Stamboom van Wincoop - Sandkuijl » Berengar I (II) von Sulzbach (± 1080-1125)

Persoonlijke gegevens Berengar I (II) von Sulzbach 

Bron 1

Gezin van Berengar I (II) von Sulzbach

Hij is getrouwd met Adelheid von Dießen-Wolfratshausen.

Zij zijn getrouwd


Kind(eren):

  1. Gebhard III von Sulzbach  ± 1114-1188 

Heeft u aanvullingen, correcties of vragen met betrekking tot Berengar I (II) von Sulzbach?
De auteur van deze publicatie hoort het graag van u!


Tijdbalk Berengar I (II) von Sulzbach

  Deze functionaliteit is alleen beschikbaar voor browsers met Javascript ondersteuning.
Klik op de namen voor meer informatie. Gebruikte symbolen: grootouders grootouders   ouders ouders   broers-zussen broers/zussen   kinderen kinderen

Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Berengar I (II) von Sulzbach


    Toon totale kwartierstaat

    Via Snelzoeken kunt u zoeken op naam, voornaam gevolgd door een achternaam. U typt enkele letters in (minimaal 3) en direct verschijnt er een lijst met persoonsnamen binnen deze publicatie. Hoe meer letters u intypt hoe specifieker de resultaten. Klik op een persoonsnaam om naar de pagina van die persoon te gaan.

    • Of u kleine letters of hoofdletters intypt maak niet uit.
    • Wanneer u niet zeker bent over de voornaam of exacte schrijfwijze dan kunt u een sterretje (*) gebruiken. Voorbeeld: "*ornelis de b*r" vindt zowel "cornelis de boer" als "kornelis de buur".
    • Het is niet mogelijk om tekens anders dan het alfabet in te voeren (dus ook geen diacritische tekens als ö en é).

    Verwantschap Berengar I (II) von Sulzbach



    Visualiseer een andere verwantschap

    Bronnen

    1. Wikipedia, accessed 22-02-2020), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berengar_II_of_Sulzbach
      Berengar II of Sulzbach
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
      Jump to navigationJump to search
      Berengar II of Sulzbach
      Berengar II von Sulzbach.jpg
      Berengar II of Sulzbach (c. 1080-3. December 1125) with hunting falcon under the organ loft above his coat of arms in Kastl Abbey
      Born c 1080– 83
      Died 3 December 1125
      Nationality Bavarian
      Occupation Knight
      Known for Foundation of Abbeys
      Children Gebhard III of Sulzbach
      Gertrude of Sulzbach
      Bertha of Sulzbach
      Matilda of Sulzbach
      Count Berengar II of Sulzbach (c. 1080– 83 – 3 December 1125), sometimes known as Berengar I of Sulzbach,[a] was Count of Sulzbach in Bavaria. Berengar was a leader of the reform party. He sided with Pope Gregory VII during the Investiture Controversy in opposition to Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, and supported Henry V in his successful rebellion against his father. He is known as the founder of several abbeys.


      Contents
      1 Family
      2 Advisor to Henry V
      3 Religious foundations
      3.1 Berchtesgaden Provostry
      3.2 Kastl Abbey
      3.3 Baumburg Abbey
      4 References
      5 Sources
      Family
      Berengar's grandfather was Gebhard I, Count of Sulzbach (died 1071), who married the daughter of Count Berengar I of Sulzbach. Gebhard I may have been the son of Herman IV, Duke of Swabia (died 28 July 1038), but this is not certain.[1] Gebhard I was father of Gebhard II.[citation needed] Berengar was the son of Count Gebhard II of Sulzbach (died 1085) and Irmgard of Rott (died 14 June 1101).[2] His sister Adelaide may have married Count Siboto II of Weyarn-Falkenstein, who was later the advocate of Baumburg Abbey.[3] The Weyarns at first supported Henry IV in his conflict with Pope Gregory VII during the Investiture Controversy. Later Siboto II was associated with the pro-papal side that included the Sulzbachs.[4]

      Around 1099 Berengar married Adelaide, widow and heiress of Count Udalric of Passau, nicknamed "the very rich". Count Udalric's cousin, the Count palatine Rapoto of Bavaria, had died around the same time as Udalric and had been succeeded by Berengar's relative Diepold III, margrave of the Nordgau in Bavaria, who inherited the titles of Count of Cham and Margrave of Vuhburg.[5] Berengar was married to Adelheid von Lechsgemünd for over six years until her death in 1105. This marriage seems to have been childless.[6]

      Berengar's second wife was Adelheid von Dießen-Wolfratshausen, with whom he had six children, Four of these children married into the highest circles. His son, Count Gebhard III of Sulzbach, married Matilda, daughter of Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria. His daughter Gertrude was the wife of King Conrad III of Germany.[7] Her sister Luitgarde married Godfrey II, Count of Louvain and Duke of Lower Lorraine.[6] In 1143 his daughter Bertha, later called Irene, married the Emperor Manuel I Komnenos of Byzantium (c. 1120– 1180). She died about 1158.[8]

      Advisor to Henry V
      On 5 February 1104 Count Sigehard of Burghausen was murdered, and Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, was blamed for the crime.[9] Berengar was one of the Bavarian Nordgau princes who held the emperor responsible for the murder. The others were Diepold III of Cham-Vohburg and Otto, count of Kastl-Habsberg.[10] They encouraged Henry V to rebel against his father. The three were closely associated with the Gregorian party of Bishop Gebhard of Constance.[10] The noble reform party thought that the Emperor Henry IV was leading the people to destruction and only the true church, the church of the Gregorian and Monastic Reform, could point the way to salvation.[11]

      On 12 December 1104 King Henry V with a small retinue left his father's camp in Fritzlar and took refuge in Bavaria, the start of the rebellion.[12] During the struggle from 1104 to 1106 Berengar was often with Henry V and one of his key advisers in affairs of the kingdom.[13] In 1106 Henry IV took refuge from his son in Regensburg, calling for assistance from the Czech Duke Borivoj. The Czech army came up, but when they saw that Henry V was supported by Margrave Diepold III and Count Berengar they retreated.[14] The emperor continued his flight, and died at Liège on 8 August 1106.[15]

      Between 1108 and 1111 Berengar took part in the campaigns in Hungary and Poland and on Henry's expedition to Rome. From January 1116 to autumn 1119 there is no sign of his presence at the royal court of Henry V. It is believed that during this time Count Berengar dedicated his absence from the royal court to increasing his monasteries.[13]

      Henry V died on 23 May 1125. Berengar was present at the emperor's funeral, and was one of the signatories to a letter inviting the leading men of the kingdom to attend a diet on 25 August 1125 to elect a successor. The first signatory was Adalbert I, Archbishop of Mainz, the archchancellor of Germany. The other secular signatories were Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria, Frederick II, Duke of Swabia and Godfrey, Count Palatine.[16]

      Berengar died on 3 December 1125 and was succeeded by his son Gebhard III.[6] The son and heir of Gebhard III died on an expedition to Rome in 1167. Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor, nephew of Conrad III, bought the Sulzbach lands for his two sons, Frederick and Otto.[17]

      Religious foundations
      As one of the leaders of the ecclesiastical reform circle in Upper Bavaria, Swabia and Saxony Berengar was one of the founders of the Abbeys of Berchtesgaden, Kastl, and Baumberg.[18]

      Berchtesgaden Provostry

      Berchtesgaden
      Berengar's first monastery foundation, the Berchtesgaden Provostry, was commissioned by his mother Irmgard of Rott. According to legend, it was founded in fulfillment of a vow of thanksgiving for the salvation of his father, Gebhard II of Sulzbach, after a hunting accident at the rock on which the Berchtesgaden Collegiate Church stands today. His mother Irmgard owned Berchtesgaden from her first marriage with Count Engelbert V of Chiemgau, and as his widow had made a vow to have a house built for use by an "assembly of clergy of communal life" ("congregatio clericorum communis vite"). Due to various worldly affairs Irmgard did not have the time to found the congregation, so shortly before her death she commissioned Berengar with the task, to promote his and her salvation.[19]

      In the year of his mother's death, 1101, Berengar appointed the canon Eberwin as the first provost. Under his guidance, he sent three Augustinian canons and four lay brothers to Berchtesgaden from Rottenbuch Abbey, the mother abbey of the Augustinians in Altbayern and a center of the canonical reform movement. Berengar and his half-brother Kuno von Horburg-Lechsgemünd then requested papal confirmation for the founding of the monastery. Probably in 1102 and no later than 1105 Kuno von Horburg and Eberwin traveled to Rome on behalf of Berengar.[20] Pope Paschal II had very likely on 7 April 1102 placed the Count's monastery under his protection.[21][18] He confirmed this privilege in writing to Berengar and Kuno von Horburg.[b][22]

      According to the Fundatio monasterii Berchtesgadensis the Augustinians at first found the lonely wilderness of Berchtesgaden, with its terrifying mountain forests, and permanent ice and snow a very inhospitable place, and sought somewhere more suitable.[23][24]

      Kastl Abbey

      Kastl Abbey
      After the Lateran council of March/April 1102, on 12 May 1102 Berengar was granted the privilege of founding the St Peter monastery in Kastl according to the Hirsauer reform.[25] Berengar co-founded the abbey with Count Friedrich of Kastl-Habsberg and his son Otto.[11] Diepold III of Cham-Vohburg also assisted with the foundation.[10]

      Baumburg Abbey

      Baumburg Abbey
      In 1102 Paschal gave Berengar the privilege of founding Baumburg Abbey.[26] In 1104– 06 Berengar was deeply involved in the struggles of Henry V against his father Emperor Henry IV, and was unable to implement the wishes of his wife Adelheid von Lechsgemünd to spend the inheritance from her first two marriages to establish a Reform congregation. Adelheid therefore felt compelled before her death (1104/1105) to place her husband and a dozen selected ministers under oath to establish a regular canons monastery to the north of lake Chiemsee and to annex the existing church of St. Margaret in Baumburg. But to found two monasteries within three or four years and to participate in the reform of the Kastl Abbey at the same time gave him great difficulty. He therefore followed the urging of his church officials and expanded Baumburg with goods from Berchtesgaden so he would have at least one well-equipped monastery, and would meet the wishes of his mother and first wife.[27]

      In 1107, or at the latest in 1109, Eberwin and his monks from Berchtesgaden founded Baumburg Abbey in the north of the present Traunstein district.[28] Later, probably around 1116, Eberwin returned to Berchtesgaden where the first major land clearing was undertaken and the Augustinians settled permanently.[29] The independence of Berchtesgaden was not secure, since Gottschalk (ca. 1120– 1163), provost of Baumburg, was not willing to accept the loss of the Berchtesgaden assets. After Berengar died in 1125, Gottschalk challenged the legality of the separation and asked Archbishop Conrad I of Salzburg for an injunction to re-merge the properties.[30] Conrad finally confirmed the independence of both monasteries in 1136, which was confirmed by Pope Innocent II in 1142.[31]

      References
      Berengar was the first Berengar, Count of Sulzbach of his house, and is sometimes called Berengar I of Sulzbach. However, his great-grandfather was also Count Berengar of Sulzbach.
      Paschalis episcopus, servus servorum dei, dilectis filiis Berengano et Cononi comitibus salutem et apostolicam benedictionem... (Paschal, bishop, servant of the servants of God, to his beloved sons Berengar and Kuno, counts, greetings and apostolic benediction...) (Anm. 45)[22]
      Hlawitschka 2006, pp. 1– 20.
      Koch-Sternfeld 1815, p. 12.
      Freed 1984, p. 20.
      Freed 1984, p. 19-20.
      Robinson 2003, p. 305.
      Dopsch 1991, pp. 214,221.
      Otto I of Freising 1953, p. 54.
      Smith 1880, p. 822.
      Robinson 2003, p. 322.
      Robinson 2003, p. 324.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, p. 233.
      Robinson 2003, p. 323.
      Walko 2004, p. 61f.
      Cosmas of Prague 1120, p. 202.
      Cosmas of Prague 1120, p. 203.
      McNeal & Thatcher 1905, p. 152-153.
      Leyser 1994, p. 132-133.
      Albrecht 1995, pp. 286– 287.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, pp. 233– 234.
      Brugger, Dopsch & Kramml 1991, p. 228.
      Feulner 1986, p. 8.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, p. 239.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, p. 244.
      Berchtesgaden, Chorherrenstift.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, p. 242.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, p. 230.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, pp. 245– 246.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, p. 246.
      Albrecht 1995, pp. 288.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, p. 250.
      Weinfurter et al. 1991, pp. 251.
      Sources
      Albrecht, Dieter (1995). "Die Fürstpropstei Berchtesgaden". In Max Spindler, Andreas Kraus (ed.). Handbuch der bayerischen Geschichte: Teilbd. Geschichte der Oberpfalz und des Bayerischen Reichskreises bis zum Ausgang des 18. Jahrhunderts. C.H.Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-39453-9. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
      "Berchtesgaden, Chorherrenstift". Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
      Brugger, Walter; Dopsch, Heinz; Kramml, Peter F. (1991). Geschichte von Berchtesgaden: Zwischen Salzburg und Bayern (bis 1594). Plenk. ISBN 978-3-922590-63-7. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
      Cosmas of Prague (1120). The Chronicle of the Czechs. CUA Press. ISBN 978-0-8132-1570-9. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
      Dopsch, Heinz (1991). "Siedlung und Recht. Zur Vorgeschichte der Berchtesgadener Stiftsgründer". Geschichte von Berchtesgaden: Zwischen Salzburg und Bayern (bis 1594). Plenk. ISBN 978-3-922590-63-7. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
      Feulner, Manfred (1986). Berchtesgaden - Geschichte des Landes und seiner Bewohner. Berchtesgaden: Berchtesgadener Anzeiger. ISBN 3-925647-00-7.
      Freed, John B. (1984). The Counts of Falkenstein: Noble Self-consciousness in Twelfth-century Germany. American Philosophical Society. ISBN 978-0-87169-746-2. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
      Hlawitschka, Eduard (2006). "Zur Abstammung Richwaras, der Gemahlin Herzog Bertholds I. von Zähringen". Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins (154).
      Koch-Sternfeld, Joseph Ernst von (1815). Geschichte des Fürstenthums Berchtesgaden und seiner Salzwerke: In drey Büchern. 1056 – 1303. 1. Salzburg: Mayer. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
      Leyser, Karl (1994-07-01). Communications and Power in Medieval Europe: The Gregorian Revolution and Beyond. Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-3028-1. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
      McNeal, Edgar Holmes; Thatcher, Oliver J. (1905). A Source Book of Mediæval History: Selected Documents Illustrating the History of Europe in the Middle Age. Charles Scribner's Sons. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
      Otto I of Freising (1953). The Deeds of Frederick Barbarossa. Translated by Mierow, Charles Christopher. Columbia University Press.
      Robinson, I. S. (2003-12-04). Henry IV of Germany 1056– 1106. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-54590-7. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
      Smith, William (1880). A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. J. Murray. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
      Walko, Martin Johann (2004). "Die Traditionen des Augustiner-Chorherrenstifts Baumburg an der Alz". Quellen und Erörterungen zur Bayerischen Geschichte. Munich. 44 (1).
      Weinfurter, Stefan; Brugger, Walter; Dopsch, Heinz; Kramml, Peter F. (1991). "Die Gründung des Augustiner-Chorherrenstiftes – Reformidee und Anfänge der Regularkanoniker in Berchtesgaden". Geschichte von Berchtesgaden: Zwischen Salzburg und Bayern (bis 1594) (in German). 1. Berchtesgaden: Plenk. ISBN 978-3-922590-63-7. Retrieved 2013-12-07.
      Authority control Edit this at Wikidata
      GND: 138776997VIAF: 95404587WorldCat Identities (via VIAF): 95404587
      Categories: 11th-century births1125 deathsCounts of the Holy Roman Empire
    

    Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

    Bron: Wikipedia


    Over de familienaam Von Sulzbach


    Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
    Chris van Wincoop, "Stamboom van Wincoop - Sandkuijl", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stambooom-van-wincoop-sandkuijl/I4220.php : benaderd 25 mei 2024), "Berengar I (II) von Sulzbach (± 1080-1125)".