Soest Feud

Territorial changes following the Soest Feud. In orange: Cleves-Mark wins Soest and the Soest Börde; in grey: Cleves-Mark loses its rights in Fredeburg and Bilstein

The Soest Feud was a feud, that took place from 1444 to 1449 in which the town of Soest claimed its freedom from Archbishop Dietrich of Cologne (1414–1463), who tried to restore his rule. The town of Soest opposed this attempt on 5 June 1444 by accepting a new suzerain, John I, the Duke of Cleves-Mark, who guaranteed the town its old rights as well as new ones. As a result Emperor Frederick III imposed the imperial ban on the town. The victory of the town (as a result of the Archbishop of Cologne abandoning his attempt) meant that Soest had de factor more freedom that a free imperial city under it was annexed by Prussia, but at the same time it had to forfeit its economic power because it was now an enclave with Cologne’s territory.

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  1. This is another title of the war diary of the Soest Feud as printed by Hansen.