List of monarchs of Luxembourg explained

The territory of Luxembourg has been ruled successively by counts, dukes and grand dukes. It was part of the medieval Kingdom of Germany, and later the Holy Roman Empire until it became a sovereign state in 1815.

Counts of Luxembourg

House of Ardenne–Luxembourg

See also: House of Ardenne–Luxembourg.

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
Siegfried92228 October 998963

28 October 998
Henry I96427 February 102628 October 998

27 February 1026
his son
Henry II100716 October 104727 February 1026

16 October 1047
his nephew
Giselbert100714 August 105916 October 1047

14 August 1059
his brother
Conrad I10408 August 108614 August 1059

8 August 1086
his son
Henry III107010968 August 1086

1096
William I108111311096

1131
his brother
Conrad II110611361131

1136
his son
Ermesinde I108011431136

1136
his aunt

House of Luxembourg–Namur

See also: House of Namur.

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
Henry IV
the Blind
111214 August 11961136

14 August 1196
her son

House of Hohenstaufen

See main article: House of Hohenstaufen.

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
OttoJune/July 117013 January 12001196

1197
his third-cousin once removed

House of Luxembourg–Namur

See also: House of Namur.

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
Ermesinde IIJuly 118612 February 12471197

12 February 1247
Henry IV's only daughter and Otto's fourth cousin
Theobald I115813 February 12141197

13 February 1214
her first husband and co-ruler
Waleran11802 July 1226May 1214

2 July 1226
her second husband and co-ruler

House of Luxembourg–Limburg

See main article: House of Luxembourg.

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
Henry V
the Blond
121624 December 128112 February 1247

24 December 1281
their son
Henry VI
the Condemned
12405 June 128824 December 1281

5 June 1288
his son
Henry VII1275/127024 August 13135 June 1288

24 August 1313
John
the Blind
10 August 129626 August 134624 August 1313

26 August 1346
Charles IV14 May 131629 November 137826 August 1346

1353
Wenceslaus I25 February 13377 December 13831353

13 March 1354
his brother

Dukes of Luxembourg

In 1354, the county was elevated to a duchy.

House of Luxembourg-Limburg

See main article: House of Luxembourg.

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
Wenceslaus I25 February 13377 December 138313 March 1354

7 December 1383
himself as count
Wenceslas II
the Lazy
26 February 136116 August 14197 December 1383

1388
his nephew
JobstDecember 135118 January 14111388

18 January 1411
his cousin
Elisabeth INovember 13902 August 145118 January 1411

1443
his heiress & first cousin once removed
AnthonyAugust 138425 October 141518 January 1411

25 October 1415
her first husband and co-ruler
John II
the Pitiless
13746 January 142510 March 1418

6 January 1425
her second husband and co-ruler

As Elisabeth had no surviving children, she sold Luxembourg to Philip III, Duke of Burgundy in 1441, but only to succeed upon her death. Philip captured the city of Luxembourg in 1443, but did not assume the ducal title because of conflicting claims by Anne of Austria, the closest Luxembourg relative.

Claimants

ImageNameDate of birthDate of deathReignRelationship with predecessor
Elisabeth INovember 13902 August 14511443
to
2 August 1451
Ladislaus
the Posthumous
22 February 144023 November 14572 August 1451
to
23 November 1457
Her first cousin once removed
Anne12 April 143213 November 146223 November 1457
to
13 November 1462
His sister
William
the Brave
30 April 142517 September 1482Her husband and co-pretender
Elisabeth II143630 August 150513 November 1462
to
1467
Her sister
Casimir Jagiellon30 November 14277 June 1492Her husband and co-pretender
George of Poděbrady23 April 142022 March 14711458
to
1471
Claimed title as king of Bohemia[1]

House of Valois-Burgundy

See main article: House of Valois-Burgundy. In 1467, when Elisabeth II of Austria, last rival claimant to the title, renounced her rights, Philip III's son, Charles, Duke of Burgundy, assumed the title of duke of Luxembourg, making it a subsidiary title of the Duke of Burgundy.

ImageNameDate of birthDate of deathReignRelationship with
predecessor
Philip I
"the Good"
31 July 139615 June 14671443
to
15 June 1467
Elisabeth I's second cousin
once removed and "usurper"
Charles II
"the Bold"
10 November 14335 January 147715 June 1467
to
5 January 1477
His son
Mary I
"the Rich"
13 February 145727 March 14825 January 1477
to
27 March 1482
His daughter
Maximilian I
"the Last Knight"
22 March 145912 January 1519Her husband and co-ruler

House of Habsburg

See main article: House of Habsburg. In 1482, Luxembourg passed to the House of Habsburg. After the abdication of Emperor Charles V, the duchy of Luxembourg fell to the Spanish line of the House of Habsburg.

ImageNameDate of birthDate of deathReignRelationship with
predecessor
Philip II
"the Handsome"
22 July 147825 September 150627 March 1482
to
25 September 1506
Their son
Charles III
"the Golden"
24 February 150021 September 155825 September 1506
to
16 January 1556
His son
Philip III
"the Prudent"
21 May 152713 September 159816 January 1556
to
6 May 1598
Isabella Clara Eugenia12 August 15661 December 16336 May 1598
to
13 July 1621
His daughter
Albert15 November 155913 July 1621His son-in-law
Philip IV
"the Great"
8 April 160517 September 166513 July 1621
to
17 September 1665
Their nephew
Charles IV
"the Bewitched"
6 November 16611 November 170017 September 1665
to
1 November 1700
His son

During the War of Spanish Succession, 1701–1714, the duchy was disputed between Philip of Anjou, grandson of Louis XIV of France, of the House of Bourbon; and Charles of Austria, son of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor, of the House of Habsburg. In 1712, Luxembourg and Namur were ceded to Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria by his French allies, but at the end of the war in 1713 with the Treaty of Utrecht Maximilian Emanuel was restored as Elector of Bavaria. In 1713, the duchy fell to the Austrian branch of the House of Habsburg.

House of Bourbon

See main article: House of Bourbon.

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
Philip V
Philippe de France
19 December 16839 July 17461 November 1700

1712
his grandnephew

House of Wittelsbach

See main article: House of Wittelsbach.

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
Maximilian II
Maximilian Emanuel Ludwig Maria Joseph Kajetan
Anton Nikolaus Franz
Ignaz Felix
11 July 166226 February 17261712

11 April 1713
his uncle

House of Habsburg

width=150pxImagewidth=150pxNamewidth=150pxDate of birthwidth=150pxDate of deathwidth=150pxReignRelationship with predecessor
Charles V
Karl Franz Joseph
Wenceslau Balthasar Johann
Anton Ignatius
1 October 168520 October 174011 April 1713

20 October 1740
his second cousin
Maria II Theresa
Maria Theresa
Walburga Amalia Christina
13 May 171729 November 178020 October 1740

29 November 1780
his daughter
Joseph
Joseph Benedikt August
Johannes Anton Michael Adam
13 March 174120 February 179029 November 1780
to
20 February 1790
her son
Leopold
Peter Leopold Joseph
Anton Joachim Pius Gotthard
5 May 17471 March 179220 February 1790
to
1 March 1792
His brother
Francis II
Francis Joseph Charles
12 February 17682 March 18351 March 1792
to
1794
His son
Luxembourg was occupied by French revolutionaries between 1794 and 1813. At the Vienna Congress, it was elevated to a grand duchy and given in personal union to William I of the Netherlands.

Grand Dukes of Luxembourg

See main article: Monarchy of Luxembourg. The Grand Duke of Luxembourg (or Grand Duchess in the case of a female monarch) is the head of state of Luxembourg. Luxembourg is the world's only extant sovereign grand duchy, a status to which Luxembourg was promoted in 1815 upon its unification with the Netherlands under the House of Orange-Nassau.

The Luxembourg constitution defines the grand duke's position:

Originally, the constitution vested the grand duke with considerable executive power. In practice, however, since the end of the personal union with the Netherlands in 1890, he has usually limited himself to a mostly representative role, acting on the advice of the government. Amendments in 1919 significantly curbed the grand duke's powers, thus codifying two decades of constitutional practice.

House of Orange-Nassau

ImageNameDate of birthDate of deathReignRelationship with
predecessor
Willem I
Willem Frederik
(Prince William VI of Orange)
24 August 177212 December 184315 March 1815
to
7 October 1840
Francis' third cousin
and
Anne's direct descendant
Willem II
Willem Frederik George Lodewijk
6 December 179217 March 18497 October 1840
to
17 March 1849
Son
Willem III
Willem Alexander Paul Frederik Lodewijk
17 February 181723 November 189017 March 1849
to
23 November 1890
Son

House of Nassau-Weilburg

Under the 1783 Nassau Family Pact, those territories of the Nassau family in the Holy Roman Empire at the time of the Pact (Luxembourg and Nassau) were bound by semi-Salic law, which allowed inheritance by females or through the female line only upon extinction of male members of the dynasty. When William III died leaving only his daughter Wilhelmina as an heir, the crown of the Netherlands, not being bound by the family pact, passed to Wilhelmina. However, the crown of Luxembourg passed to a male of another branch of the House of Nassau: Adolphe, the dispossessed Duke of Nassau and head of the branch of Nassau-Weilburg.

In 1905, Grand Duke Adolphe's younger half-brother, Prince Nikolaus Wilhelm of Nassau, died, having left a son Georg Nikolaus, Count von Merenberg who was, however, the product of a morganatic marriage, and therefore not legally a member of the House of Nassau. In 1907, Adolphe's only son, William IV, Grand Duke of Luxembourg, obtained passage of a law confirming the right of his eldest daughter, Marie-Adélaïde, to succeed to the throne in virtue of the absence of any remaining dynastic males of the House of Nassau, as originally stipulated in the Nassau Family Pact. She became the grand duchy's first reigning female monarch upon her father's death in 1912, and upon her own abdication in 1919, was succeeded by her younger sister Charlotte, who married Felix of Bourbon-Parma, a prince of the former Duchy of Parma. Charlotte's descendants have since reigned as the continued dynasty of Nassau.

Name and reignPortraitBirthMarriagesDeathRight of
Succession
Adolphe
23 November 1890 –
17 November 1905
24 July 1817
Wiesbaden (Prussia)
(1) Grand Duchess Elizabeth Mikhailovna of Russia
31 January 1844
[1 child (stillborn)]
(2) Princess Adelheid-Marie of Anhalt-Dessau
23 April 1851
[5 children]
17 November 1905
Colmar-Berg
William III's
17th cousin once removed through male line
3rd cousin through William IV, Prince of Orange
Anne's direct descendant
William IV
17 November 1905 –
25 February 1912
22 April 1852
Wiesbaden (Prussia)
Infanta Marie Anne of Portugal
[6 children]
25 February 1912
Colmar-Berg
Eldest Child
Marie-Adélaïde
25 February 1912 –
14 January 1919
(abdicated)
14 June 1894
Colmar-Berg
Unmarried
[childless]
24 January 1924
Lenggries (Germany)
Eldest Daughter
Charlotte
14 January 1919 –
12 November 1964
(abdicated)
23 January 1896
Colmar-Berg
Prince Felix of Bourbon-Parma
6 November 1919
[6 children]
9 July 1985
Fischbach
Second Daughter
Jean
12 November 1964 –
7 October 2000
(abdicated)
5 January 1921
Colmar-Berg
Princess Joséphine Charlotte of Belgium
9 April 1953
[5 children]
23 April 2019Luxembourg CityEldest Child
Henri
7 October 2000 –
present
16 April 1955
Betzdorf
María Teresa Mestre y Batista
4 February/14 February 1981
[5 children]
livingEldest Son, Second Child

Timeline of Grand Dukes of Luxembourg since 1815

ImageSize = width:800 height:auto barincrement:12PlotArea = top:10 bottom:50 right:130 left:20AlignBars = late

DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyyPeriod = from:15/03/1815 till:01/01/2024TimeAxis = orientation:horizontalScaleMajor = unit:year increment:10 start:1820

Colors = id:orange value:rgb(1,0.75,0.5) legend:Orange-Nassau id:nassau value:rgb(0.8,0.8,0.9999) legend:Nassau-Weilburg

Legend = columns:2 left:50 top:24 columnwidth:150

BarData = barset:PM

PlotData = width:5 align:left fontsize:S shift:(5,-4) anchor:till barset:PM

from: 15/03/1815 till: 07/10/1840 color:orange text:"Guillaume I" fontsize:10 from: 07/10/1840 till: 17/03/1849 color:orange text:"Guillaume II" fontsize:10 from: 17/03/1849 till: 23/11/1890 color:orange text:"Guillaume III" fontsize:10 from: 23/11/1890 till: 17/11/1905 color:nassau text:"Adolphe" fontsize:10 from: 17/11/1905 till: 25/02/1912 color:nassau text:"Guillaume IV" fontsize:10 from: 25/02/1912 till: 14/01/1919 color:nassau text:"Marie-Adélaïde" fontsize:10 from: 14/01/1919 till: 12/11/1964 color:nassau text:"Charlotte" fontsize:10 from: 12/11/1964 till: 07/10/2000 color:nassau text:"Jean" fontsize:10 from: 07/10/2000 till: end color:nassau text:"Henri" fontsize:10

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: History of the Bohemian royal titles based on contemporary documents. eurulers.altervista.org.