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Philipp I, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg

Philipp I, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg (also known as Philipp the Elder; born: 8 November 1417 at Windecken Castle in Windecken, now part of Nidderau; died: 10 May 1480 in Ingweiler, now called: Ingwiller) was Count of Hanau. The county was divided between him and his nephew, Count Philipp I "the Younger". Philipp the Elder's part of the county was later called Hanau-Lichtenberg; Philipp the Younger's part is known as Hanau-Münzenberg.

Philipp I, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg
Philipp I (the elder) of Hanau-Lichtenberg on his epitaph in the church of St Nikolaus in Babenhausen
Born(1417-11-08)8 November 1417
Windecken Castle in Windecken, now part of Nidderau
Died10 May 1480(1480-05-10) (aged 62)
Ingweiler, now called: Ingwiller
BuriedSt Nikolaus church in Babenhausen
Noble familyHouse of Hanau
Spouse(s)Anna of Lichtenberg
FatherReinhard II, Count of Hanau
MotherKatharina of Nassau-Beilstein

Life

The time before the division of the county

Philipp I was born on 8 November 1417 at Windecken Castle, as the son of Lord Reinhard II of Hanau, who was later raised to Count of Hanau, and his wife Katharina of Nassau-Beilstein. Two days later, he was baptized there. He godparents were Johann Trier, Komtur of the Teutonic Order in Frankfurt and Gertrude of Kronberg, the daughter of Frank X of Kronberg (1381–1423) and Gertrude of Hatzfeld (1381–1409), who was at the time married to her second husband Philipp of Franckenstein.

Originally, a career in the clergy had been planned for Philipp, as he was a younger son. For unknown reasons, this did not happen; instead he engaged in a military career. In 1448, he fought with the Duke of Cleves against the Archbishop of Cologne. His father died in 1451, and was succeeded by his eldest brother, Count Reinhard III.

Division of the county

Context of the division

 
Gravestone of Johann of Hanau-Lichtenberg in the City Church in Babenhausen
 
Count Johann of Hanau-Lichtenberg
 
Count Dieter of Hanau-Lichtenberg

Count Reinhard III died in 1452, after reigning only a year. He was succeeded by his son Philipp "the Younger". At the time, Philipp the Younger was only four years old. This situation presented the Hanau family with a dilemma:

  • They could obey the primogeniture rule, which had been observed in Hanau since 1375. This would mean hoping that Philipp the younger would live to an adult age, marry and have children, who would continue the dynasty. This would have the advantage that all of the family's possessions would remain in a single hand. It would entail the risk that the dynasty might die out, if Philipp the Younger were to die without a male heir.
  • Alternatively, the family could ignore the primogeniture decision and allow the next agnate, Philipp the Elder, to marry. This would have the advantage of significantly increasing the probability that the dynasty continued to exist, but the disadvantage that the county would have to be divided. This model also called for urgent action, as Philipp the Elder was almost 40 years old, which was considered quite an advanced age in the 15th century.

Debating the division

The debate over the division of the county is relatively well documented. Two parties took shape in the country and its ruling family. Since Philipp the Younger was still a minor and his interests were represented by a guardian committee, initially consisting of his maternal grandfather, Count Palatine Otto I of Mosbach, his paternal grandmother Katharina of Nassau-Beilstein and his uncle Philipp the Elder. This committee acted as guardians and regents until the county was divided in 1458. Thereafter, Philipp the Elder acted as the sole guardian, until Philipp the Younger came of age in 1467.

Otto I was opposed to the division. He supported the interests of his daughter Margaret, the widow of Reinhard III and the mother of Philipp the Younger. He sought to position his grandson as the sole heir of the whole county.

The elderly Countess Dowager, Katharina of Nassau-Beilstein, was indifferent as to whether the line was continued via her grandson, Philipp the Younger, or via her second, son Philipp the Elder. She held that the danger of the House of Hanau dying out could be reduced by allowing Philipp the Elder to marry, since he had already proven his ability to procreate.[1]

The supporters of Philipp the Elder organized a letter-writing campaign. Relatives of the Count and the most important organizations among their subjects — in particular the four cities in the county, Hanau, Windecken, Babenhausen and Steinau, and the associations of the Burgmannen of Babenhausen Castle and the imperial castle of Gelnhausen — as well as the vassals of the Counts of Hanau, all wrote to Otto I and requested that Philipp the Elder be allowed to marry. These letters are archived in the Hessian State Archive at Marburg.

Partition treaty of 1458

When his daughter Margaret died in 1457, Count Palatine Otto I no longer had a reason to oppose the division. This tipped the balance in favour of dividing the country. A treaty to that effect was sealed in January 1458. Philipp the Elder received the part of the county south of the river Main, that is the district of Babenhausen and the Hanau share of Umstadt. So, the downside of a partition was mitigated by giving Philipp the Elder much less than half the county. Even so, Philipp the Elder was happy that he was finally allowed to marry, and did so later that year. In both parts, the primogeniture statute would continue to apply.

In retrospect, the decision turned out well, even if Philipp the Younger did not die childless, as had been feared. Philipp the Elder and his descendants managed to extend their county considerably through their marriages. When the last male-line descendant of Philipp the Younger died in 1642, the country was re-united under Friedrich Casimir, a descendant of Philipp the Elder.

Naming the parts

To distinguish between the two parts of the county, the part ruled by Philipp the Elder was called Hanau-Lichtenberg after he inherited Lichtenberg in 1480.[2] The other part was officially named Hanau-Münzenberg in 1496. In the literature, the names Hanau-Lichterberg and Hanau-Münzenberg are used to distinguish the parts before these dates, even though, strictly speaking, that is an anachronism.

Reign

In 1458, Philipp the Elder took over the regency for his nephew, Philipp the Younger. This meant that the county was still effectively united, until Philipp the Younger came of age in 1467. Philipp the Elder then moved to Babenhausen, where he added to the existing castle as a residence for himself and his family. The east wing was built in 1460.

In this period he co-operated politically with Landgrave Heinrich III of Hesse, Elector Palatine Friedrich I, the counts of Henneberg and Elector Rupert of Cologne, a relative of the Elector Palatine. In 1468, he decreed that the primogeniture rules would be followed in his part of the county, meaning that all but one of his sons would have to choose an ecclesiastical career. Militarily, he fought on the side of Emperor Friedrich in a conflict between the Holy Roman Empire and France over Burgundy and in a military campaign against the Turks.

In 1480, the last Lord of Lichtenberg, Jakob of Lichtenberg, died childless. Philipp the Elder inherited one half of Lichtenberg, on behalf of his children, because his wife, Anna of Lichtenberg, who had been a niece of Jakob, had already died. The other half was inherited by Anna's sister, Elisabeth, who was married to Count Simon Wecker of Zweibrücken-Bitsch. By this inheritance, Philipp gained a substantial amount of territory, much of it in the Alsace, making the previously rather small Hanau-Lichtenberg almost as large as Hanau-Münzenberg. The Zimmern Chronicle comments in the inheritance: We can infer how much power and prestige the Barons of Lichterberg in the Alsace must have had, from the power and prestige their heirs, the houses of Bitsch and Hanau, have in our days.[3]

Death

 
Epitaphs of Philipp the Elder of Hanau-Lichtenberg, his wife Anna of Lichtenberg, and sons Johann and Dieter in the City Church in Babenhausen
 
Grave stone of Philipp the Elder in the City Church in Babenhausen

Philipp the Elder died on 10 May 1480, just one day after the partition agreement over the inheritance with Count Simon Wecker of Zweibrücken-Bitsch had been signed. He was buried in the St. Nikolaus Church in Babenhausen. The red sandstone Epitaphs for him and his wife and two of his sons, who died in childhood, have been preserved.[4]

Marriage and issue

Philipp the Elder married on 6 September 1458 in Hanau with Anna of Lichtenberg, (25 October 1442 – 24 January 1474), heiress of the Lordship of Lichtenberg. They had the following children:

  1. Johann (1460 – 4 September 1473), buried in the church of St Nikolaus in Babenhausen
  2. Philipp II (31 May 1462 in Hanau, – 22 August 1504 in Babenhausen)
  3. Margaret (15 May 1463, Lichtenberg – 26 May 1504), married to Count Adolf III of Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein
  4. Ludwig (23 August 1464; 30 December 1484 in Trent)
  5. Anna (d. 1491), a nun in the Marienborn Abbey
  6. Dieter (about 1468 – 25 February 1473[5]), buried in the Church of St. Nikolaus in Babenhausen
  7. Albrecht (before 1474 – 24 June 1491), buried in Buchsweiler

Moreover, Philipp had at least one extramarital affair, with whom is not recorded, from which had these sons:

  1. Johann of Hanau-Lichtenberg (dates unknown, mentioned in 1463), clergyman
  2. Reinhard Hanauer (dates unknown, mentioned in 1512), provost at Neuweiler

Ancestors

References

  • Reinhard Dietrich: Die Landesverfassung in dem Hanauischen = Hanauer Geschichtsblätter , vol. 34, Hanau, 1996, ISBN 3-9801933-6-5
  • Paul-Joachim Heinig: Kaiser Friedrich III. und Hessen, in: Hessisches Jahrbuch für Landesgeschichte, vol. 32, p. 63 ff
  • J. G. Lehmann: Urkundliche Geschichte der Grafschaft Hanau-Lichtenberg im unteren Elsasse, 2 vols., 1862, reprinted: Pirmasens, 1970
  • Sebastian Scholz: Die „Ewige Anbetung“ Philipps I. von Hanau-Lichtenberg und seiner Familie. Ausdrucksformen adeliger Memoria und Frömmigkeit im Spätmittelalter, in: Beiträge zur Geschichte der Grafschaft Hanau-Lichtenberg. Herausgegeben zum 20-jährigen Jubiläum der Partnerschaft zwischen den beiden ehemaligen gräflichen Residenzstädten Babenhausen und Bouxwiller = Babenhausen einst und jetzt, vol. 31, 2004, p. 19 ff
  • Sebastian Scholz: Die Inschriften der Stadt Darmstadt und des Landkreises Darmstadt-Dieburg und Groß-Gerau = Die deutschen Inschriften, vol. 49 = series Mainz, vol. 6, ed. by Akademie der Wissenschaften Mainz, Wiesbaden, 1999
  • Reinhard Suchier: Genealogie des Hanauer Grafenhauses, in: Festschrift des Hanauer Geschichtsvereins zu seiner fünfzigjährigen Jubelfeier am 27. August 1894, Hanau, 1894
  • Ernst J. Zimmermann: Hanau Stadt und Land, 3rd ed., Hanau, 1919, reprinted: 1978.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Philipp the Elder had at least one illegitimate son, Johann of Hanau-Lichtenberg.
  2. ^ Strictly speaking, one should call his territory Hanau-Babenhausen before 1480, but this is rarely done
  3. ^ Zimmern Chronicle, vol. 1, p. 467
  4. ^ Sebastian Scholz
  5. ^ Scholz, p.67, says it was on 3 March 1474
Philipp I, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg
House of Hanau
Born: 8 November 1417 Died: 10 May 1480
Preceded by
Philipp the Younger
as Count of Hanau
Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg
1458–1480
Succeeded by
Philipp II

philipp, count, hanau, lichtenberg, also, known, philipp, elder, born, november, 1417, windecken, castle, windecken, part, nidderau, died, 1480, ingweiler, called, ingwiller, count, hanau, county, divided, between, nephew, count, philipp, younger, philipp, eld. Philipp I Count of Hanau Lichtenberg also known as Philipp the Elder born 8 November 1417 at Windecken Castle in Windecken now part of Nidderau died 10 May 1480 in Ingweiler now called Ingwiller was Count of Hanau The county was divided between him and his nephew Count Philipp I the Younger Philipp the Elder s part of the county was later called Hanau Lichtenberg Philipp the Younger s part is known as Hanau Munzenberg Philipp I Count of Hanau LichtenbergPhilipp I the elder of Hanau Lichtenberg on his epitaph in the church of St Nikolaus in BabenhausenBorn 1417 11 08 8 November 1417Windecken Castle in Windecken now part of NidderauDied10 May 1480 1480 05 10 aged 62 Ingweiler now called IngwillerBuriedSt Nikolaus church in BabenhausenNoble familyHouse of HanauSpouse s Anna of LichtenbergFatherReinhard II Count of HanauMotherKatharina of Nassau Beilstein Contents 1 Life 1 1 The time before the division of the county 1 2 Division of the county 1 2 1 Context of the division 1 2 2 Debating the division 1 2 3 Partition treaty of 1458 1 2 4 Naming the parts 1 3 Reign 1 4 Death 2 Marriage and issue 3 Ancestors 4 References 5 FootnotesLife EditThe time before the division of the county Edit Philipp I was born on 8 November 1417 at Windecken Castle as the son of Lord Reinhard II of Hanau who was later raised to Count of Hanau and his wife Katharina of Nassau Beilstein Two days later he was baptized there He godparents were Johann Trier Komtur of the Teutonic Order in Frankfurt and Gertrude of Kronberg the daughter of Frank X of Kronberg 1381 1423 and Gertrude of Hatzfeld 1381 1409 who was at the time married to her second husband Philipp of Franckenstein Originally a career in the clergy had been planned for Philipp as he was a younger son For unknown reasons this did not happen instead he engaged in a military career In 1448 he fought with the Duke of Cleves against the Archbishop of Cologne His father died in 1451 and was succeeded by his eldest brother Count Reinhard III Division of the county Edit Context of the division Edit Gravestone of Johann of Hanau Lichtenberg in the City Church in Babenhausen Count Johann of Hanau Lichtenberg Count Dieter of Hanau LichtenbergCount Reinhard III died in 1452 after reigning only a year He was succeeded by his son Philipp the Younger At the time Philipp the Younger was only four years old This situation presented the Hanau family with a dilemma They could obey the primogeniture rule which had been observed in Hanau since 1375 This would mean hoping that Philipp the younger would live to an adult age marry and have children who would continue the dynasty This would have the advantage that all of the family s possessions would remain in a single hand It would entail the risk that the dynasty might die out if Philipp the Younger were to die without a male heir Alternatively the family could ignore the primogeniture decision and allow the next agnate Philipp the Elder to marry This would have the advantage of significantly increasing the probability that the dynasty continued to exist but the disadvantage that the county would have to be divided This model also called for urgent action as Philipp the Elder was almost 40 years old which was considered quite an advanced age in the 15th century Debating the division Edit The debate over the division of the county is relatively well documented Two parties took shape in the country and its ruling family Since Philipp the Younger was still a minor and his interests were represented by a guardian committee initially consisting of his maternal grandfather Count Palatine Otto I of Mosbach his paternal grandmother Katharina of Nassau Beilstein and his uncle Philipp the Elder This committee acted as guardians and regents until the county was divided in 1458 Thereafter Philipp the Elder acted as the sole guardian until Philipp the Younger came of age in 1467 Otto I was opposed to the division He supported the interests of his daughter Margaret the widow of Reinhard III and the mother of Philipp the Younger He sought to position his grandson as the sole heir of the whole county The elderly Countess Dowager Katharina of Nassau Beilstein was indifferent as to whether the line was continued via her grandson Philipp the Younger or via her second son Philipp the Elder She held that the danger of the House of Hanau dying out could be reduced by allowing Philipp the Elder to marry since he had already proven his ability to procreate 1 The supporters of Philipp the Elder organized a letter writing campaign Relatives of the Count and the most important organizations among their subjects in particular the four cities in the county Hanau Windecken Babenhausen and Steinau and the associations of the Burgmannen of Babenhausen Castle and the imperial castle of Gelnhausen as well as the vassals of the Counts of Hanau all wrote to Otto I and requested that Philipp the Elder be allowed to marry These letters are archived in the Hessian State Archive at Marburg Partition treaty of 1458 Edit When his daughter Margaret died in 1457 Count Palatine Otto I no longer had a reason to oppose the division This tipped the balance in favour of dividing the country A treaty to that effect was sealed in January 1458 Philipp the Elder received the part of the county south of the river Main that is the district of Babenhausen and the Hanau share of Umstadt So the downside of a partition was mitigated by giving Philipp the Elder much less than half the county Even so Philipp the Elder was happy that he was finally allowed to marry and did so later that year In both parts the primogeniture statute would continue to apply In retrospect the decision turned out well even if Philipp the Younger did not die childless as had been feared Philipp the Elder and his descendants managed to extend their county considerably through their marriages When the last male line descendant of Philipp the Younger died in 1642 the country was re united under Friedrich Casimir a descendant of Philipp the Elder Naming the parts Edit To distinguish between the two parts of the county the part ruled by Philipp the Elder was called Hanau Lichtenberg after he inherited Lichtenberg in 1480 2 The other part was officially named Hanau Munzenberg in 1496 In the literature the names Hanau Lichterberg and Hanau Munzenberg are used to distinguish the parts before these dates even though strictly speaking that is an anachronism Reign Edit In 1458 Philipp the Elder took over the regency for his nephew Philipp the Younger This meant that the county was still effectively united until Philipp the Younger came of age in 1467 Philipp the Elder then moved to Babenhausen where he added to the existing castle as a residence for himself and his family The east wing was built in 1460 In this period he co operated politically with Landgrave Heinrich III of Hesse Elector Palatine Friedrich I the counts of Henneberg and Elector Rupert of Cologne a relative of the Elector Palatine In 1468 he decreed that the primogeniture rules would be followed in his part of the county meaning that all but one of his sons would have to choose an ecclesiastical career Militarily he fought on the side of Emperor Friedrich in a conflict between the Holy Roman Empire and France over Burgundy and in a military campaign against the Turks In 1480 the last Lord of Lichtenberg Jakob of Lichtenberg died childless Philipp the Elder inherited one half of Lichtenberg on behalf of his children because his wife Anna of Lichtenberg who had been a niece of Jakob had already died The other half was inherited by Anna s sister Elisabeth who was married to Count Simon Wecker of Zweibrucken Bitsch By this inheritance Philipp gained a substantial amount of territory much of it in the Alsace making the previously rather small Hanau Lichtenberg almost as large as Hanau Munzenberg The Zimmern Chronicle comments in the inheritance We can infer how much power and prestige the Barons of Lichterberg in the Alsace must have had from the power and prestige their heirs the houses of Bitsch and Hanau have in our days 3 Death Edit Epitaphs of Philipp the Elder of Hanau Lichtenberg his wife Anna of Lichtenberg and sons Johann and Dieter in the City Church in Babenhausen Grave stone of Philipp the Elder in the City Church in BabenhausenPhilipp the Elder died on 10 May 1480 just one day after the partition agreement over the inheritance with Count Simon Wecker of Zweibrucken Bitsch had been signed He was buried in the St Nikolaus Church in Babenhausen The red sandstone Epitaphs for him and his wife and two of his sons who died in childhood have been preserved 4 Marriage and issue EditPhilipp the Elder married on 6 September 1458 in Hanau with Anna of Lichtenberg 25 October 1442 24 January 1474 heiress of the Lordship of Lichtenberg They had the following children Johann 1460 4 September 1473 buried in the church of St Nikolaus in Babenhausen Philipp II 31 May 1462 in Hanau 22 August 1504 in Babenhausen Margaret 15 May 1463 Lichtenberg 26 May 1504 married to Count Adolf III of Nassau Wiesbaden Idstein Ludwig 23 August 1464 30 December 1484 in Trent Anna d 1491 a nun in the Marienborn Abbey Dieter about 1468 25 February 1473 5 buried in the Church of St Nikolaus in Babenhausen Albrecht before 1474 24 June 1491 buried in BuchsweilerMoreover Philipp had at least one extramarital affair with whom is not recorded from which had these sons Johann of Hanau Lichtenberg dates unknown mentioned in 1463 clergyman Reinhard Hanauer dates unknown mentioned in 1512 provost at NeuweilerAncestors EditAncestors of Philipp I Count of Hanau Lichtenberg8 Ulrich III Lord of Hanau 1310 1370 4 Ulrich IV Lord of Hanau c 1330 1380 9 Adelheid of Nassau Wiesbaden 1327 1344 2 Reinhard II Count of Hanau 1369 1451 10 Eberhard of Wertheim d 1373 5 Elisabeth of Wertheim 1347 1378 11 Katharina of Nuremberg Hohenzollern died after 1373 1 Philipp I Count of Hanau Lichtenberg12 Henry I Count of Nassau Beilstein died between 1378 and 1380 6 Henry II Count of Nassau Beilstein d 1412 13 Meyna of Westerburg d 1388 3 Katharina of Nassau Beilstein d 1459 14 Arnold of Randerode7 Katharina of Randerode d 1415 References EditReinhard Dietrich Die Landesverfassung in dem Hanauischen Hanauer Geschichtsblatter vol 34 Hanau 1996 ISBN 3 9801933 6 5 Paul Joachim Heinig Kaiser Friedrich III und Hessen in Hessisches Jahrbuch fur Landesgeschichte vol 32 p 63 ff J G Lehmann Urkundliche Geschichte der Grafschaft Hanau Lichtenberg im unteren Elsasse 2 vols 1862 reprinted Pirmasens 1970 Sebastian Scholz Die Ewige Anbetung Philipps I von Hanau Lichtenberg und seiner Familie Ausdrucksformen adeliger Memoria und Frommigkeit im Spatmittelalter in Beitrage zur Geschichte der Grafschaft Hanau Lichtenberg Herausgegeben zum 20 jahrigen Jubilaum der Partnerschaft zwischen den beiden ehemaligen graflichen Residenzstadten Babenhausen und Bouxwiller Babenhausen einst und jetzt vol 31 2004 p 19 ff Sebastian Scholz Die Inschriften der Stadt Darmstadt und des Landkreises Darmstadt Dieburg und Gross Gerau Die deutschen Inschriften vol 49 series Mainz vol 6 ed by Akademie der Wissenschaften Mainz Wiesbaden 1999 Reinhard Suchier Genealogie des Hanauer Grafenhauses in Festschrift des Hanauer Geschichtsvereins zu seiner funfzigjahrigen Jubelfeier am 27 August 1894 Hanau 1894 Ernst J Zimmermann Hanau Stadt und Land 3rd ed Hanau 1919 reprinted 1978 Footnotes Edit Philipp the Elder had at least one illegitimate son Johann of Hanau Lichtenberg Strictly speaking one should call his territory Hanau Babenhausen before 1480 but this is rarely done Zimmern Chronicle vol 1 p 467 Sebastian Scholz Scholz p 67 says it was on 3 March 1474 Philipp I Count of Hanau LichtenbergHouse of HanauBorn 8 November 1417 Died 10 May 1480Preceded byPhilipp the Youngeras Count of Hanau Count of Hanau Lichtenberg1458 1480 Succeeded byPhilipp II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philipp I Count of Hanau Lichtenberg amp oldid 1155910264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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