Vaihingen (noble family)

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Coat of arms of the Calwer line of the Counts of Vaihingen

As Earl of Vaihingen two sidelines firmierten Swabian noble families, on the one of the counts of Urach , on the other hand by the Counts of Calw descended and on the particular occupation of the county after the " castle Vehingen " in Vaihingen in the district of Ludwigsburg renamed .

history

The first counts, who named themselves after Vaihingen, descend from a Franconian noble family originally resident around Würzburg and on the Saale, with the lead name Egino, who were able to increase their property in the high Middle Ages by acquiring Urach and Achalm , including the counts of Urach descend. By marriage, the Eginones got Enzgau with the village of Vaihingen , which had previously been ruled by a Count Walaho and a number of Adalberts . After a Count Gottfried von Calw had married their heir, he renamed himself to differentiate himself from his brothers and founded the younger line of the Vaihinger Counts as " Gottfried von Vaihingen ".

About the marriage of Konrad II of Vaihingen (1210 / 20–1271 / 75) with Agnes, heir daughter of Belrein von Eselsberg , the Vaihingers also acquired the rule of the lords of Eselsberg, who died out around 1253 in the male line, with Hohenhaslach , Horrheim , Ensingen and other estates . They took their burial place in the Rechentshofen monastery founded by the Eselsbergers . Konrad II was already heavily in debt, which ultimately led to the economic decline of the family, which had to gradually pledge and sell its property. His son Konrad III. stood in long-term conflict with Count Hartmann III. von Grüningen and Eberhard I. von Württemberg on the side of King Rudolf . Conrad IV married Elisabeth von Schlüsselberg , who had the prospect of a rich inheritance. However, Konrad IV could not enforce her claims before the Imperial Court. For economic reasons he had to sell the castle and town of Vaihingen and in future take his seat at Eselsberg Castle .

Heinrich von Vaihingen, the latest in 1364 died childless, bequeathed in 1356 to his father's lifetime Konrad V. his future heir to the uncle called Count Eberhard II. Von Württemberg . In 1364 he compared herself with Heinrich's sister "Mechthild von Zollern-Eselsberg", as she could make legitimate claims to the Eselsberg part of her father's inheritance. Heinrich's deed of donation from 1356 raises various questions, as it was drawn up in Stuttgart and, contrary to other customs at the time, was only sealed by Heinrich von Vaihingen, but not by any witnesses. The reasons for turning to Stuttgart, against which they had fought two generations earlier, are unknown. In the deed of donation, Horrheim and Hohenhaslach are also named as cities , although neither town has been granted city rights .

Document mentions of the older line

Eppo and Adalbert von Vaihingen

  • 1109: The judges "Eppo et Adalbertus de Veingen" testify in Odenheim that Konrad von Mörlheim entered the Hirsau monastery as a monk after donating goods to the named places there.

Egino from Vaihingen

  • October 14, 1139: Count "Egeno de Veingen" appears in Grüningen as a witness for King Conrad III. who puts the church in Denkendorf under his protection and authorizes it to appoint its bailiff of his own choosing.
  • Between 1148 and 1157: Count "Egonis von Vaihingen" and his wife Cunigunde donate goods to Weissach to the first abbot Diether in the Maulbronn monastery.
  • January 8, 1156: Emperor Friedrich I takes the Maulbronn Monastery under his direct protection and secures him the rights that were granted to him by Popes Innocent II and Eugene III. have been awarded. Count "Hegeno de Vehingen" is among the witnesses.
  • 1158: Bishop Günther von Speyer hands over an estate in Hohenscheid to Maulbronn Monastery . Count "Egeno de Vehingen" is among the witnesses.

Document mentions of the younger line

Count Gottfried von Vaihingen

  • August 24, 1192: Emperor Heinrich VI. In Weisenau near Mainz, the Echternach Abbey confirms its rights and freedoms, as it had previously possessed, and determines that it should remain under the protection of the empire under exemption from everyone, including the royal service, and should never be alienated from the empire. Count "Godefridus de Veingen" is among the witnesses.
  • January 28, 1194: Emperor Heinrich VI. confirms in Würzburg the donation of the castle and the village of Iptingen including the church and goods to Wiernsheim , Henkelberg and Wurmberg by the noble free Ulrich to the Maulbronn monastery. Count “Godefridus de Veingen” is a witness.
  • 1196: Philip, Duke of Tuscany “restituted” in Gonzaga to the abbot of the monastery at Polirone . Count “Godefridus de Veingen” is the first-mentioned witness. On May 3, 1196, Count Gottfried was again the first-mentioned witness for Duke Philip in Arezzo .
  • September 25, 1197: Duke Philipp "invests" in the presence of Gebhard de Roup (Völs), Warmund von Rasen, Bertold, Arnold de Livo and Jacob von Kaltern, Count Gottfried in Bozen with Berta, the daughter of Baldwin of Firmian .
  • June 29, 1198: King Philip notarizes the friendship bond entered into with King Philip of France , in such a way that he wants to help him against King Richard of England , his nephew Otto of Poitou , who appears as an anti-king, against Count Baldwin of Flanders and the Archbishop Adolf of Cologne. "Gotfr. von Vaihingen ”testifies to this pact.
  • February 18, 1199: King Philipp confirms the fiefdom of Friedrich and Otto von Borgo San Donino because of their loyalty to his father and brother in Speyer , which his father had given them in accordance with his father's privilege of December 27, 1174. Count “Godefridus de Veingen” is a witness.

Count Konrad I of Vaihingen

  • 1232: Count Konrad I. von Vaihingen documents together with his father Gottfried von Vaihingen and his cousin Gottfried von Calw.
  • November 3, 1239: Count Konrad I. von Vaihingen, patron, and his son Johannes, rector of the church there, certify the foundation of the Begine Betta (von Pulverdingen ) property at the altar of St. Stephen in the Marienkapelle of the city of Vaihingen.
  • April 1255: Count Konrad I von Vaihingen renews in his and all of his heirs' names the privilege granted by his father Count Gottfried to the Herrenalb monastery , which is literally incorporated into the document with regard to his possessions in Dietenhausen, as well as the other indications of mercy for the monastery.
  • April 23, 1255: Vogt Berthold von Stein sells all his goods and rights in Dorf and Mark Haslach to the prioress and convent of the monastery of Rechentshofen , excluding his own people, including the church patronage there for 400 pounds hellers .
  • February 23, 1257: Count Konrad I von Vaihingen († before 1263) transfers the former fiefdom of Krafts von Graefenhausen (Birkenfeld) in Dietenhausen at his request to the Herrenalb monastery as free property, subject to the redemption right for the fiefdom within one year.

Count Konrad II of Vaihingen

  • September 1262: As a result of damage to the court of the Speyr Chapter in Horrheim by the knight Konrad von Meimsheim , Count [Konrad II] von Vaihingen undertakes not to impair and recognize the chapter in his rights and privileges there either himself or by others, or in addition his right of tithe in Gündelbach .
  • October 1262: Count Konrad II. Von Vaihingen undertakes by means of a physical oath that the provost of the cathedral church in Speyer and the rector of the church in Horrheim will not impair the rights and freedoms of his church and its members.
  • February 18, 1263: At the request of his feudal husband Ulrich von Stein, Count Konrad II von Vaihingen hands over the village of Neusatz as free property to the Herrenalb monastery .
  • June 30, 1265: Count Konrad II of Vaihingen transfers the hereditary half of the big tithe in Vaihingen, which he has pledged to the brothers Heinrich and Konrad von Enzberg , in association with the prioress and the convent of the repentant in Pforzheim as property.
  • October 26, 1265: The dean Gottfried von Vaihingen commits himself and his successors, “after Count Konrad [II.] Von Vaihingen transferred his part of the tithe to Vaihingen to the sisters of the order of regrets in Pforzheim, which his predecessors from paid to the count of the aries of his church, to be killed in future to the imagined sisters ”.
  • September 2, 1266: Count Konrad von Vaihingen confirms that his servants Heinrich and Berthold von Kirchheim , sons of the knight Konrad von Kirchheim, sold a garden and a farmstead at the monastery there to the latter.
  • July 1, 1269: Count Konrad II. Von Vaihingen and the Herrenalb monastery compare because of the two parts of the half-owned mill at Maisenbach in such a way that the monastery leaves it to the count, while the latter grants him the ruined mill at the foot to rebuild the mountain Rotensol as a ban mill for Rothensol and Neusatz , and renounce all of his rights to these villages against the promise of payment of 10 pounds Heller to Epiphaniä .
  • April 1271: Count Konrad II. Von Vaihingen gives the Herrenalb monastery the undated certificate of his deceased father regarding the liberation of the Dietenhausen court as well as a donation of lights and wax candles in the church of the monastery, and confirms the freedom of the court for himself and all his heirs , the donation from Gülten in Arnbach and all other donations from his father to the abbey mentioned.
  • August 30, 1271: The brothers Wolf von Nufringen , Ulrich von Nufringen, Hugo von Nufringen, Heinrich von Nufringen and Sigmund von Nufringen called Siler sell the church in Sindelfingen through the hands of Count Rudolf von Tübingen their farm or their estate in Altingen with all their accessories excluding the castle , free of any bailiff, for 80 pounds hellers. Seals are the Counts Rudolf von Tübingen, Ulrich von Asperg and Konrad II von Vaihingen. Witnesses: Ortwin von Waldeck, Werner von Gärtringen, Heinrich von Hailfingen , Friedrich von Wilen, Otto von Brande, Dietrich the mayor of Herrenberg , Ludwig the mayor of Sindelfingen and Konrad von Wurmlingen , the canon.
  • November 7th, 1271: Count Konrad II. Von Vaihingen thanks Bishop Berthold , the provost… and Kapitel zu Würzburg for leaving the bailiwick there to the Steinheim monastery , and transfers the village of Glattbach near Vaihingen and a farm in Vaihingen to them as a replacement .
  • November 11, 1271: Count Konrad II of Vaihingen hands over the bailiwick in Steinheim , Sigebotsbuch and teaching yard under the castle to the prioress and the convent of Steinheim, which he sold to them for 200 pounds sterling .
  • November 16, 1271: Bishop Berthold von Würzburg , with the consent of his cathedral chapter, transfers the property rights of the Bailiwick of Steinheim , Sigebotsbuch and Lehrhof to the prioress and the convent of Steinheim , after Count Conrad II of Vaihingen, who was enfeoffed by the Würzburg Church, this to replace his village Glattbach near Vaihingen and a farm in Weihingen .
  • January 28, 1275: Bishop Berthold von Würzburg transfers the bailiwick of Steinheim, Sigebotsbuch and Lehrhof, fiefdom from the diocese of Würzburg , to which Count Conrad II of Vaihingen († around 1276) had given his place Glattbach and his court Weihingen to fief the Steinheim monastery.

Count Konrad III. from Vaihingen

  • December 1, 1277:
    Document dated December 1, 1277
    Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen , married to Agnes von Asperg, sells his village
    Gündelbach and all its accessories to abbot Hildebrand and the convent of Maulbronn for 400 pounds of pounds, renounces all rights to the bailiwick of the monastery building yard Steinbach and undertakes his siblings who are still underage to move to the same renunciation of all their possible rights to Gündelbach and the Steinbach farm as he himself, his mother and his brother the Speyr canon Gottfried did.
  • June 23, 1279: Werner von Rossewac and his wife Elisabet sell the brothers Werner and Werner Hopfin, citizens of Pforzheim, their tithes in Vaihingen for 100 pounds Heller, by giving them up on the open Kaiserstraße; Elizabeth explains in particular that she made an oath to the buyers that she would not prosecute them for this tithe before either a spiritual or a secular court. The witnesses are: Dietherus miles de Lomershain , Hainricus miles de Hohinnievern, Gerlachus miles dictus pincerna de Illingen, Ůlricus de Sternvels, Růdolfus iunior de Rossewac , Reinhardus et Otto fratres de Rossewac, Dietherus de Illingen, Albertus scultetus dictus Kaltysen de Vainhingen de Vainhingen , Dietmarus et Marquardus fratres, Cůnradus faber dictus de Nuzdorf, Hainricus de Durlach et Guntherus cives in Pforzhain . Siegler are Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen, Konrad the Elder from Lomersheim , Knight Swaneger von Remchingen and the exhibitor.
  • 1279: Free Ulrich von Magenheim sells the monastery to Bebenhausen with the consent of the feudal lord, Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen, and all of his heirs fishing in the Neckar near Beihingen for 55 pounds Heller. The Siegler are the Count of Vaihingen, the father of the exhibitor and the exhibitor himself.
  • May 11, 1279: Konrad Körnlin, known as von Schmiedelfeld, gives the abbot and convent of Lorch all of his goods in Buthenkain near Haselach, including vineyards, with the exception of the castle in Bietigheim with its own people and fishing. On the other hand, as long as he lives, the abbot and the convent have to give him 2 fuders of Speyrer Maßes wine, 20 Malter Spelz, 20 Malter Haber and 8 pounds of Heller annually and after his death, if his wife survives him, 10 pounds of Heller within 8 days to pay; they also have to grant him a burial in the monastery. At its time of year, they should be given 1 pound heller for fish and 1 measure of wine to every conventual. Siegler are Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen and the exhibitor, abbot and convent von Lorch.
  • April 23, 1281: Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen, after hearing his advisors and with the consent of his mother, gives the Katharinenspital zu Esslingen the bailiff of the 16 acres of vineyards in Horrheim and Haslach , insofar as the hospital builds them itself, and of 4 acres of meadows, house, wine press and garden in Haslach belong to the hospital, against payment of £ 30 hellers; However, if the vineyards are lent to builders, they should pay the bailiff for their part at the due date. In the same way, in gratitude for a loan of 10 pounds Heller granted to him by the hospital, the count releases all goods that are subsequently donated to the hospital, but with the restriction that this privilege is no longer valid after the debt has been paid back. Witnesses: Marquart the mayor of Esslingen, Ruprecht, Conrat his brother, Hainrich Stainbis, Sifrid von Dúrnkain, judge in Esslingen, Hainrich Spiegel, Albrecht Kaltisen, Diemar, Ludwig von Grüningen, Cunz Bernhuser and Cůnrat Folbi {u} n burger from Vaihingen, Cuůnrat Ziegelman, Hainrich the son of the mayor of Haselach,… dictus Shutvel, Wecangel von Horhain. Siegler are the exhibitor, the Count of Asperg, the Dean of Esslingen, the city of Esslingen.
  • April 24, 1281: Mayor and judge von Esslingen certify that the captured Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen transferred his rights to properties in Haslach and Horrheim to his mother.
  • December 6, 1282: Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen sells the Vogtei zu Dätzingen and the goods there as well as in Ostelsheim , which the brothers Balsan and Friedrich , the sons of former knight Friedrich von Dätzingen , have borne as a fief from him, the Komtur and the brothers of the Johanniterspital zu Dätzingen for 11 pounds Heller and provides payment for the consent of his brother Heinrich to this sale as soon as he has come of age.
  • May 9, 1283:
    Document dated May 9, 1283
    Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen exempts the goods of the Maulbronn Monastery in Hohen- and Niederhaslach from Vogtrecht.
  • February 13, 1284: Count Konrad III. Von Vaihingen, with the consent of his siblings Heinrich and Adelheid, pledged his two villages Hohen- and Nieder-Haslach to the abbess and the convent of Rechentshofen for 35 pounds Heller with the stipulation that the monastery should only be satisfied with the income of the villages when the 300 pounds of Heller, for which the villages are pledged to Maulbronn Monastery, have been completely removed. The sealers are the exhibitor, Knight Hermann von Sachsenheim, as well as Abbess Ber [chtrade] and Konvent von Rechentshofen, who confess that they only have the right to lumber in the forest of the village Haslach for 6 years.
  • May 14, 1285:
    Document dated May 14, 1285
    Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen hands over goods and rights in Hohen- and Nieder-Haslach to Maulbronn Monastery.
  • February 13, 1284: Conrad III. By God's grace Count von Vaihingen donates 200 acres of forest, called Hart Comitis, near the monastery to the Marienkloster in Rechentshofen, for the sake of his father Konrad and his other ancestors, with the consent of his mother Agnes, his siblings Heinrich and Adelheid and his other heirs to waive their right to lumber in the community forest of Haslach with the sole exception of the authorization to win stakes for their vineyards in Haslacher Mark in the part of the community forest in which the farmers are also interested in cutting wood. Other rights and freedoms enjoyed by the monastery in Haslach are not affected. Witnesses: Father Sifridus, the abbot of Maulbronn as well as brother Thomas and brother Ulrich, called Sicheler, Walther from Haselach, Hermann from Sachsenhein, Friedrich von Gomaringen, Hermann and Friedrich, the sons of Hermanni von Sachsenhein, Conrad Faber, Albertus Caltisen, Dietmar from Vaihingen. The sealers are the exhibitor, the abbot of Maulbronn, the abbess of Rechentshofen, the knights Erkinger the Elder of Magenheim, Ulrich von Branburg , Hermann von Sachsenheim and Dieter von Lomersheim.
  • March 12, 1286: Conrad III. By God's grace Count von Vaihingen sells the rest of the Grafenhart forest for 38 pounds Heller to the Rechentshofen monastery with the consent of his mother Agnes and his siblings Heinrich and Adelheid. Witnesses are: the pastor from Vaihingen Al (bert), the pastor from Haselach Wal (ther), the vicar from Horhein H (ermann), Ludwig von Wihingen, C (onrad) from Ingersheim , Ber (toldus) from Maulbronn, Albertus Scultetus in Horhein, ... called Sporlin, ... called Wetengil, Wolframus faber, H. de Ungaria, Erkinbertus, ... called Schamphier iurati in Horhein. The sealers are the exhibitor, the abbot of Maulbronn, the abbess of Rechentshofen, the knights Herr Erkinger the Elder of Magenheim, Herr Ulrich von Bromberg, Hermann von Sachsenheim, Diether von Lomersheim.
  • December 13, 1286: Berthold, Ulrich, Konrad and Volmar von Bromberg sell 8 ohms from Weinbede in Gündelbach to the Maulbronn monastery, in the same right as they and their father have received since then, for 26 pounds 5 Schilling Heller. The sealers are Count Konrad von Vaihingen, Erkinger the Elder from Magenheim and the exhibitors. Issued in Maulbronn.
  • January 19, 1287: Pastor Walther von Haslach bequeathed 4 acres of vineyard in Haslach to the Rechentshofen monastery on the condition that after his death 5 ohms of wine from his mother and 1 ohm to the former prioress are served annually. The sealers are Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen and the exhibitor.
  • May 1, 1287: Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen certifies that his loyal Eber (hard) called Stampf von Söllingen has given up in his hand the part of the tithe in Hochdorf , which he had in fiefdom from him and lent on to Wernher Hopfo, and at the request of both of them, he is entitled to the monastery Herrenalb out of veneration of the Virgin Mary and to his and his parents, the benefactors of the monastery, salvation. Siegler is the exhibitor under whose seal the feudal people who lack one of their own declare their agreement.
  • August 1, 1287: Konrad and Volmar von Bromberg sell 13 ohms and 4 quarters of their vineyard in Gündelbach to Maulbronn Monastery for 46 pounds, 10 shillings hellers and 40 pfennigs. Siegler is Count C (onrad III.) Von Vaihingen, Erkinger the younger from Magenheim and the exhibitors. Issued in Maulbronn.
  • 1288: Konrad von Ingersheim hands over a mill in Horrheim to Maulbronn Monastery, which he becomes an afterfief of Berthold von Weißenstein, who then becomes a fief of Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen, and the count frees the mill for the monastery.
  • March 12, 1288: The brothers Konrad III. and Heinrich, Count of Vaihingen, sell, with the consent of the spiritual judges and the provost of the Trinity Monastery in Speyer, Egelolf, as the archdeacon , to Provost Hugo and Kapitel von Denkendorf , which belongs directly to the Church of Jerusalem, their court in Bietigheim, called Fronhof , with its affiliations, namely two parts of the large and the small tithe, the Widdum and the patronage right of the church there, the fishing right in the Enz, fields, meadows, pastures and people around 630 pounds heller, provide guarantors for performance of the guarantee for the year and day and also promise guarantee in accordance with the law. Upon special request, they confirm that they are not aware of anything, that these goods are from someone fief. Heinrich expressly waives the objection due to being a minor. The sealers are Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen, whose seal Heinrich also used, the spiritual judges and the archdeacon Provost Egelolf von Speyer.
  • October 16, 1288: Konrad von Ingersheim , his wife and children Konrad, Götz, Laudilie and Engelin sell 30 Schillings perpetual validity to Benz von der Duben canons of St. German zu Speyer on the mill near Horrheim, called Brendelnes müle , and on Gardens and meadows and refute the feudal lord, the noble Berthold von Stein , the valid with a meadow near Horrheim, called Ritwise. In the event that the validity of someone else's fief or after-fief, they promise to obtain their franking within three months. Siegler is Count Konrad III. from Vaihingen. Witnesses are: our grave Heinrich , Mr. Blicger von Steinach, Mr. Wernher von Sternenfels, Mr. Ulrich von Branburg .
  • October 16, 1288: Conrad III. by God's grace Count von Vaihingen certified that Mr. Konrad von Ingersheim, knight, with the will of his heirs to Benz von der Duben , canon of St. German zu Speyer, 30 Schilling Heller perpetual validity on the Brendelnes mill near Horrheim and on 2 meadows and Heller sold 2 gardens for 121/2 pounds, that he, with his two sons Konrad and Götz and his daughter the Gratder, gave up the validity to the buyer at Horrheim an der Offen Strasse in the presence of Count Ulrichs von Bromberg and Ludwigs and his Brother that the four promised, in addition to the promise of the guarantee, to move the daughters of the seller Laudilie and Engelin to abandonment before St. Gallen Day and to have the validity of the feudal lord removed. He finally certifies that Laudilie and Engelin have since waived their rights before him. Siegler is the exhibitor.
Document dated February 18, 1289
  • February 18, 1289: Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen sells his village Hohenhaslach to the Maulbronn monastery with all rights and authorities for 750 pounds Heller. He certifies that his mother Agnes, his brother Heinrich and his sister Adelheid have given their consent, which was required for the sale, and have publicly waived in Vaihingen on the royal road to the attention of the brothers. Witnesses: Rabeno dictus Goler advocatus provincialis, Heinricus de Nitperc, Hermannus de Sachsinheim, Albertus de Ni {e} vern, Cunradus de Enzeberg dictus Rummeler, Cunradus marscalcus de Besinkeim, Reimboto iunior de Nitperc, Bertoldus de Massinbach, Gerhardus Pavo de universitas villarum in Haselach. The sealers are the exhibitor and the knights Ulrich and his brother Erkinger von Magenheim, the bailiff Rabeno Göler, Heinrich von Neipperg, Hermann von Sachsenheim, Albert von Niefern, Konrad von Enzberg, called Rummeler, Konrad the marshal of Besigheim.
  • April 23, 1289: Eberhard der Scheerer , the son of Palatine Rudolf von Tübingen , sells all his vineyards in Jesingen with the wine press and all rights under, on and above the earth to the Bebenhausen monastery with the consent of his brother, Count Rudolf , in particular the associated Vorlehen, also his bailiwick over the goods of the monastery and that of Albert von Lachen, which the monastery bought for 8 pounds Heller, over the goods of Albert Munsær von Tübingen near Lachen, which is sold to the monastery for 4 pounds Heller are, and across the fields and meadows between the Rosenau and the Echaz, around 104 pounds Heller. Siegler are the Counts Albert von Hohenberg, uncle (avunculus) of the exhibitor, and Konrad III. von Vaihingen, the exhibitor and Count Rudolf von Tübingen… Witnesses were Magister Gerlach, the notary Walther, Friederich von Weil called Usel, Burkhart von Lustnau,… Dietrich the mayor von Herrenberg with his sons and Konrad von Wildenau.
  • March 1289: Margrave Hermann von Baden pledged the village of Ellmendingen , which was formerly Count Conrad III, to the Herrenalb monastery for 310 pounds of Heller . von Vaihingen, called von Neuenbürg, to the knight Konrad the Elder von Remchingen and his son Berthold, who have pledged them to him for the same amount, promises never to redeem the pledge, but makes his for the king or the owner of Neuenbürg The village is accessories, with the proviso that they can buy back the village for 310 pounds hellers, to be paid at once. He undertakes to obtain the transfer of ownership from the king with his hand sign and seal. As soon as he brings the royal deed to the monastery, it has to pay him 70 pounds hellers within a month as the remainder of the deposit and becomes the property of the village. As a replacement for multiple damages that he has inflicted on the monastery, he leaves all income to the monastery from now until the transfer of property, for which the monastery should also remember his and his ancestors at all times. Siegler is the exhibitor and his brother Hesso.
  • June 7, 1291: Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen, Speyrer Diocese, with the consent of his brother the cleric Heinrich, his mother and his wife in honor of the Virgin Mary gives the monastery Bebenhausen freedom on the estates in Haslach, which it is called by the noble Kuno and his brothers von Stöffeln Muntrop and from the knight Wernher von Neuhausen called Tússer bought houses, barns and wine presses and was allowed to press their wine in them. Siegler are the Count Palatine Eberhard and Gottfried von Tübingen, the brother of the exhibitor and the exhibitor himself, nobilis viri Ru {o} dolfi de Rozwag, Hermanni de Sahsenhain , Ludwici de Vaihingen militum, Conradi de Remichain , Hugonis de Wiler, scultetorum de Vaihingen et de Horhain, Eberhardi de Tamme and Berth. de Vaihingen testimonio accedente. Issued in Vaihingen.
  • November 2, 1293: Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen exempts the Esslingen hospital from customs duties in Enzweihingen .
  • December 18, 1298: Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen and his family donate the church set in Kleinsachsenheim to the Rechentshofen monastery .
  • November 18, 1299: Count Konrad III. von Vaihingen confirms the donation of the patronage rights of the church in Zuffenhausen, which can be leashed to him, by knight Friedrich von Urbach to Count Eberhard von Württemberg and in turn transfers ownership and all other rights to the count to the count.
  • May 25, 1317: The Counts of Vaihingen renounce their rights and claims to the goods that the hospital in Esslingen has sold to Maulbronn Monastery.
Document dated May 25, 1317
Document dated June 11, 1319
Document dated August 1, 1322
Document dated March 18, 1339
Document dated February 16, 1350

Count Konrad IV of Vaihingen

  • 1311 besieged Count Konrad IV. Of Vaihingen the castle Dauseck above the right Enzufer and eventually takes her to Count Eberhard I of Württemberg from.
  • June 11, 1319: Count Konrad IV. Von Vaihingen and his wife Elisabeth ( von Schlüsselberg ) guarantee the abbot and the convent of Maulbronn Monastery that the church fee and tithe will be excluded from the goods sold to him in Hohenhaslach, but the Lords of Maulbronn in the churchyard should have their refuge and custody as well as other freedoms on this property.
  • August 1, 1322: Conrad IV von Vaihingen the Elder sells the estate in Weiler that Albrecht von Horrheim had accrued to Maulbronn Monastery.
  • November 11, 1323: Conrad IV. Von Vaihingen sued the court court against Bishop Johann von Bamberg . King Ludwig announced in Nuremberg that noble Konrad von Vaihingen had come before him in court and sued Bishop Johann and his bishopric for the inheritance of his father-in-law, noble Gottfried von Schlüsselberg, as well as for the damage caused to him, his wife and his heirs . The bishop was responsible for this because neither he nor his bishopric owed anything. He also submitted that no one other than other princes could give him a verdict in the court for this reason.
After this lecture, seven spiritual and secular princes followed the bishop by judgment, who ate in judgment. The verdict was contradicted by a number of counts and free people who also ate in the court. Since no joint judgment could be reached, he sat with his council on this matter and found that the claim of von Vaihingen could not harm the bishop and his bishopric, after Burgrave Friedrich von Nürnberg , Heinrich Kochmeister von Nortenberg, the court (Court) scribe Adolf and Meister Hermann, pastor of Sankt Sebald in Nuremberg, had declared on their oath that the deceased Emperor Heinrich (VII.) had acquitted the bishopric of Bamberg from the above-mentioned lawsuit by right court and judgment.
By virtue of his royal power, he therefore exempts the bishop and the Bamberg monastery from the lawsuit with this document. The King deposited the document with Abbot Friedrich von Ebrach so that he could keep it and keep it for the Bamberg Monastery until it was reclaimed.
The princes mentioned in the document who passed the judgment were the following: the bishops Markward von Eichstätt and Nikolaus von Regensburg , Abbot Heinrich von Fulda and the Abbot von Ellwangen, the Landgraves Hermann I and Otto von Hessen as well as Count Berthold von Henneberg .
  • In 1335 "Klein-Ulrich" von Bromberg was killed by Count Konrad IV von Vaihingen "in connection with Berthold von Massenbach, Heinrich von Neipperg and Hans von Gemmingen", which is why they made various foundations for the early mass in Horrheim as atonement.
  • March 10, 1339: Count Konrad IV von Vaihingen sells half the village of Gündelbach to Maulbronn Monastery for 200 pounds of Heller.
  • March 18, 1339: Count Konrad IV. Von Vaihingen, his wife Elisabeth and their son Johannes sell 2 pounds Heller per year to the Maulbronn monastery from the Streler's mill in Hohenhaslach.
  • February 16, 1350: Count Konrad IV. Von Vaihingen and his son, Count Johann von Vaihingen, donate 13½ of their property in the area of ​​their two villages Hohen- and Niederhaslach to the monastery Rechentshofen for their salvation and that of their wife and mother Elisabeth von Schlüsselberg Quarter of wine gins from one acre of vineyard called the "Spi [e] gel" and "on the Hungerberg" plus an annual valid from four acre of meadows.

Count Konrad V. von Vaihingen

Countess Mechthild von Vaihingen-Zollern

  • March 27, 1364: “ Mechthild von Vaihingen , Count Friedrichs von Zollern- [Schalksburg] married landlady, sold to Counts Eberhard II. , Ulrich IV. And Ulrich her father's claims to the legacy of her brother Count Heinrich for 7,500 pounds Heller. "
  • March 17, 1366: “Eberhard von Sickingen, provost of St. Trinitatis in Speyer, documents that Countess Mechthild von Vaihingen, wife of Count Friedrich von Zollern, for her and her ancestors' salvation to the archdeacon on the altar of the Virgin Mary and the St. John the Baptist in the parish church Hohenhaslach has given a priestly pledge with precisely defined goods and under certain conditions. "
  • August 22, 1374: Mechthild, Countess v. Zollern, b. von Vaihingen, gives virgin Anna von Gemmingen and her sisters, clerics on the Baiselsberg , in the parish of Horrheim 4 lb. H. Valid from goods to Horrheim.

Important representatives

swell

literature

  • Lothar Behr, Otto-Heinrich Elias , Manfred Scheck, Ernst Eberhard Schmidt (ed.): History of the city of Vaihingen an der Enz . Ipa, Vaihingen 2001.
  • Thomas Faltin: The Cistercian convent Rechentshofen and its position towards spiritual and secular violence. In: Journal for Württemberg State History (ZWLG) 55 (1996), pp. 27–64.
  • Werner Palmbach: The Rechentshofen Monastery in Hohenhaslach, a wine town. History and stories from 1200 years of village life . City of Sachsenheim (ed.), Sachsenheim 2000.
  • Karl Eduard Paulus : Description of the Oberamt Vaihingen . Issued by the Royal Bureau of Statistics and Topography. Hallberger, Stuttgart 1856. Wikisource .
  • Manfred Scheck: The founding of the city of Vaihingen . In: Series of publications by the city of Vaihingen an der Enz , Volume 6 (1989), pp. 17–55.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Gerhard Fritz : Noble gentlemen. The Counts of Vaihingen, their village and their city from the 11th to the 14th century . In: Lothar Behr, Otto-Heinrich Elias, Manfred Scheck, Ernst Eberhard Schmidt (eds.): History of the city of Vaihingen an der Enz , Vaihingen 2001, pp. 67–98.
  2. ^ Robert Kretzschmar: Württemberg district town and customs station . In: Lothar Behr u. a .: History of the city of Vaihingen an der Enz , Ipa, Vaihingen 2001, p. 101ff.
  3. WUB Volume I., No. 267, pages 338-339 WUB online .
  4. WUB Volume II., No. 312, Pages 13-14 WUB online .
  5. WUB Volume II., No. 324, Pages 40-41 WUB online .
  6. WUB Volume II., No. A6, pages 389-436 WUB online .
  7. WUB Volume II., No. 353, pages 100-101 WUB online .
  8. WUB Volume II., No. 363, page 116 WUB online .
  9. ^ Regesta Imperii (RI) IV, 3 n. 80, RI Online .
  10. ^ RI IV, 3 n.84, RI Online .
  11. RI IV, 3 n.243, RI Online .
  12. WUB Volume II., No. 487, page 301 WUB online .
  13. ^ RI V, 1.1n.5, RI Online .
  14. RI V, 1.1n.10, RI Online .
  15. WUB Volume II., No. 502, pages 320–321 WUB online .
  16. RI V, 1.1n.14, RI Online .
  17. RI V, 1.1n.18, RI Online .
  18. ^ RI V, 1.1 n.22, RI Online .
  19. WUB Volume III, No. 809, page 304 .
  20. WUB Volume III, No. 809, page 304 .
  21. ^ Württembergisches Urkundenbuch (WUB) Volume III, No. 934, pp. 437-438, WUB Online Analysis and Translation at Scheck, series of publications by the city of Vaihingen an der Enz , Volume 6 (1989), pp. 18ff.
  22. WUB Volume V., No. 1338, pages 103-104.
  23. a b c d e f g Baden-Wuerttemberg State Archives Department Main State Archives Stuttgart Old Wuerttemberg Archives District authorities of the church property and the university / 1095–1818 Monastery and monastery property administrations / 1095–1807 Maulbronn / 1147–1806 Documents 1.2 Official locations 1.2.39 Hohenhaslach and Bromberg .
  24. WUB Volume V., No. 1427, pp . 190-191 .
  25. WUB Volume VI., No. 1676, pages 78-79 .
  26. WUB Volume VI., No. 1680, page 81 .
  27. WUB Volume VI., No. 1698, page 98 .
  28. WUB Volume VI., No. 1821, pages 216-217 .
  29. WUB Volume VI., No. 1836, page 232 .
  30. WUB Volume VI., No. 1873, page 267 .
  31. WUB Volume VII., No. 2084, pages 38-39 .
  32. WUB Volume III, No. 772, p. 263 WUB online .
  33. WUB Volume VII., No. 2201, page 133 .
  34. WUB Volume VII., No. 2228, page 152 .
  35. WUB Volume VII., No. 2235, pages 157-158 .
  36. WUB Volume VII., No. 2236, pages 158-159 .
  37. WUB Volume VII., No. 2237, page 159 .
  38. WUB Volume VII., No. 2480, pages 350-351 .
  39. a b c Baden-Württemberg State Archive, HStA Stuttgart, Old Württemberg Archive, District Authorities of the Church Property and the University / 1095–1818 Monastery and Abbey Property Administration / 1095–1807 Maulbronn / 1147–1806 Documents 1.2 Official locations 1.2.15 Gündelbach, archival unit .
  40. WUB Volume VIII., No. 2732, pages 66-69 and 108 .
  41. WUB Volume VIII., No. 2892, pages 176-177 .
  42. WUB Volume VIII., No. 2843, page 149 .
  43. WUB Volume VIII., No. 2883, page 171 .
  44. WUB Volume VIII., No. 3042, pages 270-271 .
  45. WUB Volume VIII., No. 3043, p. 271 , and document book of the city of Esslingen, 1899, Volume 1, p. 58 .
  46. Volume VIII., No. 3188, page 371 .
  47. WUB Volume VIII., No. 3242, pages 394-395 .
  48. Württembergisches Urkundenbuch Volume VIII, No. 3284, page 420f WUB online .
  49. WUB Volume VIII., No. 3316, pages 438-439 .
  50. WUB Volume VIII., No. 3317, page 439 .
  51. WUB Volume VIII., No. 3318, pages 439-440 .
  52. WUB Volume VIII., No. 3317, page 439 .
  53. WUB Volume IX., No. 3518, page 68 .
  54. WUB Volume IX., No. 3598, page 117 .
  55. WUB Volume IX., No. 3633, page 135.
  56. WUB Volume IX., No. 3658, page 150 .
  57. WUB Volume IX., No. 3691, page 171 .
  58. WUB Volume IX., No. 3725, pages 195-196 .
  59. WUB Volume IX., No. 3783, page 234 .
  60. WUB Volume IX., No. 3784, page 235 .
  61. WUB Volume IX., No. 3828, pages 259-260 .
  62. WUB Volume IX., No. 3853, page 276 .
  63. WUB Volume IX., No. 3833, pages 263-264 .
  64. WUB Volume IX., No. 4143, pages 474-475 .
  65. WUB Volume X., No. 4436, page 180 .
  66. WUB Volume XI., No. 5125, page 138 .
  67. WUB Volume XI., No. 5195, pages 184-185 .
  68. WUB Volume XI., No. 5370, page 331 .
  69. Baden-Württemberg State Archives, Department Main State Archives Stuttgart, Old Württemberg Archives, District Authorities of the Church Property and the University / 1095–1818, Monastery and Abbey Property Administrations / 1095–1807, Maulbronn / 1147–1806, documents, 1.2 official locations, 1.2.11 Illingen, archive unit , Order signature A 502 U 372.
  70. See local lexicon Baden-Württemberg ( memento of the original from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. and Dieter Buck: The big book from Stromberg-Heuchelberg. Nature, culture, history, places . 1st edition. Silberburg-Verlag, Tübingen 2006, ISBN 3-87407-704-7 , p. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / maja.bsz-bw.de 39 .
  71. ^ Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, holdings A 502: Maulbronn, documents, 1.5. Mixed documents, order signature: A 502 U 1228 .
  72. Landgrave Regests online No. 11869. Regest of the Landgraves of Hesse. (As of October 12, 2011). In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).
  73. According to OAB Brackenheim in the HStA Stuttgart in documents from June 19, 1335, May 2, 1337, May 19, 1338 and June 3, 1339 documented. See also the local dictionary of Leo-BW
  74. ^ LABW, State Archives Ludwigsburg, JL 425 Bd 24 Qu. 46:  in the German digital library
  75. Baden-Württemberg State Archives, Department Main State Archives Stuttgart Old Württemberg Archives District authorities of the church property and the university / 1095–1818 Monastery and monastery property administrations / 1095–1807 Maulbronn / 1147–1806 Documents 1.2 Official locations 1.2.14 Schützingen, archive unit .
  76. See: Rudolf von Stillfried u. Traugott Maercker: Hohenzoller research. Part 1: Swabian research. Carl Reimarus, Berlin 1847, pp. 151-153, and LABW, HStA Stuttgart, A 602 No. 14113 LABW online
  77. ^ In: Monumenta Zollerana, Bd. 1, No. 346 (LABW, HStA Stuttgart A 502 U 1095) LABW online
  78. LABW, HStA. Stuttgart, A 602 No. 14220 - WR 14220  in the German Digital Library or LABW online .

Web links

Commons : Grafen von Vaihingen  - Collection of images, videos and audio files