Friedrich (Tübingen)

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Count Palatine Friedrich von Tübingen in the choir stalls of the Blaubeuren monastery
Wife of Count Palatine Friedrich von Tübingen
Coat of arms of the Count Palatine of Tübingen from Johann Siebmacher's coat of arms book

Friedrich († 1162 ) was Count Palatine of Tübingen from 1152 to 1162 .

origin

He was the eldest son of Count Palatine Hugo I of Tübingen and Hemma von Zollern , a daughter of Count Friedrich I of Zollern .

Document mentions

Friedrich appears with the title Pfalzgraf in several imperial documents, for the first time in a document of Emperor Friedrich I , given at Speier on August 19, 1152; among several counts, including Egino von Vehingen, he is the last witness, which is probably due to the fact that he was still very young.

In another document from Emperor Friedrich I of January 18, 1153, given to Palme, he also appears as Count Palatine of Tuwigen, after several greats, including Otto, Count Palatine of Wittelsbach, and in the next year (January 17, 1154) in given to Speier in an imperial document; Welf, Duke of Spoleto, Friedrich, Duke of Swabia are named here, then he as “Federicus Palatinus de Thiumugen” (apparently prescribed for Thuwingen), after him Hermann, Margrave of Baden, and Hugo, Count of Alsace ( Egisheim ) and other. In the same year (May 17th) he signed after the mentioned Welf with his brother Hugo (without title) at the head of several other counts ( Rudolf von Pfullendorf , Werner von Kyburg , Hartmann von Dillingen , Eberhard von Nellenburg , Marquard von Veringen ) zu Pfaffenhofen an imperial document for the Kreuzlingen monastery , and another in the same year (without a day) with his brother "comes" Hugo zu Konstanz.

On his own account, Friedrich only appears once on August 25, 1152, when he and his servant Eticho gave 5 manses in Hohenbuch to the Salem monastery ( Salmannsweiler ) with all the associated rights.

For the last time Friedrich appears as Count Palatinate of Tübingen with his brother Count Hugo in an imperial document given in Constance on November 24th, 1162. The well-known Duke Welf opens the series of secular witnesses, followed by the Friedrich described here with his brother, followed by several counts without family names. He must have died in 1162 because his brother Hugo appears several times in the same year as Count Palatine, but he no longer appears after November 24th.

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Ludwig Schmid : History of the Count Palatine of Tübingen. Tübingen 1853, pp. 62-63, digitized .