User:Rajofcanada/HREStates/Principality
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[edit] Principality
[edit] Principality of Anhalt
- ?: Albert of Ballenstadt married the heiress of the count of Orlamunde
- ?: Otto of Ballenstadt (d.1123) married a daughter of Magnus of Saxony inheriting many lands in Thuringia and Westphalia
- Lines
- Anhalt-Bernburg
- Anhalt-Dessau
- Anhalt-Kothen
- Anhalt-Zerbst
- 1792: In Council of Princes
- References
[edit] Principality of Ansbach
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Principality of Aschaffenburg
- 1803: Principality
- 10th century: Imperial Chancellor and Archbishop Willigis of Mainz acquired ownership of Aschaffenburg
- 1803: Granted to the Chancellor, Karl Theodor von Dalberg
- 1806: Annexed to the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt
- 1814: To Bavaria
- References
- History of Aschaffenburg
[edit] Principality of Auersperg
- Title: HRE Prince of Auersperg, Duke of Gottschee, Princely Count of Thengen, Count of Wels, Lord of Schönberg & Seissenberg, etc.
- 1550: HRE Barony
- 1630: HRE County
- 1653: HRE Prince
- "Johann Weikart von Auersperg...was one of the imperial envoys on the negotiations on the Treaty of Westphalia that ended the Thirty Years’ War. For this and for his other merits he was promoted to rank of a prince (principes) of the Holy Roman Empire with hereditary title on September 17th, 1653, while on July 30th 1654 he received the investiture over the Duchies of Münsterberg and Frankenstein in Silesia." [1]
- 1654: Imperial Estate
- 1654: HRE Council of Princes
- 1654-1791: Non-immediate Dukes of Silesia-Munsterberg and Frankestein
- 1663: Became immediate Lords of Thengen
- 1664: HRE Princely County
- 1664: To Swabian Circle, Princes' Bench
- 1791: Non-immediate Dukes of Gottschee (in the Austrian hereditary lands)
- Acquired non-immediate Princely County of Wels
- Rulers
- John Weikhard (1653-1677)
- John Ferdinand Francis (1677-1707)
- Francis Charles (1707- 1713)
- Henry Joseph John (1713-1783)
- John Adam Joseph (1746-1795)
- Charles Joseph (1783-1800)
- William I (1800-1806)
- References:
- Austrian and German Mediatized Houses, 1871-1919
- The Auersperg – Herberstein Coat of Arms
[edit] Principality of Babenhausen
- 1190: Babenhausen Castle built
- 1236: 1st mention of Babenhausen Castle
- 1237: 1st mention of Babenhausen
- 1100s: Babenhausen and Schonegg part of Lordship of Kellmunz
- 1200-1300s: To Lords of Schonegg
- 1295: Babenhausen received municipal rights to hold markers, coin money and jurisdiction over assaults.
- 1378: To Lords of Rechberg
- 1458: By the marriage of Philip the Elder of Hanau to the 15-year old Anna of Lichtenberg, Babenhausen became a Hanau-Lichtenberg possession. Philip left the life of a religious, at a late age, to marry Anna and ensure continuity of the line of Counts of Hanau. After Anna's death, her properties fell to her widower who came to be known as Philip I of Hanau-Lichtenberg [2]
- 1539: Anton Fugger bought Lordship of Babenhausen
- 1803: Lordships of Babenhausen, Boos and Kettershausen erected into Principality of Babenhausen for Fugger family
- 1806: To Bavaria
- Area: 52 sq. km.; Pop. 11,000
[edit] Principality of Bayreuth
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Principality of Bremen
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Principality of Bretzenheim
Title: HRE Prince of Bretzenheim
- 1769: Counts of Heydeck (in the Palatinate)
- 1774: HRE Counts of Bretzenheim.
- 1780: immediate Lords of Bretzenheim.
- 1789: HRE Princes of Bretzenheim.
- 1790: Imperial Estate)
[edit] Principality of Dietrichstein
- Title: HRE Prince of Dietrichstein in Nikolsburg/Nicolsburg, Count of Proskau, Lord of Trasp
- 984: 1st reference to the family without mentioning name
- 1166: Castellans of Dietrichstein Castle owned by the Bishopric of Bamberg
- 1506: Inherited from the Osterwitz family, which died out, the office of hereditary cupbearer (Schenk)
- 1514: Emperor Maximilian I granted his counsellor, the hero of many battles and a statesman, Sigmund of Dietrichstein (d.1480), the title of Imperial Baron, granting him the lordships of Finkenstein and Hollenburg. [3]
- ?: Adam of Dietrichstein (1527-1590) appointed major-domo of the imperial household
- 1612: Sigismund of Dietrichstein, Adam's son, received the title of Imperial Count, along with properties in Moravia
- 1624: Franz of Dietricstein, Bishop of Olomouc, granted by the Emperor title of Prince, along with many properties, and asserted that the princely title was bound to the lordship of Mikulov (Nikolsburg)
- 1635: Title of Prince of the Empire became hereditary in the Dietrichstein family
- ?: Emperor Ferdinand I appointed Sigismund of Dietrichstein (d.1533) head of Styria provincial government and governor of Lower Austria
- 1684: immediate Lords of Tarasp
- 1769: Inherited by marriage the properties and arms of the Counts of Proskau
- 1802: Inherited the properties and arms of the Counts of Leslie
- Reference
- The Counts and Princes of Dietrichstein
[edit] Principality of East Frisia
- East Friesland
- Title: Prince and Lord of East Frisia, Lord of Esens, Stadesdorf and Wittmund
- 1465: County
- 1654: HRE Prince
- 1662: Principality
- 1667: HRE Council of Princes
- 1744: Inherited by Prussia
- 1792: In Council of Princes
- 1807: Ceded to France
- 1807: Incorporated into Kingdom of Holland
- 1810: French occupation
- 1813: Russian occupation
- 1813: To Prussia
- 1815: To Hanover
- Reference
- Biographic encyclopedia for East Frisia
- Cirksena Dynasty
- Ruling Families and Lordships of East Friesland
- History of East Frisia, c1200-1979
[edit] Princes Esterhazy
- Title: Princes Esterházy von Galántha, Princely Counts of Edelstetten, Count of Forchtenstein
- 1804: Purchased Edelstetten from Ligne (College of Princes)
- References
- [4]
[edit] Principality of Friedberg
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Principality of Furstenberg
- Title: HRE Prince of Fürstenberg, Landgrave in the Baar & of Stühlingen, Count of Heiligenberg & Werdenberg, Baron of Gundelfingen, Lord of Hausen im Kinzinger Thal, Trochtelfingen, Möskirch, Hohenhöwen, Wildenstein, Jungnau, Waldsberg, Werenwag, Weitra & Püglitz
- 1218: Inherited the possessions of the House of Zahringen
- ?: Sons of Egino V of Urach founded 2 lines
- Conrad the Elder inherited Breisgau & founded line of Counts of Freiburg
- Henry (1215-1284) inherited territories in Kinzigthal and Baar.
- 1250: Henry (1215-1284), Lord, then Count of Furstenberg
- ?: Division of territory
- ?: Reunited by Count Frederick III who married Anna, heiress of last count of Werdenberg
- 1534: Inherited conty of Heiligenberg and lordships of Jungnau and Trochtelfingen
- 1559: Territories divided upon death of Frederick III between his sons, Joachim (Heiligenberg line) & Christopher (Kinzigthal line)
- 1614: Kinzigthal line divided between Wratislaw II (Moskirch line) amd Frederick (Stuhlingen line)
- Possessions
- County of Heiligenberg
- Landraviate in the Baar
- Landgraviate of Stuhlingen
- Lordship of Hausen
- Lordship of Jungnau
- Lordship of Moskirch
- Lordship of Trochtelfingen
- Furstenberg Lines
- Furstenberg
- 1283/84: Fürstenberg-Villingen-Urach-Haslach (Count, ext. 1386)
- 1408: Fürstenberg-Wolfach (Count, ext. 1490)
- 1441: Furstenberg-Geisingen (Count)
- 1559: Furstenberg-Heiligenberg (Count) & Furstenberg-Kinzigthal
- 1705: Furstenberg-Weitra
- 1762: Furstenberg-Stuhlingen (Prince) & Fürstenberg-Pürglitz (Prince)
- Furstenberg-Kinzigthal (Count)
- 1599: Furstenberg-Blomberg (Count) & Furstenberg-Mohringen (Count, ext.1641)
- Furstenberg-Blomberg (Count)
- 1614: Furstenberg-Mosskirch (Count, Landgrave, Prince, ext. 1744) & Furstenberg-Stuhlingen
- Furstenberg-Heiligenberg (Count, Landgrave, Prince, ext 1716)
- 1617: Furstenberg-Donaueschingen (Count)
- Furstenberg-Weitra (Count, Landgrave)
- 1759: Furstenberg-Bohemia Line (Landgrave,) & Furstenberg-Moravia Line (Landgrave, ext. 1866)
- References
- Furstenberg
- Sovereigns in Germany
[edit] Principality of Halberstadt
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Principality of Hanau
- Titles: Count of Hanau, Rhineck and Zweibrücken, Lord of Münzenberg, Lichtenberg and Ochsenhausen
1243: 1st mention of Hanau castle 1255: Acquired Lordship of Munzenberg 1451: Division into Hanau-Munzenberg and Hanau-Lichtenberg 1458: Division into Hanau-Babenhausen, Hanau-Munzenberg and Hanau-Lichtenberg 1480:Acquired Lordship of Lichtenberg Reunited 1736: Passed to Hesse-Kassel 1803: To France 1810: Grand Duchy of Frankfurt 1813: To Hesse-Kassel 1866: To Prussia 1429: HRE County 1803: HRE Principality
- Hanau Lines
- Hanau-Babenhausen
- Hanau-Lichtenberg
- Hanau-Munzenberg
- References
- History of Hanau
- List of Counts of Hanau
[edit] Principality of Hanau-Lichtenberg
1429: County 1642: Inherited extinct line of Hanau-Munzenberg 1696: HRE Principality 1736: Line extinct; divided between Hesse-Darmstadt and Mainz 1785: United to Hesse-Kassel
[edit] Principality of Hatzfeld
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hatzfeld-Gleichen-Trachenberg, Baron of Wildenburg, Lord of Crottorf, Schönstein, Kranichfeld, Blankenhain, etc.
[edit] Chronology
- 1138: 1st mention of Hatzfeld family
- Lordship
- 1380/1430: Acquired lordship of Wildenburg by marriage
- B/w 1300s & 1500's?: Acquired lordship of Crottorf by marriage
- 1418: Line extinct; territory passed to Hatzfeld by female succession
- 1635: Melchior of Harzfeld (1593-1658), imperial general in the Thirty Years' War, was made an imperial count; HRE County of Hatzfeld
- 1639: Acquired Gleichen
- 1640: Imperial estate; immediate HRE Counts of Gleichen
- 1641: Acquired the Silesian lordship of Trachenberg
- 1741: Frederick II of Prussia raised Hatzfeld counts to non-immediate Princes of Trachenberg in Prussia
- 1748: HRE Principality
- 1806: To Grand Duchy of Berg
- 1815: To Prussia
- Hatfeld Lines
- Hatzfeld-Trachenberg
- 1748: HRE Prince
- 1803: Prussian princely status confirmed
- Hatzfeld-Wildenburg
- 1870: Prussian prince
[edit] Principality of Heitersheim
[edit] Principality of Hersfeld
- 769: Abbey founded
- 1648: Abbey of Hersfeld secularized, given to Hesse-Kassel by Treaty of Wesphalia
- 1648: Principality of Hersfeld
- 1648: Secularized to Hesse-Kassel
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Principality of Hohenlohe
- 1764: HRE Principality
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Gleichen, Lord of Langenburg & Kranichfeld
- Lines
- Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Ingelfingen
- Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Kirchberg
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Gleichen, Lord of Langenburg & Kranichfeld
- Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Langenburg
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Gleichen, Lord of Langenburg & Kranichfeld
- Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Öhringen
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Gleichen, Lord of Langenburg & Kranichfeld
- Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Bartenstein
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Waldenburg, Lord of Langenburg
- Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Jagstberg
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Waldenburg, Lord of Langenburg
- Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst
- 1744: HRE Princes
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Waldenburg, Lord of Schillingsfürst & Langenburg
[edit] Principality of Hohenzollern
- Titles: HRE Prince of Hohenzollern, Burgrave of Nuremberg [Nürnberg], Count of Sigmaringen & Vöringen, Count of Berg, Lord of Haigerloch & Werstein, etc.
- 1623: HRE Principality
- References
- Regents of Hohenzollern
[edit] Principality of Hohenzollern-Hechingen
- 1653: HRE Principality
- References
- [5]
[edit] Principality of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
- References
- [6]
[edit] Principality of Isenburg
- Title: HRE Prince of Isenburg
- c1100: Division into Isenburg-Limburg and Isenburg-Kempenich
- 1137: Partitioned into Isenburg-Isenburg and Isenburg-Limburg-Covern
- 1442: County of Budingen and Isenburg
- 1673: Division into Isenburg, Birstein, Isenburg-Marienborn, Isenburg-Meerholz, Isenburg-Wachtersbach
- 1806: Joined Confederation of the Rhine
[edit] Principality of Isenburg-Birstein
- 1511: County of Birstein
- 1635-1643: Occupied by Hesse-Darmstadt
- 1744: HRE Principality
- 1806: Acquired the mediatized Isenburg-Budingen, Isenburg-Meerholz, Isenburg-Philippseich and Isenburg-Wachtersbach
- 1806: Joined the Confederation of the Rhine
- 1810: French occupation
- 1813: Austrian administration
- 1816: Annexed by Hesse-Darmstadt
- ?: Sovereign Principality
[edit] Principality of Isenburg-Budingen
- 1442: HRE Count
- 1131: ist mention of Gerlach I as Lord of Budingen
- 1219: 1st mention of Budingen castle
- 1240: Line died out; territory jointly inherited by Lords of Breuberg and Isenburg
- 1323: Breuberg lords died out; Isenburg inherited Budingen territory
- 1442: HRE County
- 1511: Partitioned into Isenburg-Budingen-Birstein and Isenburg-Ronneburg (extinct 1601)<1673>Partitioned into Isenburg-Budingen, Isenburg-Meerholz and Isenburg-Wachtersbach
- 1806: Mediatized to Isenburg
- 1816: To Hesse-Darmstadt
- Area: 3.5 sq. mi.; Pop. (1600s): 10,000
[edit] Principality of Kammin
- Kamin, Cammin
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Principality of Landsberg
[edit] Principality of Leiningen
- Titles: Prince of Leiningen, Count-Palatine of Mosbach, Lord of Miltenberg, Amorbach, Düren, Bischofsheim, Hardheim & Lauda, etc
- Lines
- Leiningen-Hardenburg/Hartenburg
- 1779: HRE Prince
- References
- County & Counts of Leiningen
- Divisions of Leiningen
- Princes and Counts of Leiningen
- The Principality of Leiningen Under New Rulers
[edit] Principality of Leyen-Hohengeroldseck
- Titles: " HRE Prince of and at Leyen & Hohengeroldseck, Baron of Adendorf, Lord of Bliescastel, Burrweiler, Münchweiler,Orterbach, Niewern, Saffig, Ahrenfels, Bongard, Simpelfeld, etc)
- c1420: Partitioned into Neustadt and Saffig
- 1653 HRE Barons
- 1667 owners of immediate knightly possession of Burrweiler.
- 1705 immediate Lords of Hohenheroldseck.
- 1711 HRE Counts.
- 1711 Imperial Estate.
- 1806 Princes
[edit] Principality of Liechtenstein
[edit] Titles
- Titles: Sovereign Prince of Liechtenstein, Duke of Troppau & Jägerndorf, Count of Rietberg, etc
- Titles: HRE Prince & Ruler of the House of & at Liechtenstein, Duke in Silesia at Troppau & Jägerndorf, Count of Rietberg
[edit] Chronology
- 1200's: Lines of Liechtenstein-Murau (ext.1619) and Liechtenstein-Nikolsburg
- 1608/1623: HRE Princely rank for Liechtenstein family
- 1613: non-immediate Dukes in Silesia at Troppau.
- 1623: non-immediate Dukes in Silesia at Jägerndorf.
- 1633: non-immediate Princes of Liechtenstein.
- 1699: Purchased Lordship of Schellenberg
- 1699: immediate Lords of Schellenberg.
- 1707: Estate of the Swabia Imperial Circle (for Vaduz)/Admission to College of Princes of Swabia
- 1712: Purchased County of Vaduz
- 1712: immediate Lords of Vaduz
- 1712: Principality of Liechtenstein
- 1713: HRE Council of Princes
- 1719: HRE Principality
- 1719: Establishment of the Principality of Liechtenstein from Hohenems-Vaduz and Schellenberg<1806>Joined the Confederation of the Rhine
- 1815: Joined the German Confederation
- Area: 157 sq.km.
[edit] Famous Members
- Ulrich of Liechtenstein (1200-1275) the Minnesanger (Troubadour)
[edit] References
[edit] Principality of Ligne
[edit] Principality of Lippe
- 1905, 146,000
- 1789: Principality of Lippe
- 1815-1866: Part of German Confederation
- 1871: Joined German Empire
[edit] Princes Lobkowicz
- Possessions of Princes Lobkowicz in Upper Palatinate
- Neustadt an der Waldnaab
- Störnstein
- Waldthurn
- Schönsee
- Famous Members
- Wenzel Eusebius of Lobkowitz
- Augusta Sophie of Palatinate-Sulzbach
- References
- History of the Lobkowicz Family
- Lobkowicz Family Chronology
- Melnik Castle
[edit] Principality of Lowenstein
- Titles: HRE Count of Löwenstein, Wertheim, Rochefort, Montaigu, Limpurg, Virneburg, Gaildorf, Supreme Prince of Chassepierre/Chaisepierre, Lord of Scharfeneck, Breuberg, Herbeumont/Herbimont, Neufchâteau
- 1123: Lowenstein founded by the Counts of Calw
- ?-1281: To a branch of the Counts of Calw
- 1281: German King Rudolf I purchased Lowenstein from Counts of Calw
- 1282: Rudolf I gave Lowenstein to his natural son Albert
- 1441: Henry of Lowenstein-Habsburg sold it to the Elector Palatine Frederick I
- 1476: Louis I (1463-1524) invested with Lowenstein (with Heilbronn)
- ?: Louis III of Lowenstein (1530-1611)married Anna, heiress of the Counts of Stolberg-Konigstein-Wertheim and inherited the County of Wertheim and other lands
- 1471: County of Lowenstein
- 1494: Emperor Maximilian I raised Lowenstein to HRE County
- 1580: Count of Lowenstein-Wertheim
- ?: Marriage of Christoph Luwdig (1568-1618) to Elizabeth of Manderscheid-Virneburg
- 1611: Division into Löwenstein Wertheim Virneburg & Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort
- 1711: Principality of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort
- 1712: HRE Principality
- ?: Acquired Lordship of Haid in Bohemia
- 1713: Seat and voice in the Imperial College of Princes
- 1730: Prince Dominik Marquard bought the Lordship of Rosenberg from Cout Franz of Hatzfeld
- 1803: Count of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rosenberg, instead of Rochefort
- 1803: Count of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg, instead of Virneburg
- 1806: Mediatized
- 1812: King of Bavaria elevated Count of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg to rank of prince in Bavaria
- Area: 53 sq. mi.
- County of Lowenstein-Habsburg
- Lowenstein possesions, when mediatized in 1806, located in Bavaria, Wurttemberg. Baden, & Hesse, consisted of:
- County of Lowenstein
- County of Wertheim
- Lordship of Triefenstein (jointly owned)
- Lordship of Limpurg-Sonhteim-Michelbach
- County of Umpfenbach
- Estates of Patzau & Lukawetz (Freudenberg line)
- Lordship of Heubach (Rosenberg line)
- Lordship of Rothenfels (Rosenberg line)
- Lordship of Neustadt (Rosenberg line)
- Lordship of Rosenberg (Rosenberg line)
- Lordship of Habizheim (Rosenberg line)
- Lordship of Nausess (Rosenberg line)
- Lines
- Lowenstein-Scharfeneck
- Lowenstein-Wertheim
- Titles: HRE Prince of Löwenstein and Wertheim, Count of Rochefort, Montaigu, Supreme Prince of Chassepierre/Chaisepierre, Lord of Scharfeneck, Breuberg, Herbeumont/Herbimont, Neufchâteau, Kerpen and Kasselburg
- 1500: Franconian Circle
- 1611: Division into Lowenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort and Lowenstein-Wertheim-Virneburg
- 1803: HRE Pricipality
- 1806: To the Prince-Primate Karl Theodor von Dalberg
- Lowenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg
- 1812: HRE Principality
- Lowenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort
- Titles: HRE Prince of Löwenstein and Wertheim, Count of Rochefort, Montaigu, Supreme Prince of Chassepierre, Lord of Scharfeneck, Breuberg, Herbeumont, Neufchâteau, Kerpen & Kasselburg
- 1712: HRE Principality
- Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rosenberg
- HRE Principality
- Lowenstein-Wertheim-Virneburg
- References
- Count of Lowenstein
- Counts of Wertheim
- The History of the County of Lowenstein and the Counts of Lowenstein-Habsburg
- Lowenstein
- Lowenstein-Wertheim
- Regnal Chronologies
- Pictures
- Louis I of Lowenstein
[edit] Principality of Lubeck
[edit] Princes Metternich
[edit] Principality of Mindelheim
[edit] Principality of Minden
[edit] Principality of Mors
- 1707: Principality
[edit] Principality of Neuchatel
[edit] Principality of Orange
- Nassau-Orange
- 1376: HRE Prince
[edit] Principality of Ottingen
[edit] Principality of Palatinate-Birkenfeld
- 1444: Part of Zweibrucken
- 1569: County
- 1817: Principality
- 1801: Annexed by France
- 1816: Prussian rule
- 1817: Principality of Birkenfeld in personal union with Oldenburg
- References
- History of Birkenfeld
[edit] Principlaity of Palatinate-Kaiserslauten
- Palatinate-Lautern
[edit] Principality of Palatinate-Lautereck
[edit] Principality of Palatinate-Simmern
==Principality of Palatinate-Veldenz
[edit] Principality of Palatinate-Zweibrucken
- Rulers
- 1398-1410 Rupprecht
- 1410-1444 Stephan
- 1444-1489 Ludwig I
- 1489-1514 Alexander
- 1514-1532 Ludwig II
- 1532-1569 Wolfgang
- 1569-1604 Johann I
- 1604-1635 Johann II
- 1635-1661 Friedrich
- 1661-1681 Friedrich Ludwig
- 1681-1697 Karl XI
- 1697-1718 Karl XII
- 1718-1731 Gustav Samuel Leopold
- 1731-1735 Christian III
- 1735-1775 Christian IV
- 1775-1795 Carl II August
- 1795???? Maximilian I Joseph
- References
- History of Zweibrucken
[edit] Principality of Ratzeburg
[edit] Principality of Reuss
- Reuß
- 1673: Imperial County
- References
- Reuss Family Tree
[edit] Principality of Reuss-Gera
- (Ger. Reuß-Gera or Reuß [jüngere Linie)
- 1905--318 sq.mi.; 144,600
- 1600s: Reuss-Gera divided into Reuss-Gera, Reuss-Schleiz and Reuss-Lobenstein
- 1673: The Emperor elevated the heads of the 3 lines to "Reichsgraf," or Imperial Count
- Reference
- Principalities of Reuss - Elder and Junior Lines
- (German) Gera Rulers List
[edit] Principality of Reuss-Greiz
- (Ger. Reuß-Greiz or Reuß ältere Linie)
- Title: Prince Reuss, Count and Lord of Plauen, Lord of Greiz, Kranichfeld, Gera, Schleiz & Lobenstein
- 1905--122 sq.mi.; 70,600
- 1625: Divided into Ober-Greiz & Unter-Greiz
- 1768: Ober-Greiz & Unter-Greiz reunited
- 1778: Elevated to Prince
- Reference
- Principalities of Reuss - Elder and Junior Lines
[edit] Principality of Reuss-Lobenstein
- Title: Prince Reuss, Count and Lord of Plauen, Lord of Greiz, Kranichfeld, Gera, Schleiz & Lobenstein
- 1673: County of Reuss
- 1790: HRE Prince
[edit] Principality of Rheina-Wolbeck
- To 1082: Part of Bishopric of Munster
- 1802: Principality of Rheina-Wolbeck
- 1806: To Grand Duchy of Berg
- 1811: Annexed to France
- 1815: To Prussia
- Princes of Rheina-Wolbeck
- 1802-1803: Wilhelm Joseph Alexander Herzog of Looz-Corswarem
- 1803-1806: Joseph Arnold
- Reference
- German States
- Rheina-Wolbeck
[edit] Principality of Rugen
- 995-1025: Under Polish suzerainty
- 1124-1227: County of Schlawe & Stolp under Pomeranian prince Ratibor I & his descendants
- 1227: Swantopelk II of Pomerelia took Schlawe & Stolp after death of Ratibor II
- 1270: "Principality" of Rugen acquired Schlawe & Stolp in pledge
- 1277: Rugen sold Schlawe & Stolp to Brandenburg
- 1307: Brandenburg inherited County of Schlawe, Stolp & Lauenburg when line of Prince Mestwin II of Pomeralia died out
- 1317: Wartislaw IV of Pomerania acquired Schlawe & Stolp from Margrave Valdemar of Brandenburg
- 1318-1341: Schlawe and Stolp pledged to Teutonic Knights
- Reference
- The History of Rugenwalde
[edit] Principality of Salm
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] States of Salm
- County OF Salm (1019 - 1165)
- County OF Lower Salm (1165 - 1416)
- County OF Salm Reifferscheid (1416 - 1639)
- County OF Salm Reifferscheid Bedbur (1639 - 1803)
- County OF Salm Reifferscheid Dyck (1639 - 1806)
- County OF Salm Reifferscheid Hainsbach (1734 - 1811)
- County OF Salm Reifferscheid Krautheim (1803 - 1804)
- Principality OF Salm Reifferscheid Krautheim (1804 - 1806)
- County OF Salm Reifferscheid Raitz (1734 - 1790)
- Principality OF Salm Reifferscheid Raitz (1790 - 1811)
- County OF Upper Salm (1165 - 1499)
- County OF Salm Badenweiler (1431 - 1600)
- County OF Salm Blankenburg (1246 - 1506)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Dhaun (1499 - 1748)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Grumbach (1561 - 1803)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Hoogstraten (1696 - 1739)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Horstmar (1803 - 1813)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Kyrburg (1499 - 1681)
- Principality OF Salm Kyrburg (1743 - 1813)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Leuze (1696 - 1742)
- Principality OF Salm Leuze (1742 - 1743)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate Salm Mörchingen (1607 - 1688)
- County OF Salm Neuburg (1520 - 1784) (Titular from the 16th Century)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Neuweiler (1608 - 1696)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Puttlingen (1697 - 1750)
- Wild and Rhinegraviate OF Salm Salm (1574 - 1738)
- Principality OF Salm Salm (1739 - 1813)
- References
- Count of Salm and States of Salm
[edit] Principality of Salm-Horstmar
- Forest and Rhine Count of Salm in Horstmar
- 1269: Part of Bishopric of Munster
- Acquired County of Horstmar in Prussia and part of the County of Limpurg in Wurttemberg
- 1806: Annexed to Berg
- 1810: Annexed by France
- 1815: To Prussia
- 1816: Prince of Salm-Horstmar in Prussia
- Reference
- Principality of Salm-Horstmar
[edit] Principlaity of Salm-Kyburg
[edit] Principality of Saxe-Coburg
[edit] Principality of Saxe-Gotha
[edit] Principality of Saxe-Hildburghausen
[edit] Principality of Saxe-Meiningen
- Reference
- Saxe-Meiningen Rulers' Biography
[edit] Principality of Saxe-Weimar
[edit] Principality of Sayn
- References
[edit] Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe
-
- 1905-131 sq.mi.; 45,000
- 1807: Joined Confederation of the Rhine
- References
- Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe
- Schaumburg-Lippe
- Schonburg
- Titles: Prince of Schönburg, Count and Lord of Schönburg, Count and Lord of Glauchau and Waldenburg, etc.
- 1700: HRE Count
- 1790: HRE Prince
- Schönburg Lines
- Schönburg-Waldenburg
- Schönburg-Hartenstein
- References
- Schönburg Genealogy
[edit] Principality of Schwarzburg
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Principality of Schwerin
- 1792: In Council of Princes
[edit] Princes Sinzendorf
[edit] Principality of Truchsess-Waldburg
[edit] Principality of Waldeck-Pyrmont
-
- 1910--433 sq.mi. (Pyrmont-26 sq.mi); 61,723
- 1625: Union of Waldck & Pyrmont
- 1815: Waldeck joined German Confederation
- 1866: Waldeck joined North German Confederation
- References
- [7]