Ulrich I.: Różnice pomiędzy wersjami
Przejdź do nawigacji
Przejdź do wyszukiwania
(Utworzono nową stronę "Kategoria:3 {{Uwaga| |strona = https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulric_I,_Margrave_of_Carniola |autorzy = https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ulric_I,_Margrave_o...") |
(→Life) |
||
| Linia 17: | Linia 17: | ||
==Life== | ==Life== | ||
| − | |||
| − | Ulric married [[Sophia of Hungary|Sophia]], the daughter of King [[Béla I of Hungary]] and his first wife, [[Richeza of Poland, Queen of Hungary|Richeza]], sister of the [[History of Poland during the Piast dynasty|Polish]] duke [[Casimir I the Restorer]]. Alternatively, it has been suggested that she was the daughter of Béla and his second wife, Tuta of [[Vornbach Abbey|Formbach]], and thereby a sister of King [[Ladislaus I of Hungary]]. Another alternative hypothesis makes her the daughter of Tuta and King [[Peter, King of Hungary|Peter of Hungary]], but that seems highly unlikely. Sophia had been betrothed to Margrave [[William, Margrave of Meissen|William of Meissen]], but upon his early death in 1062 married his nephew Ulric instead. She gave her first husband four children: | + | <small><small>Ulric was the son of Margrave [[Poppo I, Margrave of Carniola|Poppo I of Carniola]], whom he succeeded upon his death before 1044, and Hadamut, daughter of Count Werigand of Friuli and Istria. </small></small> |
| + | |||
| + | <small><small>Ulric married [[Sophia of Hungary|Sophia]], the daughter of King [[Béla I of Hungary]] and his first wife, [[Richeza of Poland, Queen of Hungary|Richeza]], sister of the [[History of Poland during the Piast dynasty|Polish]] duke [[Casimir I the Restorer]]. Alternatively, it has been suggested that she was the daughter of Béla and his second wife, Tuta of [[Vornbach Abbey|Formbach]], and thereby a sister of King [[Ladislaus I of Hungary]]. Another alternative hypothesis makes her the daughter of Tuta and King [[Peter, King of Hungary|Peter of Hungary]], but that seems highly unlikely. Sophia had been betrothed to Margrave [[William, Margrave of Meissen|William of Meissen]], but upon his early death in 1062 married his nephew Ulric instead. She gave her first husband four children: </small></small> | ||
| + | |||
*[[Poppo II, Margrave of Carniola|Poppo II]] (d. 1098), his successor as Margrave of Carniola, Margrave of Istria from 1096, married Richgard, daughter of Count Engelbert of [[House of Sponheim|Sponheim]] | *[[Poppo II, Margrave of Carniola|Poppo II]] (d. 1098), his successor as Margrave of Carniola, Margrave of Istria from 1096, married Richgard, daughter of Count Engelbert of [[House of Sponheim|Sponheim]] | ||
*[[Ulric II of Carniola|Ulric II]] (d. 1112), his brother's successor, married Adelaide, daughter of Landgrave [[Louis the Springer]] of [[Duchy of Thuringia|Thuringia]] | *[[Ulric II of Carniola|Ulric II]] (d. 1112), his brother's successor, married Adelaide, daughter of Landgrave [[Louis the Springer]] of [[Duchy of Thuringia|Thuringia]] | ||
| Linia 25: | Linia 27: | ||
*Adelaide, married firstly Frederick, ''[[Vogt]]'' of [[Regensburg]], and secondly Udalschalk, Count in the [[Lurnfeld|Lurngau]] | *Adelaide, married firstly Frederick, ''[[Vogt]]'' of [[Regensburg]], and secondly Udalschalk, Count in the [[Lurnfeld|Lurngau]] | ||
| − | On 31 July 1064, King [[Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor|Henry IV of Germany]] donated land ''in pago Histrie ... in comitatu Odalrici marchionis'' ("in the country of Istria ... in the county of Margrave Ulric") to ''prefato Odalrico marchioni'' ("the prefect Ulric, margrave"). Again on 5 March 1067, Henry donated land ''in pago Istria in marcha Odalrici marchionis'' ("in the country of Istria in the march of Margrave Ulric"), this time to the church [[Freising]]. Ulric was recorded as ''Odalricus marchio Carentinorum'' ("Ulric, margrave of the Carinthians") on his death. A loyal supporter of the Imperial [[Salian dynasty]] and backed by his [[Kingdom of Hungary (1000–1301)|Hungarian]] brothers-in-law, Ulric was able to enlarge his margraviate down to [[Rijeka|Fiume]], against the resistance of the [[Patriarchate of Aquileia|Patriarchs of Aquileia]] and the [[Republic of Venice]]. | + | <small><small>On 31 July 1064, King [[Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor|Henry IV of Germany]] donated land ''in pago Histrie ... in comitatu Odalrici marchionis'' ("in the country of Istria ... in the county of Margrave Ulric") to ''prefato Odalrico marchioni'' ("the prefect Ulric, margrave"). Again on 5 March 1067, Henry donated land ''in pago Istria in marcha Odalrici marchionis'' ("in the country of Istria in the march of Margrave Ulric"), this time to the church [[Freising]]. Ulric was recorded as ''Odalricus marchio Carentinorum'' ("Ulric, margrave of the Carinthians") on his death. A loyal supporter of the Imperial [[Salian dynasty]] and backed by his [[Kingdom of Hungary (1000–1301)|Hungarian]] brothers-in-law, Ulric was able to enlarge his margraviate down to [[Rijeka|Fiume]], against the resistance of the [[Patriarchate of Aquileia|Patriarchs of Aquileia]] and the [[Republic of Venice]]. </small></small> |
==References== | ==References== | ||
Wersja z 17:55, 23 lut 2020
| Strona | Autorzy | Nota |
| [1] | [2] | Ten artykuł został przetłumaczony z Wikipedii w języku angielskim. Treści pochodzące z Wikipedii w języku angielskim są oparte na licencji Creative Commons 3.0 – Uznanie Autorstwa – Na tych samych warunkach. Kopiując je lub tłumacząc, należy podać ich autorów i udostępnić na tych samych warunkach. |
|
Ulric I (), also Odalric or Udalrich (died 6 March 1070), Count of Weimar-Orlamünde, was margrave of Carniola from 1045 and of Istria from 1060 to his death. LifeUlric was the son of Margrave Poppo I of Carniola, whom he succeeded upon his death before 1044, and Hadamut, daughter of Count Werigand of Friuli and Istria. Ulric married Sophia, the daughter of King Béla I of Hungary and his first wife, Richeza, sister of the Polish duke Casimir I the Restorer. Alternatively, it has been suggested that she was the daughter of Béla and his second wife, Tuta of Formbach, and thereby a sister of King Ladislaus I of Hungary. Another alternative hypothesis makes her the daughter of Tuta and King Peter of Hungary, but that seems highly unlikely. Sophia had been betrothed to Margrave William of Meissen, but upon his early death in 1062 married his nephew Ulric instead. She gave her first husband four children:
On 31 July 1064, King Henry IV of Germany donated land in pago Histrie ... in comitatu Odalrici marchionis ("in the country of Istria ... in the county of Margrave Ulric") to prefato Odalrico marchioni ("the prefect Ulric, margrave"). Again on 5 March 1067, Henry donated land in pago Istria in marcha Odalrici marchionis ("in the country of Istria in the march of Margrave Ulric"), this time to the church Freising. Ulric was recorded as Odalricus marchio Carentinorum ("Ulric, margrave of the Carinthians") on his death. A loyal supporter of the Imperial Salian dynasty and backed by his Hungarian brothers-in-law, Ulric was able to enlarge his margraviate down to Fiume, against the resistance of the Patriarchs of Aquileia and the Republic of Venice. References
|