Udalschalk (Lurngau)

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Udalschalk (* around 1050; † November 20, 1115 ) from the family of Grögling-Hirschberger (Ernste) was Count of Lurn im Lurngau ( Upper Carinthia ). Possibly he was a nephew of Pope Viktor II.

Life

Udalschalk was the son of Hartwig II († 1069), Count on the lower Amper, and Aviza, daughter of Count Altmann von Kühbach.

Around 1068 comes Oudalscalh is mentioned for the first time, who, after Tegernsee, gives an estate to Sauerlach (AG Wolfratshausen) to Abbot Siegfried (1048-1068) for his monastic son Udalschalk .

Around 1115, Count Udalschalk and his wife Adelheid handed over the local Lambert Church to their son Altmann Burg and Herrschaft Suben and the local clergy.

A Salzburg document dated August 26, 1126 shows that the parents of Bishop Altmann von Trient at the time of Archbishop Gebhard von Salzburg (1062-1088) exchanged their Hengiste estate (western Styria) for their own estate in Cidlarn (Zeitlarn, near Burghausen ) .

Around 1120, Countess Adelheid and her son Altmann gave Kolbnitz to Suben .

In 1142, Bishop Altmann bequeathed Hohenburg Castle, inherited from his father, to Salzburg.

Udalschalk also owned other goods in western Styria .

Marriage and offspring

Udalschalk was married twice.

1. Emma von Lechsgemünd († 1100), daughter of Count Kuno von Lechsgemünd. Your children were:

  • Konrad († January 20, 1112), Count im Lurngau Vogt, von Aquileja
  • Udalschalk († November 13, 1107/08), Abbot of Tegernsee
  • Adalbero I., Count in Lurngau around 1135
  • Adelheid vom Lurngau († March 10, before 1120), oo Burkhard IV. Count von Moosburg († 1138)
  • Willibirg, oo Konrad I. Count of Dachau († 1135)


2. Adelheid von Krain (* around 1065, † 1122), widow of Friedrich Domvogt von Regensburg, daughter of the Margrave Ulrich I. von Krain . The marriage remained childless.

literature

  • Franz Engl : The former Augustinian canons of Suben am Inn . In: Land Oberösterreich (ed.), 900 years of Reichersberg Abbey. Augustinian Canons between Passau and Salzburg. Exhibition by the Province of Upper Austria, April 26 to October 18, 1984 in the Reichersberg am Inn Abbey (pp. 67–79). Linz, 1984.
  • Schwennicke Detlev: European Family Tables New Series Volume I, 1, Vittorio Klostermann GmbH Frankfurt am Main 1998, tables 144
  • Schwennicke, Detlef: European family tables. Family tables on the history of the European states. New series Volume XII, Swabia, Plate 33
  • Wegener Dr. Wilhelm: GENEALOGICAL TABLES ON CENTRAL EUROPEAN HISTORY page 224

Individual evidence

  1. West Styria