Casimir V (Pomerania)

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Casimir V. , according to another count Casimir VI. (* after 1380 ; † April 13, 1435 ) was a Duke of Pomerania from the Greifenhaus . He ruled in Pomerania-Stettin from 1413 together with his brother Otto II , from 1428 alone.

Life

Casimir V was the youngest son of Duke Swantibor I (III.) (* 1351; † 1413), who ruled in Pomerania-Stettin. Kasimir's older brothers were Otto II (* around 1380; † 1428) and Albrecht († before 1412).

His father let him take part in the Battle of Tannenberg (1410) as leader of a Pomeranian contingent on the part of the Teutonic Order. The battle ended in the Order's defeat; Casimir was captured by the Polish victors, but soon released. In the Battle of Kremmer Damm (1412) , Casimir V and his older brother Otto II fought against Brandenburg.

After the death of Duke Swantibor I in 1413, Casimir V and his older brother Otto II jointly took over the rule in Pomerania-Stettin. The fighting with Brandenburg continued. In 1415, Frederick obtained the imperial ban against Otto II and Casimir V from King Sigismund for some time . Brandenburg called the imperial immediacy of Pomerania into question. Initially, King Sigismund only granted Otto II and Casimir V a mortgage in 1417, which was subject to the rights of Brandenburg. Casimir V was then able to obtain an unrestricted loan for himself and his brother in 1424 by visiting King Sigismund in Ofen in Hungary.

After Otto II died childless in 1428, Casimir V continued to rule Pomerania-Stettin alone. He suppressed a riot in the city of Szczecin . He had the ringleaders executed, the city had to pay a heavy fine and left the Hansa . Duke Casimir V died in 1435 and was buried in the Ottenkirche in Stettin. His son Joachim the Younger followed him into the government of Pomerania-Stettin .

Marriage and offspring

Duke Casimir V was married twice. His first wife was Katharina, the daughter of Duke Bernhard I of Braunschweig-Lüneburg. From this marriage:

After Katharina's death, he married Elisabeth , daughter of Duke Erich I of Braunschweig-Grubenhagen. From this marriage comes:

After Duke Kasimir's death, his widow Elisabeth became Abbess of Gandersheim .

count

The counting of the rulers of the Griffin House has always been involved. There has been an inequality here from age that causes some confusion. The more modern census than Casimir V results if one only counts the members of the narrower Greifenhaus. If, on the other hand, one counts a Casimir from the sideline of the Swantiboriden , the count is Casimir VI. which was common in the older literature.

See also

literature

Footnotes

  1. ^ Martin Wehrmann : Genealogy of the Pomeranian ducal house. Leon Sauniers Buchhandlung Verlag, Stettin 1937, p. 15.