Adelheid of Hanau (Hohenlohe)

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Adelheid von Hanau (* between 1311 and 1313; † after 1378) was a daughter of Ulrich II. Von Hanau (* approx. 1280/1288; † 1346) and Agnes von Hohenlohe (* before 1295; † November 29, 1346 ), Daughter of Kraft I. von Hohenlohe .

The exact year of your birth is not known. Since the parents married in 1310, and she herself married before 1329, the period in which her year of birth must lie results from this. The fact that she was one of the elders of her three sisters results from the fact that the older daughters were usually married, but the younger ones entered a monastery.

Pedigree of Adelheid von Hanau
Great grandparents

Reinhard I. von Hanau (* before 1243; † 1281)

Adelheid von Hagen-Münzenberg († 1291)

Ludwig von Rieneck -Rothenfels († 1289)

Udehilt von Grumbach and Rotenfels († 1300)

Gottfried von Hohenlohe , Count of Romagna (proven: 1219–1266)

Richza von Krautheim (proven: 1224–1263)

Count Friedrich von Truhendingen - Dillingen († 1274)
2nd ∞
vmtl. Margaretha of Andechs-Meranien († 1271)

Grandparents

Ulrich I. von Hanau (* 1250/60; † 1305/06)

Elisabeth von Rieneck -Rotenfels (* approx. 1260; † approx. 1300)

Kraft I. von Hohenlohe -Weikersheim (proven 1260–1312)
2. ∞
vmtl. Margarethe von Truhendingen -Dillingen

parents

Ulrich II. Von Hanau (* 1280; † 1346)

Agnes von Hohenlohe -Weikersheim (* before 1295; † 1342/44)

Adelheid of Hanau

For the family cf. Main article: Hanau (noble family)

She was married to Count Eberhard II von Katzenelnbogen (* before 1312; † 1329), who probably died shortly after the wedding. This marriage remained childless.

In her second marriage she was married to Heinrich II von Ysenburg (* before 1315; † 1378/1379) from 1332 . Only the date of the engagement (July 29, 1332) is known. The handover of the dowry took place on September 29, 1332. The marriage must have taken place around this date. From this marriage emerged:

  1. Johann I von Isenburg-Büdingen (* 1353; † 1395), married to Sophia von Wertheim
  2. Heinrich
  3. Wilhelm (* 1373; † 1409), Canon in Speyer
  4. Agnes (* 1375; † 1404), married to Dietrich I. von Bickenbach
  5. Isengard (verified 1396/98), abbess of the Marienborn monastery
  6. Adelheid († 1441), abbess of the Quedlinburg Abbey 1406–1435
  7. Meckula († after 1367), nun in the Marienborn monastery

A document from 1343 has come down to us in which Adelheid is allowed to visit his father's grave twice a year, which was in the cloister of the Arnsburg monastery and was therefore not open to the public. This was approved three years before her father died. Arnsburg was the family burial place of the Hanau family until the 15th century. She was also buried there.

literature

  • Ludwig Clemm : The Book of the Dead of the Ilbenstadt Monastery . In: Archives for Hessian History and Archeology. NF 19.2. Darmstadt 1936, pp. 169-274
  • Bernd Freiherr Freytag von Loringhoven u. Detlev Schwennicke : European family tables . Vol. 3 u. 5. Frankfurt a. M. 1958
  • H. Simon: The history of the imperial count house Ysenburg and Büdingen . Vol. 2: The Ysenburg and Büdingen house history . Frankfurt 1865, p. 183.
  • Karl-Heinz Spieß : Family and Relatives in the German High Nobility of the Late Middle Ages . Stuttgart 1993.
  • Reinhard Suchier : Genealogy of the Hanauer count house . In: Festschrift of the Hanau History Association for its 50th anniversary celebration on August 27, 1894 . Hanau 1894.

References

  1. Clemm, p. 252
  2. Freytag von Loringhoven Vol. 3, Plate 81
  3. Schwennicke Vol. 5, Plate 56b
  4. Spieß, p. 481, note 129