Salm-Kyrburg
Forest- and Rhine-County of Salm-Kyrburg Wild- und Rheingrafschaft Salm-Kyrburg | |||||
State of the Holy Roman Empire | |||||
| |||||
Capital | Kirn | ||||
Government | Principality | ||||
Historical era | Early modern Europe | ||||
- | Partitioned from Upper Salm |
1499 1499 | |||
- | Partitioned into three | 1607 | |||
- | Comital line extinct; inherited by S-Neuweiler |
1681 1681 | |||
Salm-Kyrburg was a state of the Holy Roman Empire located in present-day Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, one of the various partitions of Salm. It was twice created: the first time as a Wild- and Rhinegraviate (partitioned from Upper Salm), and secondly as a Principality (succeeding the earlier Principality of Salm-Leuze). The first state of Salm-Kyrburg was partitioned between itself, Salm-Mörchingen and Salm-Tronecken in 1607, and was inherited by Salm-Neuweiler in 1681 upon the lines' extinction.
In 1742, Salm-Kyrburg was raised to a principality; it shared its vote in the Reichstag with Salm-Salm. Salm-Kyrburg was annexed by France in 1798; this was recognized by the Holy Roman Empire in the Treaty of Lunéville of 1801. As a compensation, the princes were granted new territories formerly belonging to the Bishops of Münster in 1802, which formed the newly founded Principality of Salm.
The full title used by the Princes of the resurrected state was "Prince of Salm-Kyrburg, Sovereign Prince of Ahaus, Bocholt and Gemen, Wildgrave of Dhaun and Kyrburg, Rhinegrave of Stein".
Princes of Salm-Kyrburg
Wild- and Rhinegraves (1499–1681)
- John VII (1499–1531)
- John VIII (1531–1548)
- Otto I (1548–1607)
- John Casimir (1607–1651)
- George Frederick (1651–1681)
Sovereign princes (1743–1813)
- Philip Joseph (Wild- and Rhinegrave of Salm-Leuze) (1743–1779)
- Frederick III (1779–1794)
- Frederick IV (1794–1813)
Mediatised princes within Prussia (1813–1905)
- Frederick IV (1813–1859)
- Frederick V (1859–1887)
- Frederick VI (1887–1905)
|