Herman IV, Duke of Swabia explained

Herman IV, Duke of Swabia and Margrave of Turin
Noble Family:House of Babenberg
Father:Ernest I, Duke of Swabia
Mother:Gisela of Swabia
Spouse:Adelaide of Susa
Death Date:July 1038

Herman IV (c. 1015-July 1038) was the Duke of Swabia (1030–1038). He was the second son of Ernest I and Gisela of Swabia. He was one of the Babenberg dukes of Swabia.

Herman became duke in 1030 following the death of his older brother Ernest II. At the time he was still a minor.

Seven years later, his stepfather, the Emperor Conrad II, married him to Adelaide of Susa, the marchioness of Turin, in January 1037. Herman was then invested as margrave of Turin.[1] In July of the next year, while campaigning with Conrad in Southern Italy, he was struck down by an epidemic near Naples. Conrad then transferred rule of the duchy of Swabia to his own son, Henry I, while Adelaide remarried to Henry of Montferrat.

He was buried in Trento Cathedral on 28 July 1038, because the summer heat made it impossible to bring his corpse back to Germany.[2]

Because of a late Austrian source, Herman is sometimes mistakenly said to have had children.[3] This was not the case. Herman was on campaign for much of his short marriage to Adelaide and he died without heirs.[4]

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Hellmann, Grafen, p. 13
  2. Iginio Rogger, "Riconsiderazioni sulla storia della Chiesa locale Trentina", in Lia de Finis (ed.), Storia del Trentino, Didascalibri, 1994, pp. 66-67.
  3. On this see E. Hlawitschka, 'Zur Abstammung Richwaras, der Gemahlin Herzog Bertholds I. von Zähringen,' Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins, 154 (2006), 1–20
  4. Schwennicke, Europäische Stammtafeln, I.1, table 84