Philip I (Falkenstein)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philip I of Falkenstein (* around 1200; † after October 4, 1271) was a nobleman of the Falkenstein family .

family

Philipp I von Falkenstein was a son of Werner III. von Bolanden and his wife Agnes von Isenburg-Braunsberg .

From his marriage to Isengard von Münzenberg (* unknown; † after 1270) the following children were born:

  • Guda von Falkenstein (* unknown, but apparently before 1237 and before the birth of Werner I. von Falkenstein ; † February 4, 1290); ∞ Conrad II of Bickenbach (1245–1270)
  • Adelheid von Falkenstein (* unknown, but apparently before 1237 and before the birth of Werner I. von Falkenstein ; † after 1237)
  • Werner I. von Falkenstein , Herr zu Münzenberg & Falkenstein (* unknown, probably after 1237; † between May 25, 1298 and September 22, 1300)
  • Philip II of Falkenstein , Lord of Munzenberg (* unknown; † between June 29, 1293 and December 13, 1293)
  • Luckard von Falkenstein (* unknown, † after February 1, 1302)

Life

Until about 1233 he appeared as Philip IV of Bolanden, because the Lords of Falkenstein were actually a sideline of the Lords of Bolanden. The name Falkenstein, used around 1220, comes from his Falkenstein castle on the Donnersberg.

He was Reichstruchseß from 1246 to 1253 , was entrusted with the Reich Treasury Office in 1257 and was commissioned to protect and administer the imperial regalia at Trifels Castle.

Since his 1255/1258 by his wife one sixth of Münzenberger heritage fell, including the rule of King Stone, Assenheim and forestry Dreieich , the family shifted its center of life to Hesse. He inherited the Ministerialengeschlecht Münzenberg and thus the bailiwick about the Wetterau and the Reichsvogtei in Dreieich forest.

After his death in 1271, the 1st Falkenstein division took place: Werner I von Falkenstein was the founder of the Lich line, his brother Philipp II was the first ruler of the Butzbach line. At the end of the 13th century - under the reign of Werner I - the lords of Falkenstein acquired a share of five-sixths in the rule of Munzenberg through exchanges and purchases. As early as 1295 - after a further division of the Munzenberg inheritance - Werner I took his seat away from the Munzenburg in nearby Lich.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Dataset on genealogy Eberhard zu Philipp I. von Falkenstein , accessed on June 14, 2015
  2. a b c European Family Tables, by Wilhelm Karl, Prinz zu Isenburg, Vol. XVII, Plate 24, accessed from the website Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors & Cousins
  3. record on Geneanet to Philip I of Falkenstein  ( page no longer available , searching web archivesInfo: The link is automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , accessed November 8, 2015@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / gw.geneanet.org  
  4. a b c Johann Georg Lehmann: Documentary history of the lords and counts of Falkenstein am Donnersberg in the Palatinate in: Mitteilungen des Historischen Verein der Pfalz, Volume 3, 1872, ISBN 5875574151 , Daniel Kranzbühler'sche Buchdruckerei, Speyer, page 3
  5. a b c European Family Tables, by Detlev Schwennicke, New Series, Vol. XVII, Plate 27, accessed on the website Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors & Cousins
  6. a b c The story of Falkenstein in words by Wolfgang Haubrich and Werner Rasche , accessed on October 18, 2015
  7. a b The Bolander and its importance for Ingelheim by Hartmut Geißler , accessed on October 18, 2015
  8. ^ Castle archive: Falkenstein Castle in the Taunus , accessed on October 18, 2015
  9. a b Philipp IV., Herr von Bolanden-Falkenstein in Genealogy Middle Ages by Manfred Hiebl , accessed on October 24, 2015
  10. ^ Bernhard Peter: Heraldik - die Welt der Wappen , accessed on October 18, 2015

literature

Web links