Giselbert von Höttingen

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Together with his brother Constantin, Giselbert founded the Premonstratensian monastery in Lochgarten on their paternal inheritance .

Since the two Hintersassen brothers, probably Wachszinser , were the monastery at the parish church in Lorch , this required the consent of the Lorch bailiffs and the canons, as stated in the document of King Konrad III. about this process emerges from the summer of 1144. According to an undated document from Würzburg Bishop Gebhard von Henneberg († 1159), half a pound from an estate in Höttingen (today the municipality of Bütthard ) was earmarked for Giselbert's livelihood . In an undated document from Gebhard's successor Heinrich II. Von Stühlingen († 1165) about the settlement of a dispute between the monastery Tückelhausen and Lochgarten, this payment to the now deceased Giselbert is no longer mentioned.

Hansmartin Decker-Hauff claimed in the catalog for the Staufer exhibition in 1977 that Giselbert was a son of the future King Konrad III. from a relationship with a gerberga. However, this hypothesis can neither be substantiated with the source cited by Decker-Hauff , nor is it able to convince in terms of content.

Whether the censorship Petrissa was his daughter, as Decker-Hauff claimed, is also very questionable.

literature

  • Hansmartin Decker-Hauff: The Staufer House. In: Reiner Haussherr (ed.): The time of the Staufer. History, art, culture. Exhibition catalog. Teilband 3. Stuttgart 1977, pp. 339-374, here p. 353, no. 53 (37).

Remarks

  1. ^ Friedrich Hausmann (ed.): Diplomata 21: The documents of Konrad III. and his son Heinrich (Conradi III. et filii eius Heinrici Diplomata). Vienna 1969, pp. 202–203 ( Monumenta Germaniae Historica , digitized version ), no. 113; Regesta imperii IV, 1.2 n. 307 ; Thomas Horling: Foundation and early days of the Premonstratensian Monastery Tückelhausen (before 1139-1172) , in: Zeitschrift für Bavarian Landesgeschichte 68 (2005), pp. 441–484, here pp. 452–453 ( digitized version ).
  2. Wirtemberg document book . Volume II, No. 332. Stuttgart 1858, pp. 54 f. ( Digitized version , online edition ); Thomas Horling: Founding and early days of the Premonstratensian Monastery Tückelhausen (before 1139-1172) , in: Journal for Bavarian State History 68 (2005), pp. 441–484, here p. 454 ( digitized version ).
  3. Wirtemberg document book . Volume II, No. 468. Stuttgart 1858, pp. 273 f. ( Digitized version , online edition ); Thomas Horling: Foundation and early days of the Tückelhausen Premonstratensian Monastery (before 1139-1172) , in: Zeitschrift für Bavarian Landesgeschichte 68 (2005), pp. 441–484, here p. 456 and p. 446, note 16 ( digitized version ).
  4. ^ Klaus Graf : Staufer traditions from Lorch Abbey. In: Sönke Lorenz , Ulrich Schmidt (Ed.): From Swabia to Jerusalem. Facets of Hohenstaufen history. Sigmaringen 1995, ISBN 3-7995-4247-7 , pp. 209-240 ( digitized version ); Gerhard Lubich : On the way to "golden freedom". Dominion and space in the Francia orientalis from the Carolingian to the Staufer times. Husum 1996 ( historical studies 449), ISBN 3-7868-1449-X , pp. 246-272; Klaus Graf: The Staufer Myth. In: Archivalia. July 15, 2010, accessed April 11, 2018 . Section VII. The falsification of sources in the 1977 Staufer catalog .
  5. ^ Tobias Weller: The marriage policy of the German high nobility in the 12th century. Cologne [ua] 2004 ( Rheinisches Archiv 149), ISBN 3-412-11104-X , pp. 196–226, here especially pp. 218–220.