County of Savoy explained

Conventional Long Name:County of Savoy
Common Name:Savoy
Flag Size:80px
Flag Type:Imperial Banner
(was used by the first counts to prove loyalty to the Emperor)
Coa Size:80px
Image Map Caption:The County of Savoy and its possessions within the Holy Roman Empire around the middle of the 13th century. The area highlights the rest of the Kingdom of Burgundy. Note that some of Savoy's possessions lie outside of that kingdom (instead being part of the Kingdom of Italy). Savoy proper is the westernmost of the territories. The unmarked territory directly to the northwest of Savoy proper, Bresse, was acquired in 1272.
Era:High Middle Ages
Religion:Roman Catholicism
Government Type:Monarchy
Status:County
Empire:Holy Roman Empire
Status Text:State of the Holy Roman Empire
Year Start:1003
Year End:1416
Leader1:Humbert I White Hands
Year Leader1:1003–1048
Leader2:Amadeus VIII (Anti-Pope Felix V)
Year Leader2:1391–1416
Title Leader:Count of Savoy
Event Start:Created by Rudolph III,
King of Burgundy
Event1:Inherited March of Turin
Date Event1:1046
Event2:Emp. Henry VII acknowledged Imperial immediacy
Date Event2:1331
Event3:Acquired County of Nice
Date Event3:1388
Event4:Acquired County of Geneva
Date Event4:1401
Event End:Raised to duchy by Sigismund
P1:Kingdom of Arles
Flag P1:Banner of arms of the kingdom of Arles.png
S1:Duchy of Savoy
Flag S1:Flag of Savoie.svg
Footnote A:The Kingdom of Burgundy, to which the county owed suzerainty, became a part of the Empire on King death in 1032; the County of Savoy gained Imperial immediacy from Emperor in 1331.

The County of Savoy was a feudal state of the Holy Roman Empire which emerged, along with the free communes of Switzerland, from the collapse of the Burgundian Kingdom in the 11th century. It was the cradle of the future Savoyard state.[1]

History

See also: Sapaudia and House of Savoy. Sapaudia, stretching south of Lake Geneva from the Rhône River to the Western Alps, had been part of Upper Burgundy ruled by the Bosonid duke Hucbert from the mid-9th century. Together with the neighbouring Free County of Burgundy (today's Franche Comté), it became part of the larger Kingdom of Burgundy under King Rudolph II in 933.[2]

Humbert the White-Handed was raised to count by the last king of Burgundy, Rudolph III, in 1003. He backed the inheritance claims of Emperor Henry II and in turn, was permitted to usurp the county of Aosta from its bishops at the death of Anselm. Following his support of Conrad II in annexing Arles upon Rudolph's death and suppressing the revolts of Count Odo and Bishop Burchard, he also received the county of Maurienne (formerly held by the archbishops of Vienne) and territories in Chablais and Tarentaise, formerly held by its archbishops at Moûtiers.

While the Arelat remained a titular kingdom of the Holy Roman Empire, Humbert's descendants—later known as the House of Savoy—maintained their independence as counts. In 1046, his younger son Otto married Adelaide, daughter of Ulric Manfred II, marquis of Susa. When she inherited her father's lands in preference to other, male, relatives, he thereby acquired control of the extensive March of Turin. This was then united with Savoy upon his inheritance from his elder brother.[3]

The counts further enlarged their territory when, in 1218, they inherited the Vaud lands north of Lake Geneva from the extinct House of Zähringen. In 1220, Count Thomas I occupied the towns of Pinerolo and Chambéry (Kamrach), which afterwards became the Savoy capital. In 1240, his younger son Peter II was invited to England by King Henry III, who had married Peter's niece Eleanor of Provence. He was appointed Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Earl of Richmond and had the Savoy Palace erected in London.

In 1313, Count Amadeus V the Great officially gained the status of Imperial immediacy from Emperor Henry VII. What was left of the Kingdom of Burgundy effectively ceased to be entirely under the authority of the emperor after the Dauphiné had passed to the future King Charles V of France in 1349 and Amadeus VI of Savoy was appointed Imperial vicar of Arelat by Emperor Charles IV in 1365.

Amadeus VII gained access to the Mediterranean Sea by the acquisition of the County of Nice in 1388, and his son Amadeus VIII purchased the County of Geneva in 1401. The extended Savoy lands were finally raised to a duchy in 1416 by the German king Sigismund (see Duchy of Savoy 1416–1718).

Counts of Savoy

1003–1047/48

In 1416 Amadeus VIII was raised to the status of Duke of Savoy.

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: House of Savoy Italian Royal Family, European Dynasty Britannica . 2024-08-07 . www.britannica.com . en.
  2. Web site: 2021-12-23 . Le Comté de Savoie – Musée du patrimoine militaire de Lyon et sa région . 2024-08-07 . fr-FR.
  3. Web site: Savoie - Petit comté deviendra grand... - Herodote.net . 2024-08-07 . www.herodote.net.