Nagoldgau

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The Nagoldgau (also Nagoldgouw or Nagaltgouwe ), so called around 780, is an early medieval territory that belonged to the Duchy of Swabia and emerged from the Baar .

history

The Nagoldgau was located around the Nagold River , to the right of the Enz , and was a territory of the Westbaar in the 10th century . The Nagoldgau was divided into two further smaller districts:

Nagoldgaugrafen

  • Count Gerold , a brother-in-law of Emperor Charlemagne († September 1, 799), around 785 to 790 Graf in der Baar
  • Graf Anshelm , around 966 Graf im Nagoldgau
  • Count Werner (* after 950, † before 1027) possibly identical with the Reichssturmfähnrich Count Werner I. von Winterthur
  • Count Hugo I. (around 1007)
  • Count Anshelm, 1027 at the Reichstag in Ulm, where he resigned from Duke Ernst of Swabia
  • Count Anselm († December 25th around 1087)
  • Count Hugo III. , moved his seat to Tübingen around 1078 and is considered the ancestor of the Count Palatine of Tübingen
  • Count Hugo IV, ruled around 1100 with his seat in Tübingen, married to Hemma, daughter of Count Ludwig I von Arnstein
  • Count Hugo V was the first Count Palatine of Tübingen since 1146

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Gerhard Köbler : Historical Lexicon of the German Lands. The German territories from the Middle Ages to the present. 7th, completely revised edition. CH Beck, Munich 2007, ISBN 978-3-406-54986-1 .
  2. NDB VI, 315 - M. Mitterauer, Karolingische Mgf.en im SO, 1963, 8ff. - W. Störmer, Early Adel, 1973, 218ff.
  3. See RI II, 1 n. 428 Regesta imperii online
  4. Heinrich II. Donated Nagold im Nagoldgau in the county of Count Werner with all accessories to the diocese of Bamberg on January 11, 1007 for the benefit of the diocese. WUB online
  5. See RI III, 1 n. 109b Regesta Imperii online
  6. Possibly married to Berta von Grüningen , see Hermann Römer : Markgröningen in the context of Landesgeschichte I. Urgeschichte und Mittelalter , Markgröningen 1933, p. 52.