Zweibrücken-Bitsch Explained

Native Name:German: Grafschaft Zweibrücken-Bitsch
Conventional Long Name:County of Zweibrücken-Bitsch
Common Name:Zweibrücken-Bitsch
Image Map Caption:Counties of Zweibrücken-Zweibrücken (dark green) and Zweibrücken-Bitsch (light pink) around 1400
Era:Middle Ages
Status:Vassal
Empire:Holy Roman Empire
Languages Type:Language
Languages:German
Religion:Roman Catholic
Government Type:County
Year Start:1286 - 1302
Year End:1570
Life Span:1286/13021570
Capital:Bitsch
P1:County of Zweibrücken
P2:Duchy of Lorraine
S1:Duchy of Lorraine
S2:Hanau-Lichtenberg

The County of Zweibrücken-Bitsch was a territory of the Holy Roman Empire that was created between 1286 and 1302 from the eastern part of the County of Zweibrücken and the Barony of Bitche (German: Bitsch|links=no) in Lorraine. It existed until 1570, when it was divided amongst its heirs when the counts died out.

History

When the land of Zweibrücken was divided amongst the sons of Count Henry II of Zweibrücken, the district (German: [[Amt]]) of Lemberg and Lemberg Castle went to the elder son, Eberhard I from 1286. His portion also included Morsberg, Linder and Saargemünd. In 1297 he swapped these three castles with Duke Frederick III of Lorraine and received in return the castle and lordship of Bitsch as a fief. This exchange of territory was further defined in 1302. From then on, Eberhard called himself the Count of Zweibrücken and Lord of Bitsch. Because he and his descendants bore the title count, the new territory was called the County of Zweibrücken-Bitsch.

Other lands were initially managed jointly by Eberhard I and his younger brother, Walram I, who had been given the German: Amt of Zweibrücken. These were not finally apportioned until 1333. Walram inherited Stauf Castle, Bergzabern, and the town and abbey of Hornbach. Eberhard received Thaleischweiler, Pirmasens, and part-ownership of the castles of Landeck and Lindelbronn. In the period that followed the counts of Bitsch succeeded in acquiring a few other properties, but only in the immediate vicinity. When their Zweibrücken cousins died out in 1394, they received parts of the inheritance, but not the County of Zweibrücken because the last count had sold his county in 1385 to the Electoral Palatinate.

In the 16th century, Count James succeeded for the last time in establishing a clear concentration of power in northern Alsace and the southern Palatinate. In 1559 he obtained the Barony of Ochsenstein because the cadet branch of Zweibrücken-Bitsch-Ochsenstein, that had existed since 1485, had died out. However, since James and his brother Simon V Wecker (died 1540) had each only produced a daughter, a dispute broke out in 1570 after James' death between the husbands of the two cousins, Count Philip I of Leiningen-Westerburg and Count Philip V of Hanau-Lichtenberg. Whilst Philip V was able to overpower Philip I, his immediate introduction of Lutheranism in the course of the Reformation made himself an enemy of the powerful Roman Catholic Duchy of Lorraine under Duke Charles III, who had the suzerainty of Bitsch. In July 1572 troops of Lorraine occupied the county. Because Philip V could not match Lorraine's military might, he sought legal redress.[1]

During the subsequent trial before the German: [[Reichskammergericht]], Lorraine was able to point both to the exchange agreement of 1302 as well as the fact that, in 1573, it had purchased the hereditary rights of the counts of Leiningen.

In 1604 there was a contractual agreement between Hanau-Lichtenberg and Lorraine, which resulted in the German: Amt of Lemberg being transferred to the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg and the German: Amt of Bitsch to the Duchy of Lorraine.

List of the counts of Zweibrücken-Bitsch

Coat of arms

Blazon

Or, a lion rampant gules, armed and langued azure.

See also

References

Literature

Notes and References

  1. [Zimmerische Chronik]