Hartnid III. (Wildon)

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Seal of Hartnid

Hartnid III. ( Hertnid , Hertnit , Hertneid ) (* probably 1246; † around 1302) from the house of the Lords of Wildon was Styrian Ministeriale .

Life

Hartnid was the youngest son of Ulrich I and, together with his brother Herrand II , represented his father's political line.

In 1268, after King Ottokar's second unfortunate move to Prussia , the mood in the Styrian camp was in the basement and Friedrich von Pettau accused Count Bernhard von Pfannberg of planned treason. Hartnid was also suspected among others and was accused of conspiracy in front of the king in Breslau; his brother Herrand wanted to defend him, but in the end they all ended up in dungeon. The Wildonians (according to Ottokars Reimchronik Herrand, according to Gregor Hagen Hartnid) had to deliver their castles Eppenstein , Primaresburg and Burg Alt-Gleichenberg , of which the last two were broken. They were released after 26 weeks in prison.

In any case, Hartnid sought contact with King Rudolf in 1274/75 and therefore had to flee the country before King Ottokar's revenge. When Reiner oath in 1276 he was not going very well but in driving Ottokar of Styria. In 1277 he was awarded the Styrian Marshal 's Office, with which the castle and dominion Frauheim / Fram (sw. Maribor ) and goods in the Sölktal were connected.

In 1291 Hartnid still supported Duke Albrecht against the Güssing Counts ( Güssing feud ), but after King Rudolf's death a political crisis broke out in Styria: Duke Albrecht did not want to confirm the state freedoms and his governor Abbot Heinrich von Admont oppressed the Styrian nobility. The rebels - first Hartnid von Wildon and Friedrich von Stubenberg , and Count Ulrich von Heunburg - won Archbishop Konrad and the Bavarian Duke Otto III. as allies and were able to seize many castles, but were held in front of Bruck - Hartnid's son of the same name was on duty here - by Hermann von Landenberg , Albrecht's general. Despite the deep snow on the Semmering, over which hundreds of farmers had to pave their way, Albrecht came to relief, and the besiegers had to give up. Duke Albrecht showed his generosity as the victor, confirmed the Styrians' rights on March 20, 1292 in St. Veit and exchanged the governor.

Hartnid had to pledge Gleichenberg to the Walseer to cover his war expenditures in 1292 (the rule was finally sold to them in 1302/12). Hartnid fared even worse with his regular festival Alt-Wildon: In 1294 he had to sell it to Duke Albrecht as compensation and in return take Eibiswald as a fief. He also had to cede his Waldstein Castle to the sovereign for three years in 1294.

With the loss of his ancestral home, the decline of his family was initiated. As a result, he was a loyal servant of his master: in 1289 in Nuremberg as Marshal of Styria at the head of the Styrian ministerial when the sons of the now King Albrecht I, Rudolf, Friedrich and Leopold, were enfeoffed with the Habsburg hereditary lands.

Private

After Reimbert von Mureck's death in 1240, the village of Laubegg fell to him , which he passed on to Bishop Ulrich von Seckau in 1302 in order to be enfeoffed by him.

In 1278 Hartnid sold a castle in Sebach ( Weinburg ) and property in Swarza (Ober-, Unterschwarza) and Weytratsvelde ( Weitersfeld an der Mur ) to Bishop Bernhard von Seckau and took them as a fief.

In 1292 he acquired the New House (Neu-Wildon) as a Salzburg fief.

family

Hartnid III. was married to an Agnes. Progeny:

  • Richer
  • Hartnid IV. († 1325), 1302–1325 " Marshal of Styria"
  • Ullein / Ulrich III.
  • Elisabeth

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Sorrow 1268
  2. MHVSt 1854 , Kummer in 1294 , Kummer 1295
  3. Sorrow Sebach 1278
  4. Kummer Neuhaus 1292