Henry VI | |
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Holy Roman Emperor; King of The Romans, Burgundy, and Sicily; Duke of Swabia | |
Portrait of Henry VI from the Codex Manesse (folio 6r) | |
Holy Roman Emperor; King of Italy | |
Reign | 1191 - 28 September 1197 |
Coronation | April, 1191 |
Predecessor | Frederick I Barbarossa |
Successor | Otto IV |
King of the Romans | |
Reign | 10 June 1190 - 28 September 1197 |
Predecessor | Frederick I Barbarossa |
Successor | Philip and Otto IV |
Coronation | April, 1169 |
King of Sicily with Constance |
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Reign | 25 December 1194 - 28 September 1197 |
Predecessor | William III |
Successor | Frederick |
Coronation | 25 December 1194 |
Consort | Constance of Sicily |
Issue | |
Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor | |
Royal house | House of Hohenstaufen |
Father | Frederick I |
Mother | Beatrix, Countess of Burgundy |
Born | November, 1165 Nijmegen |
Died | 28 September 1197 Messina |
Burial | Palermo |
Henry VI (November 1165 – 28 September 1197) was King of Germany from 1190 to 1197, Holy Roman Emperor from 1191 to 1197 and King of Sicily from 1194 to 1197.
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Born in Nijmegen, Henry was the son of the emperor Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor and Beatrix of Burgundy, and was crowned King of the Romans at Bamberg in June 1169, at the age of four. After having taken the reins of the Empire from his father, who had gone on the Crusade, in 1189-1190 he suppressed a revolt by Henry the Lion, former duke of Saxony and Bavaria and relative of Frederick.
Constance of Sicily was betrothed to Henry in 1184, and they were married on 27 January 1186. Constance was the sole legitimate heir of William II of Sicily, and, after the latter's death in November 1189, Henry had the possibility of adding the Sicilian crown to the imperial one, as his father had died crossing the Saleph River in Cilicia, now part of Turkey June 10, 1190.
Holy Roman Emperor |
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In April 1191, in Rome, Henry and Constance were crowned Emperor and Empress by Pope Celestine III. The crown of Sicily, however, was harder to gain, as the barons of southern Italy had chosen a grandson of Roger II, Tancred, count of Lecce, as their king. Henry began his work besieging Naples, but he had to return to Germany (where Henry the Lion had revolted again) after his army had been heavily hit by an epidemic. Constance, who stayed behind in the palace at Salerno, was betrayed by the Salernitans, handed over to Tancred, and only released on the intervention of Celestine III, who in return recognized Tancred as King of Sicily. Henry had a stroke of fortune when the duke of Austria Leopold gave him his prisoner, the King of England Richard I, whom he kept in Trifels Castle. Henry managed to exact from the English a ransom of 150,000 silver marks, a huge sum for that age, and with this money, he could raise a powerful army to conquer southern Italy.
Henry was granted free passage in Northern Italy, signing with the Italian communes a treaty in January 1194. The following April he also reached a settlement with Henry the Lion. In February Tancred died, leaving as heir a young boy, William III. Henry met little resistance and entered Palermo, capital city of the Kingdom of Sicily, on 20 November, and was crowned on 25 December. He is also said to have had the young William blinded and castrated, while many Sicilian nobles were burned alive. Some, however, like the Siculo-Greek Eugene of Palermo, transitioned into the new Hohenstaufen government with ease.
At that point, Henry was the most powerful monarch in the Mediterranean and Europe, since the Kingdom of Sicily added to his personal and Imperial revenues an income without parallel in Europe. Henry felt strong enough to send home the Pisan and Genoese ships without giving their governments the promised concessions in Southern Italy, and even received tribute from the Byzantine Empire. In 1194 his son, Frederick, the future emperor and king of Sicily and Jerusalem, was born. Henry secured his position in Italy, naming his friend Conrad of Urslingen as Duke of Spoleto and giving the Marche to Markward of Anweiler.
His next aim was to make the imperial crown hereditary. At the Diet of Würzburg, held in April 1196, he managed to convince the majority of the princes to vote for his proposal, but in the following one at Erfurt (October 1196) he did not achieve the same favourable result.
In 1197 the tyrannical power of the foreign King in Italy spurred a revolt, especially in southern Sicily, where Arabs were the majority of the population, which his German soldiers suppressed mercilessly. In the same year Henry prepared for a Crusade, but, on 28 September, he died of malaria in Messina.[1]
His son Frederick II was to inherit both the Kingdom of Sicily and the Emperor crown.
Henry was fluent in Latin and, according to Alberic of Troisfontaines, was "distinguished by gifts of knowledge, wreathed in flowers of eloquence, and learned in canon and Roman law". He was a patron of poets and poetry, and he almost certainly composed the song "Kaiser Heinrich", now among the Weingarten Song Manuscripts.
According to his rank and with Imperial Eagle, regalia, and a scroll, he is the first and foremost to be portrayed in the famous Codex Manesse, a fourteenth century manuscript showing 140 reputed poets (see Minnesänger), and at least three poems are attributed to a young and romantically minded Henry VI. In one of those he describes a romance which makes him forget all his earthly power, and neither riches nor royal dignity can outweigh his yearning for that lady (ê ich mich ir verzige, ich verzige mich ê der krône – before I give her up, I’d rather give up the crown).
Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor
Born: 1165 Died: 1197 |
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German royalty | ||
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Regnal titles | ||
Preceded by Frederick I Barbarossa |
King of Germany (formally King of the Romans) 1190–1197 |
Succeeded by Philip & Otto IV |
King of Italy 1191–1197 |
Succeeded by Otto IV |
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Holy Roman Emperor 1191–1197 |
Succeeded by Otto IV |
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Preceded by William III |
King of Sicily de jure uxoris with Constance 25 December 1194 - 28 September 1197 |
Succeeded by Frederick |
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