HOHENZOLLERN, German Princely Family

hōˌən-tsôlˈərn, German princely family that ruled Brandenburg (1415–1918), Prussia (1525–1918), and Germany (1871–1918).

Originating in S Germany and traceable to the 11th cent., the family probably took its name from the German word zöller, meaning "watchtower" or "castle," and in particular from the Swabian castle of Hohenzollern, the ancestral seat in the Black Forest. Conrad of Hohenzollern, appointed (c.1170) burgrave (imperial representative) of Nuremberg by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I, was succeeded (1192) by Frederick of Hohenzollern (d. c.1200), whose sons founded the Swabian and Franconian lines of the family. (For the Swabian line see Hohenzollern-Hechingen and Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen under Hohenzollern, province.)

The Franconian line acquired the margraviates of Ansbach (1331) and Kulmbach (1340). In 1415 Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund made Frederick VI of Hohenzollern elector of Brandenburg, and in 1417 Frederick formally received the electoral dignity as Frederick I. Brandenburg then became the center of Hohenzollern power. Frederick II (reigned 1440–70) bought New Mark from the Teutonic Knights and Lower Lusatia from the Holy Roman emperor; he made Berlin the political capital.

Elector Albert Achilles (reigned 1470–86) issued a family law that made Brandenburg indivisible. Roman law was introduced by Joachim I (1499–1535), who tried to suppress the Protestant movement. In 1525 Albert of Brandenburg, grand master of the Teutonic Knights, secularized the domains of his order as the duchy of Prussia. Joachim II (reigned 1535–71) converted to Lutheranism. When John Sigismund (reigned 1608–19) converted to Calvinism, his subjects remained Lutheran; thus religious toleration became a mark of the dynasty.

John Sigismund's acquisition (1614) of Cleves, Mark, and Ravensburg and his inheritance (1618) of the duchy of Prussia (East Prussia) marked the Hohenzollern rise as a leading German power. Frederick William, the Great Elector (reigned 1640–88), obtained E Pomerania, the secularized bishoprics of Cammin, Minden, and Halberstadt, and the expectancy to Magdeburg upon the death of its administrator. His reign brought centralization and absolutism to the Hohenzollern lands. In 1701 his son was crowned "king in Prussia" as Frederick I and at the Peace of Utrecht was recognized (1713) as king of Prussia. The royal title was a new symbol of the unity of the family holdings.

Frederick William I (reigned 1713–40), through his administrative, fiscal, and military reforms, was the real architect of Hohenzollern greatness. As a result of the Northern Wars he obtained (1721) part of W Pomerania, including Stettin. Frederick II (reigned 1740–86) seized Silesia from Holy Roman Empress Maria Theresa and acquired (1772) West Prussia and Ermeland from the first partition of Poland. An enlightened despot, he achieved the reform and codification (1794) of Prussian law. Frederick William II (reigned 1786–97), Frederick William III (reigned 1797–1840), and Frederick William IV (reigned 1840–61) were mediocre rulers; their ministers were more important in the history of Prussia.

William I (reigned 1861–88) entrusted his affairs to Otto von Bismarck, under whose direction Prussia triumphed over its rival Austria and over France. In 1871 William was proclaimed emperor (kaiser) of a united Germany. He was succeeded by Frederick III (1888) and by William II (reigned 1888–1918), whose instability and ambition contributed to the involvement of Germany in World War I; his abdication ended the family's rule in Germany.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Hohenzollern German Princely Family  - 703 results

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...of the Prince of Hohenzollern." The Austrian diplomat...1870 , pp. 17f. The German archives do contain...the Sigmaringen family had rejected the...Reichstag and South German conditions seem...whole house if a Hohenzollern reigned in Spain...the Hohenzollern family.... The king would...
...of the Prince of Hohenzollern." The Austrian diplomat...pp. 17 f. The German archives do contain...the Sigmaringen family had rejected the...Reichstag and South German conditions seem...whole house if a Hohenzollern reigned in Spain...the Hohenzollern family. . . . The king...
...Welcome among us, Hohenzollern Prince! Rejoice...the star of Germany! Protect our...atone for his princely arrogance. The...not unknown to Germans. With him stepped...the House of Hohenzollern. Ever since...clergy, for a family-gathering, there...ratified the German diagnosis of...
...Hartmann, "The Family as the Locus...early-modern, German-speaking Europe...duchies, duchies, princely bishoprics...states like the Hohenzollern monarchy...provinces of Germany, by contrast...children in a family, often of both...Reformation, German churches acted...affairs, and even princely authority...
...connected the rise of the Hohenzollerns with German unification, that a...glorify the rise of the Hohenzollerns, such as German unification) on historians...added luster to the Hohenzollern triumph in reviving German power and prosperity...
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journal articles on: Hohenzollern German Princely Family  - 3 results

 
 
...Friedrich von Homburg," Carleton Germanic Papers 14 (1986): 45-54. Although...hell fall down." (16.) "Hohenzollern: `Arthur! The Prince falls...Politics of the Unpolitical: German Writers and the Problem of...arguments of Kottwitz and Hohenzollern on behalf of the Prince in...
...portrait of a liberal immigrant Jewish family, the sort that has so enriched South...but his heart remained in the defunct Hohenzollern monarchy.... As Jonathan Wright shows...his care to deal justly with the poets family, friends, business associates, mistresses...
...house of the Welfen (German branch of the Guelfs...rank, and glory of the princely house (Finster 23...the reputation of a family, the greater were their...report on the Prussian Hohenzollern dynasty. She certainly...province of Poitou. Her family did not belong to the...


 

magazine articles on: Hohenzollern German Princely Family  - 4 results

 
 
...federalism. Although the princely states were more authoritarian...authority to join a new German state? For the radical-democratic...of the Habsburg and Hohenzollern princes was not required...involve her leading a Germany that excluded Austria...personally dreamed of the Hohenzollerns taking a military lead...
...royal and princely classes, where...Almanachs founding family. When it...Romanov, Hohenzollern, Hapsburg...But look at Germany, a republic...the pages of German papers and...Christian von Hohenzollern has washed...so with the princely families...members of the family have now returned...
...royal and princely classes, where...Almanachs founding family. When it...Romanov, Hohenzollern, Hapsburg...But look at Germany, a republic...the pages of German papers and...Christian von Hohenzollern has washed...so with the princely families...members of the family have now returned...
...others what belongs to my family, which cannot be allowed in...frontiers created for some of his German allies. All Napoleonic constitutions...the best mounted and most princely looking establishment in the...royal armchair at Madame Meres family dinners; in the end she stopped...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Hohenzollern German Princely Family  - 1 result

 
 
HOHENZOLLERN , German princely family ho n-tsol rn, German princely family that ruled Brandenburg...Prussia (1525 1918), and Germany (1871 1918). Originating...Swabian castle of Hohenzollern, the ancestral seat...


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