Adelheid of Tübingen (around 1236)

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Adelheid von Tübingen was a daughter of the Count Palatine Wilhelm von Tübingen . Her father married her to Kuno III in 1236. from Munzenberg. One of the witnesses of the marriage certificate was Heynrikus de Kirchperc. Historical researchers use this document as the first mention of Kilchberg . Other witnesses were Count Eberhard von Württemberg, lawyer Berthold von Winzenstein, Volbert von Poltringen, the parish priest Walther von Waiblingen and others.

Shortly before his wedding, her groom received the transfer of Babenhausen, which is owned by Mr. von Munzenberg. Kuno III. von Munzenberg resided in Königstein in 1239 and was camerarius from 1240 to 1244 . He died as early as 1244 without male descendants, so that the line died out as the last of the male line when his childless brother Ulrich II von Munzenberg died († August 11, 1255).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ History of Kilchberg.
  2. ^ Christian Friedrich Sattler: Christian Fridrich Sattlers, ducal-Würtemberg government councilor and secret archivist of the royal. British historical institute in Göttingen and the Royal. Prussian learned society in Frankfurt an der Oder real members, topographical history of the Duchy of Würtemberg and all the lordships incorporated into it, in which the towns, monasteries and the same offices are described in detail according to their location, former owners, fortunes, natural and other peculiarities: together with some Notes explaining civil, state and fiefdom law. Betulius, 1784, page 8 of 619 pages.
  3. ^ Ernst Hammann: Dietzenbach: his sovereigns from 1100 to the present (2010). BoD - Books on Demand, 2012. Page 11 of 124 pages.
  4. ^ Johann Wilhelm Christian Steiner: Antiquities and history of the Bachgau in the old Maingau: history of the cities Umstadt and Babenhausen, their former cent and official affiliations. Wailandt, 1821. See "Typographical Errors and Improvements".
  5. Bernhard Peter: fields, components and their history.