Reburied: St. Mary’s Church [de], Siegen 1836
Noble familyHouse of Hesse-Marburg
Spouse(s)John V, Count of Nassau-Siegen
Issue
Detail
FatherHenry III ‘the Rich’ of Hesse-Marburg
MotherAnne of Katzenelnbogen

Biography

Elisabeth was born in Marburg in May 1466[1][2] as the eldest daughter of Landgrave Henry III ‘the Rich’ of Hesse-Marburg and Countess Anne of Katzenelnbogen.[2][3]

Count Philip ‘the Elder’ of Katzenelnbogen, Elisabeth’s maternal grandfather, had two sons. The eldest son, Count Philip ‘the Younger’, was married to Countess Ottilie of Nassau-Siegen, but died already in 1453. The second son, Count Eberhard, died three years later. After becoming a widower in 1471, Philip ‘the Elder’ remarried in 1474, at the age of 72, to the 32 years old Countess Anne of Nassau-Siegen, a first cousin of his daughter-in-law.[4] The marriage of Philip ‘the Elder’ and Anne of Nassau-Siegen remained childless, so that upon his death in 1479 the County of Katzenelnbogen was inherited by his daughter Anne and her husband Henry III ‘the Rich’ of Hesse-Marburg, Elisabeth's parents.[5]

Elisabeth married in Marburg on 11 February 1482[1][2] to Count John V of Nassau-Siegen (Breda, 9 November 1455[1][2][3][6][7]Dillenburg or Siegen,[note 1] 30 July 1516[1][2][7][8][9]), the youngest brother of her step-grandmother.[1][2][7]

 
The city of Katzenelnbogen. Engraving by Matthäus Merian from the Topographia Hassiae, 1655.

Elisabeth’s father died in 1483; he was succeeded by his son William III ‘the Younger’.[5] The latter stipulated that his sisters Elisabeth and Matilda should be compensated with 50,000 florins. John protested against this on behalf of his wife in 1488. At the time of the marriage John had renounced all claims to Elisabeth’s inheritance, but with the exception of her mother’s inheritance.[3] William III ‘the Younger’ died in 1500 without legitimate children.[3][5][10][11] His Landgraviate of Hesse-Marburg was inherited by Landgrave William II ‘the Middle’ of Hesse-Kassel. Matilda renounced her inheritance, so that her elder sister Elisabeth remained the sole heir to Katzenelnbogen.[5] Indeed, Elisabeth laid claim to all her brother’s possessions and John immediately assumed the title Count of Katzenelnbogen.[3][10] But when the negotiations with William II ‘the Middle’ of Hesse-Kassel began, he resigned that title.[3] For both Hesse and Nassau, the County of Katzenelnbogen was a desirable inheritance, not only because of its wealth, but also because of its geographical location.[5] The county was situated between the Taunus and the Lahn and was very rich due to the possession of a large number of Rhine tolls between Mainz and the border of the Netherlands.[4] The county consisted of Rheinfels, Sankt Goar, Braubach, Hohenstein, Darmstadt, Zwingenberg, Rüsselsheim and Umstadt, as well as Eppstein, the district of Driedorf and parts of Diez, Hadamar, Ems, Löhnberg, Camberg, Altweilnau [de] and Wehrheim.[11] The last seven possessions were jointly owned with the Counts of Nassau.[3]

Because Elisabeth’s brother-in-law Engelbert II of Nassau had no legitimate children, he brought Elisabeth’s eldest son Henry to his court in Breda and Brussels in 1499, provided for his further education and appointed him his heir. After the death of his uncle in 1504, Henry succeeded him in all his possessions.[12][13][14][15][16][17]

On 24 May 1501,[note 2] Emperor Maximilian I forbade William II ‘the Middle’ to violate the County of Katzenelnbogen or to take violent steps against the House of Nassau.[10] John also received some fiefs of Katzenelnbogen from the Duke of Jülich and the Abbey of Prüm.[9] Tensions between Hesse and Nassau increased when William II ‘the Middle’ took possession of Katzenelnbogen, disregarding the rights of Elisabeth.[18] All of John’s attempts to gain his wife’s rights were in vain, despite several amicable negotiations. To settle the matter by force against the powerful House of Hesse did not occur to him.[9] Therefore John filed a complaint with the Reichskammergericht. In 1507 the court ruled that half the county should be awarded to Elisabeth. William II ‘the Middle’ refused to accept this judgment.[10][18]

After the death of Elisabeth’s husband John in 1516, their sons Henry and William continued Elisabeth’s case with increasing vigour. The former’s high position and close personal relationship with Roman King Charles V as an educator, general and advisor gave the Nassaus powerful support in this protracted legal battle. On the other side stood their energetic opponent, the young Landgrave Philip I of Hesse. He had an advantage because Hesse had gained control of the entire disputed territory, which gave him a strong position over the small County of Nassau; in addition, powerful imperial princes, such as Elector Frederick III ʻthe Wiseʼ of Saxony, were on his side as allies.[11]

In 1520 Charles V referred the dispute from the Reichskammergericht to the Reichshofrat. This seemed to be very favourable, because Alexander Schweis from Herborn, who was Henryʼs secretary, served as a judge in the latter court.[19] It was probably also due to Henryʼs great influence on Charles V that the case was also discussed at the Imperial Diet of Worms in 1521. But there was no final decision there either. A commission consisting of the Prince bishops Christoph of Augsburg, George of Bamberg and William III of Strasbourg was given the task of re-examining the case, which had been handled by the most important legal scholars of the time. The verdict, to which both parties had unconditionally submitted in advance, was handed down in Tübingen on 9 May 1523. It was favourable to Elisabeth and awarded her almost the entire inheritance.[11]

Shortly before the verdict from Tübingen, Elisabeth died in Cologne on 17 January 1523.[2][7][note 3] In Cologne the Counts of Nassau owned a house (‘das achte Haus von der Goltgassenecken nach St. Cunibert hin’), which made the connection between their possessions in the Netherlands and their counties in Germany easier for them.[20] Elisabeth was buried next to her husband in the crypt of St. John’s Church in the Franciscan monastery in Siegen, which her husband had founded.[21] In 1836, both were reburied in St. Mary’s Church [de] in Siegen.[22]

As Philip of Hesse refused to hand over Katzenelnbogen to Elisabeth’s son and heir William, the dispute was not settled until 1557.[15][23][24][25][26]

Elisabeth and John V depicted on one of the Nassau tapestries?

 
Design drawing for the eighth tapestry in the series containing the genealogy of the House of Nassau by Bernard van Orley, c. 1528–1530. Staatliche Graphische Sammlung München. Does this drawing depict John V and his wife Elisabeth? Or their son Henry III and his three wives?

Around 1531, the son of Elisabeth and John V, Henry III, had a series of eight tapestries with the genealogy of the House of Nassau woven.[27][28] These tapestries were lost in the 18th century.[27][29] The design drawings for the tapestries were made by Bernard van Orley. Seven of those drawings have been preserved,[29][30] only the design drawing for the fifth tapestry, depicting Count John I of Nassau-Siegen and Countess Margaret of the Mark [nl], is missing.[30] The theme of the series was the descent of the House of Nassau, whereby the dynastic significance was paramount. This genealogy was given extra splendour by the fact that, in addition to the direct descent from Count Otto I of Nassau, Roman King Adolf was also included in the series.[27][28] On each tapestry, a man and woman sitting on horseback are depicted facing each other. The rather unusual composition remains lively due to the alternation in clothing and poses and the position of the horses. The mostly hilly landscape in the background is sometimes interrupted by trees in the foreground. The coats of arms in the top corners and the cartouche with the inscription in between are connected by garlands that stand out sharply against the sky. It is also clear from the designs for the first and last tapestry that the main scenes were surrounded by wide carpet borders.[30] The drawings also show the great care taken with the inscriptions in the cartouches, which are written in the same hand on all seven of the surviving drawings, and with the heraldic details of the coats of arms.[31] With the coats of arms, indications have been written in French about inaccuracies, especially about the mirror-image representation of the male arms. It is known that Henry III paid special attention to this aspect and corresponded with his brother William I about it. The design for the last tapestry in the series differs from the other designs in that it depicts three women instead of one. As the inscription does not mention the identity of the two women in the background, this has given rise to much speculation.[32]

L.J. van der Klooster, curator of the topography department of the Netherlands Institute for Art History, argued that the design drawing for the last tapestry contains a clear mistake. The text in the cartouche indicates that depicted are John V and Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg, the parents of the commissioner of the tapestries, Henry III. However, the horseman depicted in the drawing wears the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece around his neck.[29] The coat of arms in the corner of the drawing is also decorated with this collar. Now it is remarkable that John V was never a member of the Order of the Golden Fleece. So there is a contradiction between text and image. Since the discovery of the drawing in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich in 1904, it has been argued that the text in the inscription is incorrect and that the commissioner himself, Henry III of Nassau and his three wives are depicted in this drawing. The obvious collar of the Golden Fleece, the three female figures, being his wife Mencía de Mendoza and his two predeceased wives, as well as the strong resemblance of both Henry himself and Mencía to other portraits of that couple, indicated that.[33]

 
Count Henry III of Nassau-Breda. Portrait by Jan Gossaert, 1530–1532. Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya, Barcelona.
 
Mencía de Mendoza. Portrait by Jan Gossaerts, 1500–1550. Musée Condé, Chantilly, Oise.

Van der Klooster argued that in a work of art, one should always start from the most original form of the object. In this drawing he stated, it is clear that the inscription in the cartouche, as well as the filling in of the shields, were added early, but somewhat later in the sixteenth century, because the colour of the paint indicates this. The drawing therefore originally had an empty cartouche and empty shields. The collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece around the shield does, however, belong to the first instance of the drawing. Van der Klooster also argued that there is an unmistakable portrait similarity between the horseman and his wife and some portraits of Henry III and Mencía de Mendoza, namely those by Jan Gossaert. Further Van der Klooster stated that the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece which the horseman wears and which also hangs around his coat of arms marks him as a member of the order. According to the statutes, a Knight of the Golden Fleece was obliged to wear the insignia. Abuses were punished severely. John V has never been a Knight of the Golden Fleece, but Henry III had been since 1505. Van Orley, who worked for the court, must have been well aware of this rule. He could not afford to make a mistake. Van der Klooster stated this being the most essential point in his analysis.[34]

Van der Klooster further stated that the portrait of Mencía in the drawing has acquired a permanent place in Spanish costume history. One could say that it followed the fashion of the international courtiers around Emperor Charles V. His sister Archduchess Eleanor is depicted in entirely similar attire in her portraits by Joos van Cleve. The German Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg – of whom no portraits are known – must have been dressed according to a completely different fashion in her day.[34] The so-called German hat and the wide cloak, often with a broad collar, determined the fashion image in the Northern European countries.[35]

Of the nine women in the tapestries, eight are on horseback. Only the woman, whom Van der Klooster regards as Mencía de Mendoza, rides a mule. According to Van der Klooster, in those days, especially in Spain, the mule was considered the most suitable riding animal for women. When in September 1517 Emperor Charles V made his first journey to Spain in the company of a large retinue, among them Dutch chroniclers and artists, the party came into contact with the mule for the transport of the ladies. As far as Van der Klooster could ascertain, a woman riding a mule appeared for the first time in Dutch art on a print by Jacob Cornelisz van Oostsanen in the series Counts of Holland. However, this print is explicitly dated 1 April 1518. The artists who had accompanied the Emperor to Spain could have returned by now. The fact that, unlike the other countesses, the Spanish Mencía de Mendoza is the only one riding on a mule is therefore a factor in the identification according to Van der Klooster.[36]

According to Van der Klooster, the series of tapestries relates to the genealogy of the House of Nassau, not to its possessions. The tapestry of Engelbert I and Joanne of Polanen does not allude to her rich heritage, including Breda, which was so important to Henry III. Van der Klooster admitted that against his view the fact speaks that the inscription in the cartouche explicitly states only as depicted: John V and his wife Elisabeth. Also, the original series of eight tapestries never included one depicting Henry III and his wives. In Van der Klooster’s opinion, the error lies in the application of the inscription, for which he was unable to give an explanation. Therefore the fate of this design drawing is that it will continue to carry an internal contradiction, according to Van der Klooster.[36] His view of the proposed depicted persons led Van der Klooster to the hypothesis that around 1530 the idea of making a tapestry of the commissioner was considered. The series then would not have ended with his parents, but with Henry III. This in itself Van der Klooster considered a reasonable possibility. The series would then have consisted of nine and not eight tapestries. But Van der Klooster admitted that the present series, however, always consisted of eight tapestries, as the inventory of 19 July 1539 already mentions them: ‘huyt pieces de tapisserie de la genealogie de feu monseigneur du lignaige de Nassaw’ (‘eight pieces of tapestry of the genealogy of the late lord of the lineage of Nassau’). In Van der Klooster's view, the design drawing remains the only reminder of a probably unexecuted plan. The existence or non-existence of a ninth tapestry, according to Van der Klooster, is not relevant for the identification of the people, as this is only a design drawing.[37]

C.W. Fock, Professor of the History of Applied Arts at the Institute of Art History of Leiden University, argued that there must be very conclusive reasons for opposing the inscription and the coat of arms shown on the drawing, precisely because it is so clear that much attention was paid to this aspect. The inscription is written in the same 16th century hand as on the other drawings, probably contemporary with the designs of the whole series. Moreover, all historical sources indicate that the last, eighth tapestry depicted John V and his wife Elisabeth and not the commissioner Henry III. Fock further argued that the face of the man indeed resembles portraits of Henry III. However, no portraits of John V are known and it is certainly possible that Henry had inherited the features of his father.[32] A resemblance of the front woman to the portrait of Mencía de Mendoza is demonstrable, especially in the hairstyle; the facial features themselves are in fact not very individual.[38] Apart from the hairstyle, the face of the second woman in the drawing hardly differs from that of the woman in the foreground.[39]

Fock also pointed out that the view that the mule should be interpreted as a reference to Mencía’s Spanish origin cannot be sustained. Already on the woodcut of 1518 by Jacob Cornelisz van Oostsanen with the counts and countesses of Holland, several women ride mules instead of horses. Nor can the braided band pattern on the cloth be interpreted as a clear reference to Spain. This motif, originally Arabic and Moorish, appeared almost simultaneously at the beginning of the 16th century in Italy, at the French court and in Germany, where artists such as Albrecht Dürer and Hans Holbein frequently used it. Van Orley, who was greatly impressed by Dürer, whom he also met during his journey through the Netherlands in 1521, may therefore have used this then very fashionable motif as a progressive artist for entirely different reasons.[40] Fock did point out that the fact that John V, unlike his son, had no right to wear the collar of the Golden Fleece and to carry it with his coat of arms is a valid argument.[41]

Fock continued to argue for the identification of the couple according to the inscription and the coats of arms as John V and Elisabeth, as it is known that the series of eight tapestries did not contain a tapestry depicting Henry III, accompanied by one or all three of his wives. The eighth tapestry must have depicted John V and Elisabeth. The inscriptions on the tapestries, known not only from the drawings but also from various written sources, indicate mainly the intention to glorify the deceased ancestors. Apart from emphasising their good and heroic deeds, the succession within the family, which repeatedly did not go through the eldest son, is also explained several times. In this context, the texts also mention other family members who are not depicted, such as the eldest son Adolf I in the fifth tapestry, the second son Henry II in the sixth tapestry, and the eldest son Engelbert II in the seventh tapestry. In the last tapestry, the two sons of John V – Henry III and William I – are mentioned in the same way, which is reason enough to assume that it was not the intention to depict them on a tapestry, let alone glorify them. In addition, the inscriptions strongly emphasise on the possessions brought in by the woman. In Fock’s opinion, this also holds the key to the identification of the two unknown women, which is related to the inheritance of the County of Katzenelnbogen, which was so important for Nassau at the time. The inscription on the drawing lists John’s wife as Elisabeth, daughter of the Landgrave of Hesse. It is striking and indicative of the importance of her claim to the County of Katzenelnbogen that this very wording was changed during the execution on the eighth tapestry and she was referred to as the daughter of the Countess of Katzenelnbogen.[41]

At the time of the creation of the tapestries, the Katzenelnbogische Erbfolgestreit was a very important issue for the Nassaus. According to Fock the tapestry seems to allude to this, by depicting Elisabeth’s sister Matilda in the background to the left of Elisabeth, who had left the inheritance to Elisabeth. The older woman on the left must be the older sister of John V, Anne, who was married to the last Count of Katzenelnbogen and, although she had no legal standing in the matter, through her marriage provided moral support for the claims of the Nassau dynasty. This solution, Fock argued, corresponds best to the intention of the tapestries to emphasise the dynastic importance and territorial claims of the family.[42]

More importantly, in Fock’s opinion, the ages of the two women in the background, where there is clearly a generation gap between the woman on the left and the two others, are also correct; this is in contrast to the ages of Henry III’s three wives. His first wife, Françoise Louise of Savoy-Vaud, was born before 1486, the second wife, Claudia of Chalon, in 1498, and the third wife, Mencía de Mendoza, in 1508, which according to Fock is in no way consistent with the respective ages of the three women in the design drawing; the first two women both died at a young age. Moreover, Fock argued, one may seriously doubt whether, if it had been the three wives of Henry III, the two first wives would not have been treated in a more equal way instead of being treated in such a secondary manner. Through Claudia of Chalon, the Principality of Orange had just passed to Henry’s son in 1530, such an honour for the family that it is almost inconceivable in Fock’s view, that it would not have expressed in some form in the tapestry, if only in a prominent position also for Claudia of Chalon. This identification also explains – something that in Fock’s opinion would otherwise be inexplicable with all the attention paid to the coats of arms – that the two shields of the women in the background were left blank. Anne of Nassau had the same coat of arms as her brother John V and Matilda of Hesse the same as her sister Elisabeth. The indicated coats of arms of John and Elisabeth were therefore enough of a clue. Moreover, the two blank shields are partly painted over with white (it shows through a bit now), which could even indicate that the coats of arms would be left out in second instance.[42]

On the website of the Netherlands Institute for Art History (the former employer of Van der Klooster) it is stated that the picture depicts Henry III with his wife Mencía de Mendoza and two deceased wives. It is also stated there that he was previously identified as his father John V on the basis of a later added erroneous inscription and coat of arms. Finally it states that the identification as Henry III is on the basis of the portrait of Mencía de Mendoza, her Spanish mule, the Order of the Golden Fleece and the ‘three wives’.[43]

Issue

From the marriage of Elisabeth and John the following children were born:[1][44][45]

  1. Count Henry III (Siegen, 12 January 1483 – Breda Castle, 14 September 1538), succeeded his uncle Engelbert II in 1504. Married:
    1. on 3 August 1503 to Countess Françoise Louise of Savoy-Vaud (1485 – 17 September 1511);
    2. in La-Fère-sur-Oise on 24 April 1515 to Claudia of Chalon (1498 – Diest, 31 May 1521);
    3. in Burgos on 30 June 1524 to Mencía de Mendoza y Fonseca (Jadraque (?), 1 December 1508 – 4 January 1554), 2nd Marchioness of Cenete since 3 June 1523.
  2. John (Tringenstein Castle [de], 3 November 1484 – 15 August 1504?).
  3. Ernest (Dillenburg, 9 April 1486 – 12 October 1486).
  4. Count William I ‘the Rich’ (Dillenburg, 10 April 1487 – Dillenburg Castle, 6 October 1559), succeeded his father in 1516. Married:
    1. in Koblenz on 29 May 1506 to Countess Walburga of Egmont (c. 1489 – 7 March 1529);
    2. in Siegen on 20 September 1531 to Countess Juliane of Stolberg-Wernigerode (Stolberg, 15 February 1506 – Dillenburg, 18 June 1580).
  5. Elisabeth (1488 – Dillenburg, 3 June 1559), married in Siegen in February 1506 to Count John III of Wied [de] (1485[note 4] – 18 May 1533).
  6. Mary (Vianden, February 1491 – Siegen, 1547[note 5]), married in Siegen in February 1506 to Count Jobst I of Holstein-Schauenburg-Pinneberg (1483 – 5 June 1531[note 6]).

The double wedding of Elisabeth and Mary was held at Siegen Castle [de]. A banquet was also held in the city hall in Siegen at which both brides and grooms were present. The feast with the city magistrates was paid for by the brides’ father and the city council donated 16 oxen and 19 pigs for the feast.[21] On 16 February 1506, the ʻBeilagerʼ of the two sisters was celebrated in Dillenburg with the greatest of festivities. The purchase of gold fabric for 747 guilders and silk fabric for 396 guilders at the trade fair in Mainz for these celebrations and the wedding of their brother William in Koblenz in May 1506, as well as the unusually high total expenditure of 13,505 guilders in the accounts of 1505/1506, show that these weddings must have been splendid events.[46]

Ancestors

Ancestors of Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg[47][48][49][50][51][52][53]
Great-great-grandparents Louis II of Hesse
(?–1345)
⚭ 1340
Elisabeth of Sponheim
(?–?)
Frederick V of Nuremberg
(1333–1398)
⚭ 1350
Elisabeth of Meissen
(1329–1375)
Frederick III ‘the Strict’ of Meissen
(1332–1381)
⚭ 1344
Catherine of Henneberg
(?–1397)
Henry II ‘the Mild’ of Brunswick-Lüneburg
(?–1416)
⚭ 1388
Sophie of Pomerania
(?–1406)
Thierry VIII of Katzenelnbogen
(?–1402)
⚭ 1361
Elisabeth of Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein
(?–1389)
Eberhard of Katzenelnbogen
(?–1403)
⚭ 1367
Agnes of Diez
(?–1399)
Eberhard III ‘the Clement’ of Württemberg
(c. 1364–1417)
⚭ 1380
Antonia Visconti
(c. 1360–1405)
Henry II of Montfaucon
(c. 1366–1396)
⚭ 1383
Mary of Chatillon
(?–1394)
Great-grandparents Herman II ‘the Scholar’ of Hesse
(c. 1342–1413)
⚭ 1383
Margaret of Nuremberg
(c. 1363–1406)
Frederick I ‘the Belligerent’ of Saxony
(1370–1428)
⚭ 1402
Catherine of Brunswick-Lüneburg
(?–1442)
John III of Katzenelnbogen
(?–1444)
⚭ 1383
Anne of Katzenelnbogen
(?–1439)
Eberhard IV ‘the Younger’ of Württemberg
(1388–1419)
⚭ 1397/98
Henriette of Montbéliard
(1387–1444)
Grandparents Louis III ‘the Peaceful’ of Hesse
(1402–1458)
⚭ 1433
Anne of Saxony
(1420–1462)
Philip ‘the Elder’ of Katzenelnbogen
(c. 1402–1479)
⚭ 1422
Anne of Württemberg
(1408–1471)
Parents Henry III ‘the Rich’ of Hesse-Marburg
(1440–1483)
⚭ 1458
Anne of Katzenelnbogen
(1443–1494)

Notes

  1. ^ Schutte (1979), p. 42 and Dek (1970), p. 70 mention Dillenburg as place of death, and Vorsterman van Oyen (1882), p. 95 mentions Dillenburg Castle. Assman & Menk (1996), however, mention Siegen Castle as place of death and Joachim (1881), p. 253 mentions Siegen. Brachthäuser (2016), p. 8 doesn’t mention a place of death at all.
  2. ^ Joachim (1881), pp. 252–253 states the date 24 May 1500.
  3. ^ Schutte (1979), p. 42 mentions the date 7 or 17 January 1523
  4. ^ The date of birth 1485 is mentioned by Schutte (1979), p. 42, Dek (1970), p. 71, and Medieval Lands. However, his mother’s date of death is stated as 12 March 1478 by An Online Gotha, and Stammtafel des mediatisierten Hauses Wied. Which of these two dates is incorrect is unclear.
  5. ^ The date of death 1543 in Vorsterman van Oyen (1882), p. 97.
  6. ^ The date of death 5 June 1532 in Vorsterman van Oyen (1882), p. 97.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Schutte (1979), p. 42.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Dek (1970), p. 70.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Joachim (1881), p. 252.
  4. ^ a b Lück (1981), p. 32.
  5. ^ a b c d e Lück (1981), p. 33.
  6. ^ Brachthäuser (2016), p. 1.
  7. ^ a b c d Vorsterman van Oyen (1882), p. 95.
  8. ^ Brachthäuser (2016), p. 8.
  9. ^ a b c Joachim (1881), p. 253.
  10. ^ a b c d Brachthäuser (2016), p. 4.
  11. ^ a b c d Becker (1983), p. 57
  12. ^ Van Ditzhuyzen (2004), pp. 95, 120.
  13. ^ Becker (1983), p. 13.
  14. ^ Becker (1983), p. 54.
  15. ^ a b Huberty, et al. (1981), p. 219.
  16. ^ Lück (1981), p. 27.
  17. ^ Jansen (1979), p. 37.
  18. ^ a b Lück (1981), p. 34.
  19. ^ Lück (1981), p. 41.
  20. ^ Lück (1981), p. 24.
  21. ^ a b Assman & Menk (1996).
  22. ^ Lück (1981), p. 35.
  23. ^ Van Ditzhuyzen (2004), p. 250.
  24. ^ Lück (1981), p. 48.
  25. ^ Dek (1970), p. 72.
  26. ^ Vorsterman van Oyen (1882), p. 98.
  27. ^ a b c Fock (1996), p. 39.
  28. ^ a b Van der Klooster (1996), p. 57.
  29. ^ a b c Van der Klooster (1996), p. 59.
  30. ^ a b c Fock (1996), p. 41.
  31. ^ Fock (1996), pp. 41–42.
  32. ^ a b Fock (1996), p. 42.
  33. ^ Van der Klooster (1996), p. 60.
  34. ^ a b Van der Klooster (1996), p. 63.
  35. ^ Van der Klooster (1996), pp. 63–64.
  36. ^ a b Van der Klooster (1996), p. 64.
  37. ^ Van der Klooster (1996), p. 65.
  38. ^ Fock (1996), pp. 42–44.
  39. ^ Fock (1996), p. 55.
  40. ^ Fock (1996), p. 44.
  41. ^ a b Fock (1996), p. 45.
  42. ^ a b Fock (1996), p. 47.
  43. ^ "Bernard van Orley. Hendrik III van Nassau (1483-1538) with his wife Mencia de Mendoza (1508-1554) and two deceased wives, ca. 1528-1530". RKD – Netherlands Institute for Art History. Retrieved 29 August 2022.
  44. ^ Dek (1970), pp. 70–71.
  45. ^ Vorsterman van Oyen (1882), pp. 95–97.
  46. ^ Becker (1983), p. 55.
  47. ^ Huberty, et al. (1976).
  48. ^ Ehrenkrook, et al. (1928).
  49. ^ Knetsch (1917).
  50. ^ Behr (1854).
  51. ^ Europäische Stammtafeln.
  52. ^ Theroff, Paul. "An Online Gotha". Retrieved 21 August 2022.
  53. ^ Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands. A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families". Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Retrieved 21 August 2022.

Sources

  • Aßmann, Helmut & Menk, Friedhelm (1996). Auf den Spuren von Nassau und Oranien in Siegen (in German). Siegen: Gesellschaft für Stadtmarketing Siegen e.V.
  • Behr, Kamill (1854). Genealogie der in Europa regierenden Fürstenhäuser (in German). Leipzig: Verlag von Bernhard Tauchnitz.
  • Becker, E. (1983) [1950]. Schloss und Stadt Dillenburg. Ein Gang durch ihre Geschichte in Mittelalter und Neuzeit. Zur Gedenkfeier aus Anlaß der Verleihung der Stadtrechte am 20. September 1344 herausgegeben (in German) (Neuauflage ed.). Dillenburg: Der Magistrat der Stadt Dillenburg.
  • Brachthäuser, Christian (1 October 2016). "Kloster, Krypta, Kontroversen. Zum 500. Todesjahr des Siegener Landesherrn Johann V. Graf zu Nassau, Katzenelnbogen, Vianden und Diez, Herr Breda, Grimbergen und Diest (1455–1516)" (PDF). Universitätsstadt Siegen. Retrieved 8 July 2022.
  • Dek, A.W.E. (1970). Genealogie van het Vorstenhuis Nassau (in Dutch). Zaltbommel: Europese Bibliotheek.
  • Van Ditzhuyzen, Reinildis (2004) [1992]. Oranje-Nassau. Een biografisch woordenboek (in Dutch) (3rd ed.). Haarlem: Becht. ISBN 90-230-1124-4.
  • Ehrenkrook, Hans Friedrich von; Förster, Karl & Marchtaler, Kurt Erhard (1928). Ahnenreihen aus allen deutschen Gauen. Beilage zum Archiv für Sippenforschung und allen verwandten Gebieten (in German). Görlitz: Verlag für Sippenforschung und Wappenkunde C.A. Starke.
  • Fock, C.W. (1996). "Teruggevonden ontwerpen voor de tapijtreeks De Nassause Genealogie". In Van der Klooster, L.J.; Tiethoff-Spliethoff, M.E. & Tamse, C.A. (eds.). Jaarboek Oranje-Nassau Museum 1995 (in Dutch). Rotterdam: Barjesteh, Meeuwes & Co Historische Uitgeverij. pp. 39–56. ISBN 90-73714-23-0.
  • Huberty, Michel; Giraud, Alain & Magdelaine, F. & B. (1976). l’Allemagne Dynastique (in French). Vol. Tome I: Hesse-Reuss-Saxe. Le Perreux: Alain Giraud.
  • Huberty, Michel; Giraud, Alain & Magdelaine, F. & B. (1981). l’Allemagne Dynastique (in French). Vol. Tome III: Brunswick-Nassau-Schwarzbourg. Le Perreux: Alain Giraud.
  • Jansen, H.P.H. (1979). "De Bredase Nassaus". In Tamse, C.A. (ed.). Nassau en Oranje in de Nederlandse geschiedenis (in Dutch). Alphen aan den Rijn: A.W. Sijthoff. pp. 11–40. ISBN 90-218-2447-7.
  • Joachim, Ernst (1881). "Johann V. von Nassau-Dillenburg". Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German). Vol. Band 14. Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot. pp. 252–254.
  • Van der Klooster, L.J. (1996). "Johan V of Hendrik III afgebeeld op een van de ontwerpen voor de Nassause tapijten". In Van der Klooster, L.J.; Tiethoff-Spliethoff, M.E. & Tamse, C.A. (eds.). Jaarboek Oranje-Nassau Museum 1995 (in Dutch). Rotterdam: Barjesteh, Meeuwes & Co Historische Uitgeverij. pp. 57–66. ISBN 90-73714-23-0.
  • Knetsch, Carl (1917). Das Haus Brabant. Genealogie der Herzoge von Brabant und der Landgrafen von Hessen (in German). Vol. I. Teil: Vom 9. Jahrhundert bis zu Philipp dem Grossmütigen. Darmstadt: Historischer Verein für das Großherzogtum Hessen.
  • Lück, Alfred (1981) [1967]. Siegerland und Nederland (in German) (2nd ed.). Siegen: Siegerländer Heimatverein e.V.
  • Schutte, O. (1979). "Genealogische gegevens". In Tamse, C.A. (ed.). Nassau en Oranje in de Nederlandse geschiedenis (in Dutch). Alphen aan den Rijn: A.W. Sijthoff. pp. 40–44. ISBN 90-218-2447-7.
  • Vorsterman van Oyen, A.A. (1882). Het vorstenhuis Oranje-Nassau. Van de vroegste tijden tot heden (in Dutch). Leiden: A.W. Sijthoff/Utrecht: J.L. Beijers.
  • "Bernard van Orley. Hendrik III van Nassau (1483-1538) with his wife Mencia de Mendoza (1508-1554) and two deceased wives, ca. 1528-1530". RKD – Netherlands Institute for Art History. Retrieved 29 August 2022.

External links

  • Brabant & Hesse, Part 3. In: An Online Gotha, by Paul Theroff.
  • Hessen. In: Medieval Lands. A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, by Charles Cawley.
  • Nassau. In: Medieval Lands. A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, by Charles Cawley.
  • Nassau Part 4. In: An Online Gotha, by Paul Theroff.
  • Nassau-Dillenburg, Elisabeth Gräfin von (in German). In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS) (in German).
  • Wapenboek van de genealogie van Elisabeth van Hessen, 1490 (in Dutch). In: Royal Dutch Collections.
Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg
Born: May 1466 Died: 17 January 1523
Regnal titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Mary of Looz-Heinsberg
Countess Consort of Nassau-Siegen
11 February 1482 – 30 July 1516
Succeeded by

elisabeth, hesse, marburg, landgravine, 1466, january, 1523, german, elisabeth, landgräfin, hessen, marburg, landgravine, from, house, hesse, marburg, through, marriage, countess, nassau, siegen, heiress, county, katzenelnbogen, which, after, brother, death, c. Landgravine Elisabeth of Hesse Marburg May 1466 17 January 1523 German Elisabeth Landgrafin von Hessen Marburg was a landgravine from the House of Hesse Marburg and through marriage Countess of Nassau Siegen She was heiress to the County of Katzenelnbogen which after her brother s death was claimed both by her and the Landgraviate of Hesse The legal dispute for the County of Katzenelnbogen between the House of Nassau and the House of Hesse lasted until well after her death and is known as the Katzenelnbogische Erbfolgestreit Elisabeth of Hesse MarburgCountess Consort of Nassau SiegenCoat of armsNative nameElisabeth Landgrafin von Hessen MarburgBornMay 1466MarburgDied17 January 1523CologneBuriedSt John s Church Franciscan monastery SiegenReburied St Mary s Church de Siegen 1836Noble familyHouse of Hesse MarburgSpouse s John V Count of Nassau SiegenIssueDetailHenry III William I Elisabeth MaryFatherHenry III the Rich of Hesse MarburgMotherAnne of Katzenelnbogen Contents 1 Biography 2 Elisabeth and John V depicted on one of the Nassau tapestries 3 Issue 4 Ancestors 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBiography EditElisabeth was born in Marburg in May 1466 1 2 as the eldest daughter of Landgrave Henry III the Rich of Hesse Marburg and Countess Anne of Katzenelnbogen 2 3 Count Philip the Elder of Katzenelnbogen Elisabeth s maternal grandfather had two sons The eldest son Count Philip the Younger was married to Countess Ottilie of Nassau Siegen but died already in 1453 The second son Count Eberhard died three years later After becoming a widower in 1471 Philip the Elder remarried in 1474 at the age of 72 to the 32 years old Countess Anne of Nassau Siegen a first cousin of his daughter in law 4 The marriage of Philip the Elder and Anne of Nassau Siegen remained childless so that upon his death in 1479 the County of Katzenelnbogen was inherited by his daughter Anne and her husband Henry III the Rich of Hesse Marburg Elisabeth s parents 5 Elisabeth married in Marburg on 11 February 1482 1 2 to Count John V of Nassau Siegen Breda 9 November 1455 1 2 3 6 7 Dillenburg or Siegen note 1 30 July 1516 1 2 7 8 9 the youngest brother of her step grandmother 1 2 7 The city of Katzenelnbogen Engraving by Matthaus Merian from the Topographia Hassiae 1655 Elisabeth s father died in 1483 he was succeeded by his son William III the Younger 5 The latter stipulated that his sisters Elisabeth and Matilda should be compensated with 50 000 florins John protested against this on behalf of his wife in 1488 At the time of the marriage John had renounced all claims to Elisabeth s inheritance but with the exception of her mother s inheritance 3 William III the Younger died in 1500 without legitimate children 3 5 10 11 His Landgraviate of Hesse Marburg was inherited by Landgrave William II the Middle of Hesse Kassel Matilda renounced her inheritance so that her elder sister Elisabeth remained the sole heir to Katzenelnbogen 5 Indeed Elisabeth laid claim to all her brother s possessions and John immediately assumed the title Count of Katzenelnbogen 3 10 But when the negotiations with William II the Middle of Hesse Kassel began he resigned that title 3 For both Hesse and Nassau the County of Katzenelnbogen was a desirable inheritance not only because of its wealth but also because of its geographical location 5 The county was situated between the Taunus and the Lahn and was very rich due to the possession of a large number of Rhine tolls between Mainz and the border of the Netherlands 4 The county consisted of Rheinfels Sankt Goar Braubach Hohenstein Darmstadt Zwingenberg Russelsheim and Umstadt as well as Eppstein the district of Driedorf and parts of Diez Hadamar Ems Lohnberg Camberg Altweilnau de and Wehrheim 11 The last seven possessions were jointly owned with the Counts of Nassau 3 Because Elisabeth s brother in law Engelbert II of Nassau had no legitimate children he brought Elisabeth s eldest son Henry to his court in Breda and Brussels in 1499 provided for his further education and appointed him his heir After the death of his uncle in 1504 Henry succeeded him in all his possessions 12 13 14 15 16 17 On 24 May 1501 note 2 Emperor Maximilian I forbade William II the Middle to violate the County of Katzenelnbogen or to take violent steps against the House of Nassau 10 John also received some fiefs of Katzenelnbogen from the Duke of Julich and the Abbey of Prum 9 Tensions between Hesse and Nassau increased when William II the Middle took possession of Katzenelnbogen disregarding the rights of Elisabeth 18 All of John s attempts to gain his wife s rights were in vain despite several amicable negotiations To settle the matter by force against the powerful House of Hesse did not occur to him 9 Therefore John filed a complaint with the Reichskammergericht In 1507 the court ruled that half the county should be awarded to Elisabeth William II the Middle refused to accept this judgment 10 18 After the death of Elisabeth s husband John in 1516 their sons Henry and William continued Elisabeth s case with increasing vigour The former s high position and close personal relationship with Roman King Charles V as an educator general and advisor gave the Nassaus powerful support in this protracted legal battle On the other side stood their energetic opponent the young Landgrave Philip I of Hesse He had an advantage because Hesse had gained control of the entire disputed territory which gave him a strong position over the small County of Nassau in addition powerful imperial princes such as Elector Frederick III ʻthe Wiseʼ of Saxony were on his side as allies 11 In 1520 Charles V referred the dispute from the Reichskammergericht to the Reichshofrat This seemed to be very favourable because Alexander Schweis from Herborn who was Henryʼs secretary served as a judge in the latter court 19 It was probably also due to Henryʼs great influence on Charles V that the case was also discussed at the Imperial Diet of Worms in 1521 But there was no final decision there either A commission consisting of the Prince bishops Christoph of Augsburg George of Bamberg and William III of Strasbourg was given the task of re examining the case which had been handled by the most important legal scholars of the time The verdict to which both parties had unconditionally submitted in advance was handed down in Tubingen on 9 May 1523 It was favourable to Elisabeth and awarded her almost the entire inheritance 11 Shortly before the verdict from Tubingen Elisabeth died in Cologne on 17 January 1523 2 7 note 3 In Cologne the Counts of Nassau owned a house das achte Haus von der Goltgassenecken nach St Cunibert hin which made the connection between their possessions in the Netherlands and their counties in Germany easier for them 20 Elisabeth was buried next to her husband in the crypt of St John s Church in the Franciscan monastery in Siegen which her husband had founded 21 In 1836 both were reburied in St Mary s Church de in Siegen 22 As Philip of Hesse refused to hand over Katzenelnbogen to Elisabeth s son and heir William the dispute was not settled until 1557 15 23 24 25 26 Elisabeth and John V depicted on one of the Nassau tapestries Edit Design drawing for the eighth tapestry in the series containing the genealogy of the House of Nassau by Bernard van Orley c 1528 1530 Staatliche Graphische Sammlung Munchen Does this drawing depict John V and his wife Elisabeth Or their son Henry III and his three wives Around 1531 the son of Elisabeth and John V Henry III had a series of eight tapestries with the genealogy of the House of Nassau woven 27 28 These tapestries were lost in the 18th century 27 29 The design drawings for the tapestries were made by Bernard van Orley Seven of those drawings have been preserved 29 30 only the design drawing for the fifth tapestry depicting Count John I of Nassau Siegen and Countess Margaret of the Mark nl is missing 30 The theme of the series was the descent of the House of Nassau whereby the dynastic significance was paramount This genealogy was given extra splendour by the fact that in addition to the direct descent from Count Otto I of Nassau Roman King Adolf was also included in the series 27 28 On each tapestry a man and woman sitting on horseback are depicted facing each other The rather unusual composition remains lively due to the alternation in clothing and poses and the position of the horses The mostly hilly landscape in the background is sometimes interrupted by trees in the foreground The coats of arms in the top corners and the cartouche with the inscription in between are connected by garlands that stand out sharply against the sky It is also clear from the designs for the first and last tapestry that the main scenes were surrounded by wide carpet borders 30 The drawings also show the great care taken with the inscriptions in the cartouches which are written in the same hand on all seven of the surviving drawings and with the heraldic details of the coats of arms 31 With the coats of arms indications have been written in French about inaccuracies especially about the mirror image representation of the male arms It is known that Henry III paid special attention to this aspect and corresponded with his brother William I about it The design for the last tapestry in the series differs from the other designs in that it depicts three women instead of one As the inscription does not mention the identity of the two women in the background this has given rise to much speculation 32 L J van der Klooster curator of the topography department of the Netherlands Institute for Art History argued that the design drawing for the last tapestry contains a clear mistake The text in the cartouche indicates that depicted are John V and Elisabeth of Hesse Marburg the parents of the commissioner of the tapestries Henry III However the horseman depicted in the drawing wears the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece around his neck 29 The coat of arms in the corner of the drawing is also decorated with this collar Now it is remarkable that John V was never a member of the Order of the Golden Fleece So there is a contradiction between text and image Since the discovery of the drawing in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich in 1904 it has been argued that the text in the inscription is incorrect and that the commissioner himself Henry III of Nassau and his three wives are depicted in this drawing The obvious collar of the Golden Fleece the three female figures being his wife Mencia de Mendoza and his two predeceased wives as well as the strong resemblance of both Henry himself and Mencia to other portraits of that couple indicated that 33 Count Henry III of Nassau Breda Portrait by Jan Gossaert 1530 1532 Museu Nacional d Art de Catalunya Barcelona Mencia de Mendoza Portrait by Jan Gossaerts 1500 1550 Musee Conde Chantilly Oise Van der Klooster argued that in a work of art one should always start from the most original form of the object In this drawing he stated it is clear that the inscription in the cartouche as well as the filling in of the shields were added early but somewhat later in the sixteenth century because the colour of the paint indicates this The drawing therefore originally had an empty cartouche and empty shields The collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece around the shield does however belong to the first instance of the drawing Van der Klooster also argued that there is an unmistakable portrait similarity between the horseman and his wife and some portraits of Henry III and Mencia de Mendoza namely those by Jan Gossaert Further Van der Klooster stated that the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece which the horseman wears and which also hangs around his coat of arms marks him as a member of the order According to the statutes a Knight of the Golden Fleece was obliged to wear the insignia Abuses were punished severely John V has never been a Knight of the Golden Fleece but Henry III had been since 1505 Van Orley who worked for the court must have been well aware of this rule He could not afford to make a mistake Van der Klooster stated this being the most essential point in his analysis 34 Van der Klooster further stated that the portrait of Mencia in the drawing has acquired a permanent place in Spanish costume history One could say that it followed the fashion of the international courtiers around Emperor Charles V His sister Archduchess Eleanor is depicted in entirely similar attire in her portraits by Joos van Cleve The German Elisabeth of Hesse Marburg of whom no portraits are known must have been dressed according to a completely different fashion in her day 34 The so called German hat and the wide cloak often with a broad collar determined the fashion image in the Northern European countries 35 Of the nine women in the tapestries eight are on horseback Only the woman whom Van der Klooster regards as Mencia de Mendoza rides a mule According to Van der Klooster in those days especially in Spain the mule was considered the most suitable riding animal for women When in September 1517 Emperor Charles V made his first journey to Spain in the company of a large retinue among them Dutch chroniclers and artists the party came into contact with the mule for the transport of the ladies As far as Van der Klooster could ascertain a woman riding a mule appeared for the first time in Dutch art on a print by Jacob Cornelisz van Oostsanen in the series Counts of Holland However this print is explicitly dated 1 April 1518 The artists who had accompanied the Emperor to Spain could have returned by now The fact that unlike the other countesses the Spanish Mencia de Mendoza is the only one riding on a mule is therefore a factor in the identification according to Van der Klooster 36 According to Van der Klooster the series of tapestries relates to the genealogy of the House of Nassau not to its possessions The tapestry of Engelbert I and Joanne of Polanen does not allude to her rich heritage including Breda which was so important to Henry III Van der Klooster admitted that against his view the fact speaks that the inscription in the cartouche explicitly states only as depicted John V and his wife Elisabeth Also the original series of eight tapestries never included one depicting Henry III and his wives In Van der Klooster s opinion the error lies in the application of the inscription for which he was unable to give an explanation Therefore the fate of this design drawing is that it will continue to carry an internal contradiction according to Van der Klooster 36 His view of the proposed depicted persons led Van der Klooster to the hypothesis that around 1530 the idea of making a tapestry of the commissioner was considered The series then would not have ended with his parents but with Henry III This in itself Van der Klooster considered a reasonable possibility The series would then have consisted of nine and not eight tapestries But Van der Klooster admitted that the present series however always consisted of eight tapestries as the inventory of 19 July 1539 already mentions them huyt pieces de tapisserie de la genealogie de feu monseigneur du lignaige de Nassaw eight pieces of tapestry of the genealogy of the late lord of the lineage of Nassau In Van der Klooster s view the design drawing remains the only reminder of a probably unexecuted plan The existence or non existence of a ninth tapestry according to Van der Klooster is not relevant for the identification of the people as this is only a design drawing 37 C W Fock Professor of the History of Applied Arts at the Institute of Art History of Leiden University argued that there must be very conclusive reasons for opposing the inscription and the coat of arms shown on the drawing precisely because it is so clear that much attention was paid to this aspect The inscription is written in the same 16th century hand as on the other drawings probably contemporary with the designs of the whole series Moreover all historical sources indicate that the last eighth tapestry depicted John V and his wife Elisabeth and not the commissioner Henry III Fock further argued that the face of the man indeed resembles portraits of Henry III However no portraits of John V are known and it is certainly possible that Henry had inherited the features of his father 32 A resemblance of the front woman to the portrait of Mencia de Mendoza is demonstrable especially in the hairstyle the facial features themselves are in fact not very individual 38 Apart from the hairstyle the face of the second woman in the drawing hardly differs from that of the woman in the foreground 39 Fock also pointed out that the view that the mule should be interpreted as a reference to Mencia s Spanish origin cannot be sustained Already on the woodcut of 1518 by Jacob Cornelisz van Oostsanen with the counts and countesses of Holland several women ride mules instead of horses Nor can the braided band pattern on the cloth be interpreted as a clear reference to Spain This motif originally Arabic and Moorish appeared almost simultaneously at the beginning of the 16th century in Italy at the French court and in Germany where artists such as Albrecht Durer and Hans Holbein frequently used it Van Orley who was greatly impressed by Durer whom he also met during his journey through the Netherlands in 1521 may therefore have used this then very fashionable motif as a progressive artist for entirely different reasons 40 Fock did point out that the fact that John V unlike his son had no right to wear the collar of the Golden Fleece and to carry it with his coat of arms is a valid argument 41 Fock continued to argue for the identification of the couple according to the inscription and the coats of arms as John V and Elisabeth as it is known that the series of eight tapestries did not contain a tapestry depicting Henry III accompanied by one or all three of his wives The eighth tapestry must have depicted John V and Elisabeth The inscriptions on the tapestries known not only from the drawings but also from various written sources indicate mainly the intention to glorify the deceased ancestors Apart from emphasising their good and heroic deeds the succession within the family which repeatedly did not go through the eldest son is also explained several times In this context the texts also mention other family members who are not depicted such as the eldest son Adolf I in the fifth tapestry the second son Henry II in the sixth tapestry and the eldest son Engelbert II in the seventh tapestry In the last tapestry the two sons of John V Henry III and William I are mentioned in the same way which is reason enough to assume that it was not the intention to depict them on a tapestry let alone glorify them In addition the inscriptions strongly emphasise on the possessions brought in by the woman In Fock s opinion this also holds the key to the identification of the two unknown women which is related to the inheritance of the County of Katzenelnbogen which was so important for Nassau at the time The inscription on the drawing lists John s wife as Elisabeth daughter of the Landgrave of Hesse It is striking and indicative of the importance of her claim to the County of Katzenelnbogen that this very wording was changed during the execution on the eighth tapestry and she was referred to as the daughter of the Countess of Katzenelnbogen 41 At the time of the creation of the tapestries the Katzenelnbogische Erbfolgestreit was a very important issue for the Nassaus According to Fock the tapestry seems to allude to this by depicting Elisabeth s sister Matilda in the background to the left of Elisabeth who had left the inheritance to Elisabeth The older woman on the left must be the older sister of John V Anne who was married to the last Count of Katzenelnbogen and although she had no legal standing in the matter through her marriage provided moral support for the claims of the Nassau dynasty This solution Fock argued corresponds best to the intention of the tapestries to emphasise the dynastic importance and territorial claims of the family 42 More importantly in Fock s opinion the ages of the two women in the background where there is clearly a generation gap between the woman on the left and the two others are also correct this is in contrast to the ages of Henry III s three wives His first wife Francoise Louise of Savoy Vaud was born before 1486 the second wife Claudia of Chalon in 1498 and the third wife Mencia de Mendoza in 1508 which according to Fock is in no way consistent with the respective ages of the three women in the design drawing the first two women both died at a young age Moreover Fock argued one may seriously doubt whether if it had been the three wives of Henry III the two first wives would not have been treated in a more equal way instead of being treated in such a secondary manner Through Claudia of Chalon the Principality of Orange had just passed to Henry s son in 1530 such an honour for the family that it is almost inconceivable in Fock s view that it would not have expressed in some form in the tapestry if only in a prominent position also for Claudia of Chalon This identification also explains something that in Fock s opinion would otherwise be inexplicable with all the attention paid to the coats of arms that the two shields of the women in the background were left blank Anne of Nassau had the same coat of arms as her brother John V and Matilda of Hesse the same as her sister Elisabeth The indicated coats of arms of John and Elisabeth were therefore enough of a clue Moreover the two blank shields are partly painted over with white it shows through a bit now which could even indicate that the coats of arms would be left out in second instance 42 On the website of the Netherlands Institute for Art History the former employer of Van der Klooster it is stated that the picture depicts Henry III with his wife Mencia de Mendoza and two deceased wives It is also stated there that he was previously identified as his father John V on the basis of a later added erroneous inscription and coat of arms Finally it states that the identification as Henry III is on the basis of the portrait of Mencia de Mendoza her Spanish mule the Order of the Golden Fleece and the three wives 43 Issue EditFrom the marriage of Elisabeth and John the following children were born 1 44 45 Count Henry III Siegen 12 January 1483 Breda Castle 14 September 1538 succeeded his uncle Engelbert II in 1504 Married on 3 August 1503 to Countess Francoise Louise of Savoy Vaud 1485 17 September 1511 in La Fere sur Oise on 24 April 1515 to Claudia of Chalon 1498 Diest 31 May 1521 in Burgos on 30 June 1524 to Mencia de Mendoza y Fonseca Jadraque 1 December 1508 4 January 1554 2nd Marchioness of Cenete since 3 June 1523 John Tringenstein Castle de 3 November 1484 15 August 1504 Ernest Dillenburg 9 April 1486 12 October 1486 Count William I the Rich Dillenburg 10 April 1487 Dillenburg Castle 6 October 1559 succeeded his father in 1516 Married in Koblenz on 29 May 1506 to Countess Walburga of Egmont c 1489 7 March 1529 in Siegen on 20 September 1531 to Countess Juliane of Stolberg Wernigerode Stolberg 15 February 1506 Dillenburg 18 June 1580 Elisabeth 1488 Dillenburg 3 June 1559 married in Siegen in February 1506 to Count John III of Wied de 1485 note 4 18 May 1533 Mary Vianden February 1491 Siegen 1547 note 5 married in Siegen in February 1506 to Count Jobst I of Holstein Schauenburg Pinneberg 1483 5 June 1531 note 6 The double wedding of Elisabeth and Mary was held at Siegen Castle de A banquet was also held in the city hall in Siegen at which both brides and grooms were present The feast with the city magistrates was paid for by the brides father and the city council donated 16 oxen and 19 pigs for the feast 21 On 16 February 1506 the ʻBeilagerʼ of the two sisters was celebrated in Dillenburg with the greatest of festivities The purchase of gold fabric for 747 guilders and silk fabric for 396 guilders at the trade fair in Mainz for these celebrations and the wedding of their brother William in Koblenz in May 1506 as well as the unusually high total expenditure of 13 505 guilders in the accounts of 1505 1506 show that these weddings must have been splendid events 46 Ancestors EditAncestors of Elisabeth of Hesse Marburg 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 Great great grandparents Louis II of Hesse 1345 1340Elisabeth of Sponheim Frederick V of Nuremberg 1333 1398 1350Elisabeth of Meissen 1329 1375 Frederick III the Strict of Meissen 1332 1381 1344Catherine of Henneberg 1397 Henry II the Mild of Brunswick Luneburg 1416 1388Sophie of Pomerania 1406 Thierry VIII of Katzenelnbogen 1402 1361Elisabeth of Nassau Wiesbaden Idstein 1389 Eberhard of Katzenelnbogen 1403 1367Agnes of Diez 1399 Eberhard III the Clement of Wurttemberg c 1364 1417 1380Antonia Visconti c 1360 1405 Henry II of Montfaucon c 1366 1396 1383Mary of Chatillon 1394 Great grandparents Herman II the Scholar of Hesse c 1342 1413 1383Margaret of Nuremberg c 1363 1406 Frederick I the Belligerent of Saxony 1370 1428 1402Catherine of Brunswick Luneburg 1442 John III of Katzenelnbogen 1444 1383Anne of Katzenelnbogen 1439 Eberhard IV the Younger of Wurttemberg 1388 1419 1397 98Henriette of Montbeliard 1387 1444 Grandparents Louis III the Peaceful of Hesse 1402 1458 1433Anne of Saxony 1420 1462 Philip the Elder of Katzenelnbogen c 1402 1479 1422Anne of Wurttemberg 1408 1471 Parents Henry III the Rich of Hesse Marburg 1440 1483 1458Anne of Katzenelnbogen 1443 1494 Notes Edit Schutte 1979 p 42 and Dek 1970 p 70 mention Dillenburg as place of death and Vorsterman van Oyen 1882 p 95 mentions Dillenburg Castle Assman amp Menk 1996 however mention Siegen Castle as place of death and Joachim 1881 p 253 mentions Siegen Brachthauser 2016 p 8 doesn t mention a place of death at all Joachim 1881 pp 252 253 states the date 24 May 1500 Schutte 1979 p 42 mentions the date 7 or 17 January 1523 The date of birth 1485 is mentioned by Schutte 1979 p 42 Dek 1970 p 71 and Medieval Lands However his mother s date of death is stated as 12 March 1478 by An Online Gotha and Stammtafel des mediatisierten Hauses Wied Which of these two dates is incorrect is unclear The date of death 1543 in Vorsterman van Oyen 1882 p 97 The date of death 5 June 1532 in Vorsterman van Oyen 1882 p 97 References Edit a b c d e f Schutte 1979 p 42 a b c d e f g Dek 1970 p 70 a b c d e f g Joachim 1881 p 252 a b Luck 1981 p 32 a b c d e Luck 1981 p 33 Brachthauser 2016 p 1 a b c d Vorsterman van Oyen 1882 p 95 Brachthauser 2016 p 8 a b c Joachim 1881 p 253 a b c d Brachthauser 2016 p 4 a b c d Becker 1983 p 57 Van Ditzhuyzen 2004 pp 95 120 Becker 1983 p 13 Becker 1983 p 54 a b Huberty et al 1981 p 219 Luck 1981 p 27 Jansen 1979 p 37 a b Luck 1981 p 34 Luck 1981 p 41 Luck 1981 p 24 a b Assman amp Menk 1996 Luck 1981 p 35 Van Ditzhuyzen 2004 p 250 Luck 1981 p 48 Dek 1970 p 72 Vorsterman van Oyen 1882 p 98 a b c Fock 1996 p 39 a b Van der Klooster 1996 p 57 a b c Van der Klooster 1996 p 59 a b c Fock 1996 p 41 Fock 1996 pp 41 42 a b Fock 1996 p 42 Van der Klooster 1996 p 60 a b Van der Klooster 1996 p 63 Van der Klooster 1996 pp 63 64 a b Van der Klooster 1996 p 64 Van der Klooster 1996 p 65 Fock 1996 pp 42 44 Fock 1996 p 55 Fock 1996 p 44 a b Fock 1996 p 45 a b Fock 1996 p 47 Bernard van Orley Hendrik III van Nassau 1483 1538 with his wife Mencia de Mendoza 1508 1554 and two deceased wives ca 1528 1530 RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History Retrieved 29 August 2022 Dek 1970 pp 70 71 Vorsterman van Oyen 1882 pp 95 97 Becker 1983 p 55 Huberty et al 1976 Ehrenkrook et al 1928 Knetsch 1917 Behr 1854 Europaische Stammtafeln Theroff Paul An Online Gotha Retrieved 21 August 2022 Cawley Charles Medieval Lands A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families Foundation for Medieval Genealogy Retrieved 21 August 2022 Sources EditAssmann Helmut amp Menk Friedhelm 1996 Auf den Spuren von Nassau und Oranien in Siegen in German Siegen Gesellschaft fur Stadtmarketing Siegen e V Behr Kamill 1854 Genealogie der in Europa regierenden Furstenhauser in German Leipzig Verlag von Bernhard Tauchnitz Becker E 1983 1950 Schloss und Stadt Dillenburg Ein Gang durch ihre Geschichte in Mittelalter und Neuzeit Zur Gedenkfeier aus Anlass der Verleihung der Stadtrechte am 20 September 1344 herausgegeben in German Neuauflage ed Dillenburg Der Magistrat der Stadt Dillenburg Brachthauser Christian 1 October 2016 Kloster Krypta Kontroversen Zum 500 Todesjahr des Siegener Landesherrn Johann V Graf zu Nassau Katzenelnbogen Vianden und Diez Herr Breda Grimbergen und Diest 1455 1516 PDF Universitatsstadt Siegen Retrieved 8 July 2022 Dek A W E 1970 Genealogie van het Vorstenhuis Nassau in Dutch Zaltbommel Europese Bibliotheek Van Ditzhuyzen Reinildis 2004 1992 Oranje Nassau Een biografisch woordenboek in Dutch 3rd ed Haarlem Becht ISBN 90 230 1124 4 Ehrenkrook Hans Friedrich von Forster Karl amp Marchtaler Kurt Erhard 1928 Ahnenreihen aus allen deutschen Gauen Beilage zum Archiv fur Sippenforschung und allen verwandten Gebieten in German Gorlitz Verlag fur Sippenforschung und Wappenkunde C A Starke Fock C W 1996 Teruggevonden ontwerpen voor de tapijtreeks De Nassause Genealogie In Van der Klooster L J Tiethoff Spliethoff M E amp Tamse C A eds Jaarboek Oranje Nassau Museum 1995 in Dutch Rotterdam Barjesteh Meeuwes amp Co Historische Uitgeverij pp 39 56 ISBN 90 73714 23 0 Huberty Michel Giraud Alain amp Magdelaine F amp B 1976 l Allemagne Dynastique in French Vol Tome I Hesse Reuss Saxe Le Perreux Alain Giraud Huberty Michel Giraud Alain amp Magdelaine F amp B 1981 l Allemagne Dynastique in French Vol Tome III Brunswick Nassau Schwarzbourg Le Perreux Alain Giraud Jansen H P H 1979 De Bredase Nassaus In Tamse C A ed Nassau en Oranje in de Nederlandse geschiedenis in Dutch Alphen aan den Rijn A W Sijthoff pp 11 40 ISBN 90 218 2447 7 Joachim Ernst 1881 Johann V von Nassau Dillenburg Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie in German Vol Band 14 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 252 254 Van der Klooster L J 1996 Johan V of Hendrik III afgebeeld op een van de ontwerpen voor de Nassause tapijten In Van der Klooster L J Tiethoff Spliethoff M E amp Tamse C A eds Jaarboek Oranje Nassau Museum 1995 in Dutch Rotterdam Barjesteh Meeuwes amp Co Historische Uitgeverij pp 57 66 ISBN 90 73714 23 0 Knetsch Carl 1917 Das Haus Brabant Genealogie der Herzoge von Brabant und der Landgrafen von Hessen in German Vol I Teil Vom 9 Jahrhundert bis zu Philipp dem Grossmutigen Darmstadt Historischer Verein fur das Grossherzogtum Hessen Luck Alfred 1981 1967 Siegerland und Nederland in German 2nd ed Siegen Siegerlander Heimatverein e V Schutte O 1979 Genealogische gegevens In Tamse C A ed Nassau en Oranje in de Nederlandse geschiedenis in Dutch Alphen aan den Rijn A W Sijthoff pp 40 44 ISBN 90 218 2447 7 Vorsterman van Oyen A A 1882 Het vorstenhuis Oranje Nassau Van de vroegste tijden tot heden in Dutch Leiden A W Sijthoff Utrecht J L Beijers Bernard van Orley Hendrik III van Nassau 1483 1538 with his wife Mencia de Mendoza 1508 1554 and two deceased wives ca 1528 1530 RKD Netherlands Institute for Art History Retrieved 29 August 2022 External links EditBrabant amp Hesse Part 3 In An Online Gotha by Paul Theroff Hessen In Medieval Lands A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley Nassau In Medieval Lands A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley Nassau Part 4 In An Online Gotha by Paul Theroff Nassau Dillenburg Elisabeth Grafin von in German In Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen LAGIS in German Wapenboek van de genealogie van Elisabeth van Hessen 1490 in Dutch In Royal Dutch Collections Elisabeth of Hesse MarburgHouse of Hesse MarburgBorn May 1466 Died 17 January 1523Regnal titlesVacantTitle last held byMary of Looz Heinsberg Countess Consort of Nassau Siegen11 February 1482 30 July 1516 Succeeded byWalburga of Egmont Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elisabeth of Hesse Marburg amp oldid 1134079637, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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