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Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel

The Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (German: Fürstentum Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel) was a subdivision of the Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg, whose history was characterised by numerous divisions and reunifications. It had an area of 3,828 square kilometres in the mid 17th century.[1] Various dynastic lines of the House of Welf ruled Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel until the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806. As a result of the Congress of Vienna, its successor state, the Duchy of Brunswick, was created in 1815.

Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
Fürstentum Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel (German)
1269–1815
Coat of arms
  The Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel in 1789
StatusState of the Holy Roman Empire (until 1806)
CapitalBrunswick 1235–1432, 1753–1815
Wolfenbüttel 1432–1753
Common languagesLow German, German
GovernmentPrincipality
Historical era
• Partitioned from Brunswick-Lüneburg
1269
• Acquired by Göttingen; Grubenhagen split off
1292
• Re-partitioned from Göttingen
1344
• Calenberg split off
1432
1484–95
• Joined Saxon Circle (Lower Saxon Circle from 1512)
1500
• Regained Calenberg and Göttingen
1584
• Occupied Grubenhagen
1596–1617
• Wolfenbüttel line extinct; Calenberg and Göttingen to House of Hanover
1635
• Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern split off
1667–1735
• Annexed to the Kingdom of Westphalia (Napoleonic Wars)
1807–1813
• Formally re-established as the Duchy of Brunswick
1815

History edit

Middle Ages edit

After Otto the Child, grandchild of Henry the Lion, had been given the former allodial seat of his family (located in the area of present-day eastern Lower Saxony and northern Saxony-Anhalt) by Emperor Frederick II on 21 August 1235 as an imperial enfeoffment under the name of the Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg, the duchy was divided in 1267–1269 by his sons.

Albert I (also called Albert the Tall) (1236–1279) was given the regions around Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Einbeck-Grubenhagen and Göttingen-Oberwald. He thus founded the Old House of Brunswick and laid the basis for what became, later, the Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. His brother John (1242–1277) inherited the land around Lüneburg and founded the Old House of Lüneburg. The town of Brunswick remained under joint rule.

The area of Brunswick(-Wolfenbüttel) was further subdivided in the succeeding decades. For example, the lines of Grubenhagen and Göttingen were split for a while. In a similar way, in 1432 the estates between the Deister hills and the Leine river, that had been gained in the meantime from the Middle House of Brunswick, split away to form the Principality of Calenberg. There were further reunifications and divisions.

 
Coat of arms of the Duchy in Schedel's World Chronicle of 1493

In the meanwhile the dukes became weary of the constant disputes with the citizens of the town of Brunswick and, in 1432, moved their Residenz to the water castle of Wolfenbüttel, which lay in a marshy depression of the river Oker about 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) south of Brunswick. The castle built here for the Brunswick-Lüneburg dukes—together with the ducal chancery, the consistory, the courts and the archives—became the nerve centre of a giant region, from which the Wolfenbüttel-Brunswick part of the overall duchy was ruled. For a long time, it also governed the principalities of Calenberg-Göttingen and Grubenhagen, the Prince-Bishopric of Halberstadt, large parts of the Prince-Bishopric of Hildesheim, the counties of Hohnstein and Regenstein, the baronies of Klettenberg and Lohra and parts of Hoya on the Lower Weser. The importance of this court was signified by the number of craftsmen needed. Hundreds of timber-framed buildings were built for the court, for its citizens and for ducal facilities, initially randomly, later designed to ducal requirements and for fire protection. In the heyday of the town's development its districts were named after various dukes: the Auguststadt in the west, the Juliusstadt in the east and the Heinrichstadt.

Following the twelfth division of the duchy in 1495, whereby the Principality of Brunswick-Calenberg-Göttingen was re-divided into its component territories, Duke Henry the Elder was given the land of Brunswick, to which the name of the new Residenz at Wolfenbüttel was added. From then on the name of the principality became "Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel".

Early modern times edit

 
Coat of arms of the principality in early modern times (at Wolfenbüttel Palace)

The reigns of dukes Henry the Younger, Julius and Henry Julius followed, under whose lordship the Residenz of Wolfenbüttel was expanded and the principality gained a Germany-wide standing.

In 1500 Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel became part of the Lower Saxon Circle within the Holy Roman Empire.

From 1519 to 1523 the principality went to war with the principalities of Hildesheim and Lüneburg in the Hildesheim Diocesan Feud which, despite a resounding defeat in the Battle of Soltau, eventually resulted in large territorial gains accruing to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.

 
Ducatus Brunsvicensis, 1645
 
Schloss Wolfenbüttel

In the Thirty Years War Wolfenbüttel was the strongest fortress in North Germany but survived the war heavily damaged. The Wolfenbüttel line died out during the war.

In 1571 the castle and village of Calvörde became part of the principality thanks to Duke Julius of Brunswick.

In 1635 Duke Augustus the Younger, from the collateral line of Lüneburg-Dannenberg, took over the reins of power in the principality and founded the New House of Brunswick. Under his rule, Wolfenbüttel reached its cultural zenith. One of his greatest achievements was the building of the Wolfenbüttel Library, the largest in Europe in its day. In 1671 an old pipe dream of the House of Welf dukes came true when the joint armies of the different dynastic lines were able to capture the town of Brunswick and add it to their domain.

In 1735 when the dynastic line died out another collateral line emerged: the Brunswick-Bevern line founded in 1666.

In 1753–1754 the residence of the dukes of Wolfenbüttel returned to Brunswick, to the newly built Brunswick Palace.

The town thus lost the independence it had enjoyed since the 15th century. In the process, the duke followed the trend and did not interfere with anything, including work on the new castle, begun in 1718 by Hermann Korb on the Grauer Hof which was still not finished. The effect on Wolfenbüttel was catastrophic, as can be seen from the timber-framed houses built later on. 4,000 townsfolk followed the ducal family and Wolfenbüttel's population sank from 12,000 to 7,000. Only the archives, the ecclesiastical office and the library remained as a link to earlier times. From Brunswick there were jibes that Wolfenbüttel had deteriorated into a "widows' residence" (Witwensitz).

The extensive gardens in front of the three town gates (the Herzogtor, Harztor and Augusttor) were leased to the former gardeners as an emphyteusis. As a consequence jam factories were established which were characteristic of Wolfenbüttel until the 20th century. In front of the Herzogtor, the number of gardens grew, until they eventually reached the Lechlum Wood (Lechlumer Holz). Its southern edge was graced by the little Lustschloss of Antoinettenruh, built in 1733 instead of a garden house, a work by the master builder, Hermann Korb, who was so important to Wolfenbüttel. Wolfenbüttel became a town of schools. In 1753 the teachers' training college was founded, which began in the orphanage and later moved to the building of the present-day Harztorwall School.

Politically Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel was one of Prussia's closest allies. Whilst shortly beforehand the Habsburg emperor had been the most important focal point through political marriages, the Wolfenbüttel line of the Welfs became closely linked to the Hohenzollerns through the marriage of the Prussian Crown Prince Frederick to Elisabeth Christine.[2] The marriage was arranged by Frederick William I of Prussia and Ferdinand Albert. They also founded the "brotherhood in arms" between the little state and the great Prussian kingdom. Numerous Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel officers served in high positions in the Prussian Army, most notably during the Seven Years' War. The regiments of the principality screened the allied army in western Prussia and, in particular, the allied Electorate of Hanover. An outstanding representative of the military alliance between Brunswick and Prussia was the Duke of Brunswick and Lüneburg, the hereditary Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.

During Charles I's era, there were great achievements in the cultural and scientific fields: the theatre was promoted and education encouraged. In 1753 the ducal art and natural history collection—forerunner of the Natural History Museum—was founded. These substantial collections had been amassed by the Brunswick dukes. This enterprise was supported by Abbot Jerusalem, the founder of the Collegium Carolinum. Whilst Wolfenbüttel waned, Brunswick now experienced a cultural boom.

In August 1784 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe stayed in Brunswick on a political mission, when he accompanied the Weimarsch minister, his duke, Charles Augustus. At a time when the political situation between Austria and Prussia had heated up once again, the small and medium-sized German states planned the creation of a larger princely state as a counterbalancing force. Duke Charles William Ferdinand of Brunswick was to be asked to join this league of princes (Fürstenbund) which he did on 30 August.

The secret mission was disguised as a family visit at the time of the Autumn Fair. court life determined the timing of the stay in the Residenz castle on Bohlweg.

Napoleonic era and transfer to the Duchy of Brunswick edit

As a result of the German Mediatisation of 25 February 1803 the principality was given the territories of the secularised imperial abbeys of Gandersheim and Helmstedt. In 1806 Duke Charles William Ferdinand was mortally wounded as a Prussian general in the Battle of Auerstedt. After a short interregnum Brunswick was occupied from 1807 to 1813 by the French and became part of the Kingdom of Westphalia.

After the end of Napoleonic rule the state was re-established under the name of the Duchy of Brunswick.

Collateral line in Bevern edit

The Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern emerged from an inheritance dispute between Ferdinand Albert I and his brothers. In 1667 Ferdinand Albert was awarded the castle of Bevern near Holzminden. He — and later his son Ferdinand Albert II — were princes of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern. In 1735 Ferdinand Albert II took over the Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, the subordinate principality returning to the overarching Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.

Economic and social history edit

The role of farmers edit

According to Bornstedt [3] serfdom in the state was abolished with the "Recess of 17 May 1433" by Henry the Peaceful. According to Bornstedt, Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel was therefore the first principality in the Holy Roman Empire to do away with feudalism. The recess laid down that all arbitrariness (Willkür) in the levies on stewards, or Meier, of feudal manors, particularly on the death of the farmer, were cancelled. the Grundherr or 'lord of the manor' continued to be the owner of the Meier estate, but now the Meier could also quit. This change usually meant that the Meier family did not move out when the contract expired or when the farmer died; i.e. that the family were not prematurely evicted as would have been the case before. In 1563 it was decreed by Henry the Younger that every 6 years Meier and Grundherr had to negotiate the extension of the estate lease; later this was increased to 9 years. In his Landtag farewell in 1597, "Duke" Henry Julius made the farms inheritable.

With the Brunswick redemption law (Ablösungsordnung) of 20 December 1834 by the state's legal successor, the Duchy of Brunswick, the dependence of the farmers was abolished. Farmers could now purchase the land freehold and the money required could be loaned from the ducal lending office. At the end of the 19th century Flurbereinigung or land consolidation took place.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Wilson, Peter (2002). German Armies: War and German Society, 1648–1806. p. 21. ISBN 1135370532.
  2. ^ Werner Knopp, Im Schatten des großen Bruders: Braunschweig und Preußen in friderizianischer Zeit, Braunschweigische Museumsvorträge 1, Braunschweig: Braunschweigisches Landesmuseum, 1986 (in German) OCLC 180492556
  3. ^ Bornstedt, Wilhelm (ed), Aus der Geschichte von Rautheim an der Wabe, pp. 28 ff.

Sources edit

  • Wilhelm Havemann: Geschichte der Lande Braunschweig und Lüneburg. 3 vols. Repr. Hirschheydt, Hannover 1974–75, ISBN 3-7777-0843-7 (Original ed: Verlag der Dietrich'schen Buchhandlung, Göttingen 1853–1857, online at Google Books) (in German)
  • Hans Patze (et al.): Geschichte Niedersachsens. 7 vols. Hahnsche Buchhandlung, Hannover 1977- (Veröffentlichungen der Historischen Kommission für Niedersachsen und Bremen, 36) (in German) ()
  • Gudrun Pischke: Die Landesteilungen der Welfen im Mittelalter. Lax, Hildesheim 1987, ISBN 3-7848-3654-2 (in German)

External links edit

  • The House of Welf
  • Karte von Niedersachsen am Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts
  • Zur Rolle der Bauern im Duchy of BS-WF auf der Cremlingen.de
  • Castle of the House of Welf at Wolfenbüttel

principality, brunswick, wolfenbüttel, german, fürstentum, braunschweig, wolfenbüttel, subdivision, duchy, brunswick, lüneburg, whose, history, characterised, numerous, divisions, reunifications, area, square, kilometres, 17th, century, various, dynastic, line. The Principality of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel German Furstentum Braunschweig Wolfenbuttel was a subdivision of the Duchy of Brunswick Luneburg whose history was characterised by numerous divisions and reunifications It had an area of 3 828 square kilometres in the mid 17th century 1 Various dynastic lines of the House of Welf ruled Brunswick Wolfenbuttel until the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806 As a result of the Congress of Vienna its successor state the Duchy of Brunswick was created in 1815 Principality of Brunswick WolfenbuttelFurstentum Braunschweig Wolfenbuttel German 1269 1815Coat of arms The Principality of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel in 1789StatusState of the Holy Roman Empire until 1806 CapitalBrunswick 1235 1432 1753 1815Wolfenbuttel 1432 1753Common languagesLow German GermanGovernmentPrincipalityHistorical eraMiddle AgesEarly modern era Partitioned from Brunswick Luneburg1269 Acquired by Gottingen Grubenhagen split off1292 Re partitioned from Gottingen1344 Calenberg split off1432 Union with Calenberg and Gottingen1484 95 Joined Saxon Circle Lower Saxon Circle from 1512 1500 Regained Calenberg and Gottingen1584 Occupied Grubenhagen1596 1617 Wolfenbuttel line extinct Calenberg and Gottingen to House of Hanover1635 Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Bevern split off1667 1735 Annexed to the Kingdom of Westphalia Napoleonic Wars 1807 1813 Formally re established as the Duchy of Brunswick1815Preceded by Succeeded byDuchy of Brunswick Luneburg 1807 Kingdom of Westphalia1815 Duchy of Brunswick Contents 1 History 1 1 Middle Ages 1 2 Early modern times 1 3 Napoleonic era and transfer to the Duchy of Brunswick 2 Collateral line in Bevern 3 Economic and social history 3 1 The role of farmers 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory editMiddle Ages edit After Otto the Child grandchild of Henry the Lion had been given the former allodial seat of his family located in the area of present day eastern Lower Saxony and northern Saxony Anhalt by Emperor Frederick II on 21 August 1235 as an imperial enfeoffment under the name of the Duchy of Brunswick Luneburg the duchy was divided in 1267 1269 by his sons Albert I also called Albert the Tall 1236 1279 was given the regions around Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Einbeck Grubenhagen and Gottingen Oberwald He thus founded the Old House of Brunswick and laid the basis for what became later the Principality of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel His brother John 1242 1277 inherited the land around Luneburg and founded the Old House of Luneburg The town of Brunswick remained under joint rule The area of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel was further subdivided in the succeeding decades For example the lines of Grubenhagen and Gottingen were split for a while In a similar way in 1432 the estates between the Deister hills and the Leine river that had been gained in the meantime from the Middle House of Brunswick split away to form the Principality of Calenberg There were further reunifications and divisions nbsp Coat of arms of the Duchy in Schedel s World Chronicle of 1493In the meanwhile the dukes became weary of the constant disputes with the citizens of the town of Brunswick and in 1432 moved their Residenz to the water castle of Wolfenbuttel which lay in a marshy depression of the river Oker about 12 kilometres 7 5 mi south of Brunswick The castle built here for the Brunswick Luneburg dukes together with the ducal chancery the consistory the courts and the archives became the nerve centre of a giant region from which the Wolfenbuttel Brunswick part of the overall duchy was ruled For a long time it also governed the principalities of Calenberg Gottingen and Grubenhagen the Prince Bishopric of Halberstadt large parts of the Prince Bishopric of Hildesheim the counties of Hohnstein and Regenstein the baronies of Klettenberg and Lohra and parts of Hoya on the Lower Weser The importance of this court was signified by the number of craftsmen needed Hundreds of timber framed buildings were built for the court for its citizens and for ducal facilities initially randomly later designed to ducal requirements and for fire protection In the heyday of the town s development its districts were named after various dukes the Auguststadt in the west the Juliusstadt in the east and the Heinrichstadt Following the twelfth division of the duchy in 1495 whereby the Principality of Brunswick Calenberg Gottingen was re divided into its component territories Duke Henry the Elder was given the land of Brunswick to which the name of the new Residenz at Wolfenbuttel was added From then on the name of the principality became Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Early modern times edit nbsp Coat of arms of the principality in early modern times at Wolfenbuttel Palace The reigns of dukes Henry the Younger Julius and Henry Julius followed under whose lordship the Residenz of Wolfenbuttel was expanded and the principality gained a Germany wide standing In 1500 Brunswick Wolfenbuttel became part of the Lower Saxon Circle within the Holy Roman Empire From 1519 to 1523 the principality went to war with the principalities of Hildesheim and Luneburg in the Hildesheim Diocesan Feud which despite a resounding defeat in the Battle of Soltau eventually resulted in large territorial gains accruing to Brunswick Wolfenbuttel nbsp Ducatus Brunsvicensis 1645 nbsp Schloss WolfenbuttelIn the Thirty Years War Wolfenbuttel was the strongest fortress in North Germany but survived the war heavily damaged The Wolfenbuttel line died out during the war In 1571 the castle and village of Calvorde became part of the principality thanks to Duke Julius of Brunswick In 1635 Duke Augustus the Younger from the collateral line of Luneburg Dannenberg took over the reins of power in the principality and founded the New House of Brunswick Under his rule Wolfenbuttel reached its cultural zenith One of his greatest achievements was the building of the Wolfenbuttel Library the largest in Europe in its day In 1671 an old pipe dream of the House of Welf dukes came true when the joint armies of the different dynastic lines were able to capture the town of Brunswick and add it to their domain In 1735 when the dynastic line died out another collateral line emerged the Brunswick Bevern line founded in 1666 In 1753 1754 the residence of the dukes of Wolfenbuttel returned to Brunswick to the newly built Brunswick Palace The town thus lost the independence it had enjoyed since the 15th century In the process the duke followed the trend and did not interfere with anything including work on the new castle begun in 1718 by Hermann Korb on the Grauer Hof which was still not finished The effect on Wolfenbuttel was catastrophic as can be seen from the timber framed houses built later on 4 000 townsfolk followed the ducal family and Wolfenbuttel s population sank from 12 000 to 7 000 Only the archives the ecclesiastical office and the library remained as a link to earlier times From Brunswick there were jibes that Wolfenbuttel had deteriorated into a widows residence Witwensitz The extensive gardens in front of the three town gates the Herzogtor Harztor and Augusttor were leased to the former gardeners as an emphyteusis As a consequence jam factories were established which were characteristic of Wolfenbuttel until the 20th century In front of the Herzogtor the number of gardens grew until they eventually reached the Lechlum Wood Lechlumer Holz Its southern edge was graced by the little Lustschloss of Antoinettenruh built in 1733 instead of a garden house a work by the master builder Hermann Korb who was so important to Wolfenbuttel Wolfenbuttel became a town of schools In 1753 the teachers training college was founded which began in the orphanage and later moved to the building of the present day Harztorwall School Politically Brunswick Wolfenbuttel was one of Prussia s closest allies Whilst shortly beforehand the Habsburg emperor had been the most important focal point through political marriages the Wolfenbuttel line of the Welfs became closely linked to the Hohenzollerns through the marriage of the Prussian Crown Prince Frederick to Elisabeth Christine 2 The marriage was arranged by Frederick William I of Prussia and Ferdinand Albert They also founded the brotherhood in arms between the little state and the great Prussian kingdom Numerous Brunswick Wolfenbuttel officers served in high positions in the Prussian Army most notably during the Seven Years War The regiments of the principality screened the allied army in western Prussia and in particular the allied Electorate of Hanover An outstanding representative of the military alliance between Brunswick and Prussia was the Duke of Brunswick and Luneburg the hereditary Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel During Charles I s era there were great achievements in the cultural and scientific fields the theatre was promoted and education encouraged In 1753 the ducal art and natural history collection forerunner of the Natural History Museum was founded These substantial collections had been amassed by the Brunswick dukes This enterprise was supported by Abbot Jerusalem the founder of the Collegium Carolinum Whilst Wolfenbuttel waned Brunswick now experienced a cultural boom In August 1784 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe stayed in Brunswick on a political mission when he accompanied the Weimarsch minister his duke Charles Augustus At a time when the political situation between Austria and Prussia had heated up once again the small and medium sized German states planned the creation of a larger princely state as a counterbalancing force Duke Charles William Ferdinand of Brunswick was to be asked to join this league of princes Furstenbund which he did on 30 August The secret mission was disguised as a family visit at the time of the Autumn Fair court life determined the timing of the stay in the Residenz castle on Bohlweg Napoleonic era and transfer to the Duchy of Brunswick edit As a result of the German Mediatisation of 25 February 1803 the principality was given the territories of the secularised imperial abbeys of Gandersheim and Helmstedt In 1806 Duke Charles William Ferdinand was mortally wounded as a Prussian general in the Battle of Auerstedt After a short interregnum Brunswick was occupied from 1807 to 1813 by the French and became part of the Kingdom of Westphalia After the end of Napoleonic rule the state was re established under the name of the Duchy of Brunswick Collateral line in Bevern editThe Principality of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Bevern emerged from an inheritance dispute between Ferdinand Albert I and his brothers In 1667 Ferdinand Albert was awarded the castle of Bevern near Holzminden He and later his son Ferdinand Albert II were princes of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Bevern In 1735 Ferdinand Albert II took over the Principality of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel the subordinate principality returning to the overarching Principality of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Economic and social history editThe role of farmers edit According to Bornstedt 3 serfdom in the state was abolished with the Recess of 17 May 1433 by Henry the Peaceful According to Bornstedt Brunswick Wolfenbuttel was therefore the first principality in the Holy Roman Empire to do away with feudalism The recess laid down that all arbitrariness Willkur in the levies on stewards or Meier of feudal manors particularly on the death of the farmer were cancelled the Grundherr or lord of the manor continued to be the owner of the Meier estate but now the Meier could also quit This change usually meant that the Meier family did not move out when the contract expired or when the farmer died i e that the family were not prematurely evicted as would have been the case before In 1563 it was decreed by Henry the Younger that every 6 years Meier and Grundherr had to negotiate the extension of the estate lease later this was increased to 9 years In his Landtag farewell in 1597 Duke Henry Julius made the farms inheritable With the Brunswick redemption law Ablosungsordnung of 20 December 1834 by the state s legal successor the Duchy of Brunswick the dependence of the farmers was abolished Farmers could now purchase the land freehold and the money required could be loaned from the ducal lending office At the end of the 19th century Flurbereinigung or land consolidation took place See also editList of the rulers of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel List of rulers of the House of WelfReferences edit Wilson Peter 2002 German Armies War and German Society 1648 1806 p 21 ISBN 1135370532 Werner Knopp Im Schatten des grossen Bruders Braunschweig und Preussen in friderizianischer Zeit Braunschweigische Museumsvortrage 1 Braunschweig Braunschweigisches Landesmuseum 1986 in German OCLC 180492556 Bornstedt Wilhelm ed Aus der Geschichte von Rautheim an der Wabe pp 28 ff Sources editWilhelm Havemann Geschichte der Lande Braunschweig und Luneburg 3 vols Repr Hirschheydt Hannover 1974 75 ISBN 3 7777 0843 7 Original ed Verlag der Dietrich schen Buchhandlung Gottingen 1853 1857 online at Google Books in German Hans Patze et al Geschichte Niedersachsens 7 vols Hahnsche Buchhandlung Hannover 1977 Veroffentlichungen der Historischen Kommission fur Niedersachsen und Bremen 36 in German Publisher s summary Gudrun Pischke Die Landesteilungen der Welfen im Mittelalter Lax Hildesheim 1987 ISBN 3 7848 3654 2 in German External links editThe House of Welf Karte von Niedersachsen am Ende des 18 Jahrhunderts Zur Rolle der Bauern im Duchy of BS WF auf der Cremlingen de Castle of the House of Welf at Wolfenbuttel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Principality of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel amp oldid 1184736161, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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