WITTELSBACH

vĭˈtəlsbäkh, German dynasty that ruled Bavaria from 1180 until 1918.

The family takes its name from the ancestral castle of Wittelsbach in Upper Bavaria. In 1180 Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I invested Count Otto of Wittelsbach with the much-reduced duchy of Bavaria, of which he had deprived the Guelphic duke, Henry the Lion. In 1214 Otto's son, Otto II, also received the Rhenish Palatinate. After Otto's death (1253) the Wittelsbach possessions were divided between an elder branch, which received the Rhenish Palatinate and W Bavaria, and a younger branch, which received the rest.

The Wittelsbachs reached their zenith under Duke Louis III, of the elder branch, who became Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV (reigned 1314–47). Louis IV temporarily (1324–73) attached Brandenburg to his dynasty and through his second marriage added Hainaut, Holland, Zeeland, and Friesland. In 1329, Louis IV subdivided the Wittelsbach lands; the elder branch, descended from Louis's brother Rudolf, received the Rhenish and the Upper Palatinate, while the younger branch, descended from Louis's first marriage, received Bavaria proper.

The electoral dignity at first was to alternate between the two branches but was settled permanently on the Palatinate branch by the Golden Bull of 1356. Both branches underwent several subdivisions, but in the early 16th cent. Bavaria was reunited by Duke Albert IV, who introduced succession by primogeniture. (For the subdivisions of the Palatinate branch, which is not treated here in detail, see Palatinate.)

In 1443 Philip the Good of Burgundy seized Hainaut, Holland, Zeeland, and Friesland from Countess Jacqueline, his first cousin. In the 16th and 17th cent. the Bavarian Wittelsbachs championed the Roman Catholic cause while the Palatinate branch were the leading Protestant princes. After the defeat of the elector palatine, known as Frederick the Winter King of Bohemia, his electoral voice was transferred (1623) to Duke Maximilian I of Bavaria, who also received the Upper Palatinate. A new electorate was created in 1648 for Frederick's son, to whom the Rhenish Palatinate was restored.

Elector Charles Albert of Bavaria was chosen (1742) Holy Roman emperor as Charles VII; with the death (1777) of his son, Maximilian III, the Bavarian branch of the Wittelsbachs died out, and the Palatinate-Sulzbach line acceded in Bavaria in the person of Elector Charles Theodore, who died in 1799 without issue. He was succeeded by the duke palatine of Zweibrücken, senior member of the Palatinate branch, who thus united all Wittelsbach lands under his sole rule and who in 1806 became king of Bavaria as Maximilian I. His successors as kings of Bavaria were Louis I, Maximilian II, Louis II, Otto I, and Louis III, who was deposed in 1918.

Empress Elizabeth of Austria, wife of Francis Joseph, and Queen Elizabeth of the Belgians, consort of Albert I, issued from a collateral line of the dynasty, and the Wittelsbachs have intermarried for centuries with all the royal families of Europe. A line of the Palatinate branch (see Zweibrücken) ruled Sweden from 1654 to 1741. Crown Prince Rupert (d. 1955), son of King Louis III and claimant to the Bavarian throne (the family never renounced their claim), also inherited, through a complicated succession, the claim of the Stuart dynasty to the British throne.

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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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Questia Books and Articles on: Wittelsbach
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books on: Wittelsbach  - 413 results

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...Liege with Innocent XI, who favored the Wittelsbach because of Max Emanuels important role...campaign against the Turks also helped the Wittelsbach contender. After his election, Joseph...nephew, the due dAnjou. Neither of the Wittelsbach brothers, however, was able to interest...
...pation of Frederick of Wittelsbach in Henry the Lions expedition; and...for the count palatine Frederick of Wittelsbach. That this is possible may be admitted...mentioned testament of Frederick of Wittelsbach which connects his second journey to...
...Bothmer; Pan-Bavarian, Koy pro-Wittelsbach BHKB...Spruhner, Pan-Bavarian, Kanzler pro-Wittelsbach ORKA...Kanzler Pan-Bavarian, pro-Wittelsbach BVP...
...including the toponymically important Wittelsbach, destroyed in 1208, the large founding family of Wittelsbach retained the advocacy of Scheyern...capacities the dynasty of Scheyern and Wittelsbach served the empire from the twelfth...
...sixteenth to the eighteenth century, the Wittelsbach dynasty was in direct or indirect control...that juncture. The elder branch of the Wittelsbach had acquired the Palatinate in the family...amongst its adherents. It was the two Wittelsbach cousins who eventually unleashed the...
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journal articles on: Wittelsbach  - 22 results

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...integral part of rulership within the Wittelsbach family. (26) By the time of Albrecht V, the Wittelsbach dukes were well-known for their extensive...cultural, and political aspirations of the Wittelsbach rulers. 5. WILHELMS EARLIER GARDENS...
...of Bavaria, which was ruled by the Wittelsbach family from their large and splendid...succeeded in serving the last two Bavarian Wittelsbach Electors, Maximilian III Joseph (1727...controlled system - ironically, as the Wittelsbach family line died out in 1799 for want...
...1356-1390), a member of the rival Wittelsbach dynasty and staunch supporter of the...unresolved hostility bet-ween the Wittelsbach and Nassau families, but also from...his reign. Yet the interest of the Wittelsbach counts Palatine in Conrad von Weinsberg...
...Reformation. Unlike thenpeers in Munich who could rely on Wittelsbach flat, the Mikulov priests could not depend on Dietrichstein...Confraternity of the Body of Christ came in part from Wilhelm V, the Wittelsbach duke.66 Erhard reproduces a letter from Wilhelm directed...
...policies, Strasser argues, extolled Maximilian and the Wittelsbach dynasty as the defenders of orthodoxy, while at the same...history of confessionalization. The virginity policies of the Wittelsbach dynasty might look like hardline assertions of patriarchal...
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magazine articles on: Wittelsbach  - 7 results

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...in 1240) the city passed into the control of the House of Wittelsbach whose kings ruled Bavaria until 1918, when Ludwig III was...Residenz, the huge palace that was the main home to the Wittelsbach dynasty. The complex grew from a small moated castle in...
...that marriages to his offspring were considered very desirable throughout Europe and four of his children married into the Wittelsbach dynasty of Bavaria. From one of these unions would come a granddaughter, Isabella, who, upon marrying Charles VI, became...
...rat Charlie Allnutt, as the pair avenge Samuels death by sinking the German steamer Konigin Luise, which dominates Lake Wittelsbach. Other writers of the interwar period depict missionaries at work in Africa, as well as in South Asia and Australia. Joyce...
...their sovereign prince. They chose the seventeen-year-old Prince Otto of Bavaria, a member of the notoriously unstable Wittelsbach dynasty, an unwise choice from the beginning, and the beginning also of an involvement with the German states. John van...
...mentality as the people they ruled. The Rococo style spoke the same language to nobility and peasantry. Two princes of the Wittelsbach family, during the Wars of the Spanish Succession, the Elector Max Emmanuel of Bavaria and his brother Joseph Clemens...
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newspaper articles on: Wittelsbach  - 20 results

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...picturesque spots in central Europe. We stayed in the cosy Hotel Wittelsbach in the centre of town, a well-appointed family-run establishment...Summer offers a half-board deal at the three-star Hotel Wittelsbach in Ruhpolding, including direct flights from Manchester...
...Bonaventura Adalbert Maria Herzog von Bayern, head of the Wittelsbach family. The 74-year-old German aristocrat is the blood...king by that time. His position as head of the House of Wittelsbach will pass to his brother Prince Max. Max has no sons, so...
...Winston, tell me all about it. The current record holder for the worlds most expensive diamond is the inch-wide 35 carat Wittelsbach diamond, owned by a 17th century Spanish king which sold at Christies for pounds sterling16.3million in December 2008...
...Winston, tell me all about it. The current record holder for the worlds most expensive diamond is the inch-wide 35-carat Wittelsbach diamond, which was owned by a 17th century Spanish king. It sold at Christies in London for euro19million in December 2008...
...independent state ruled by prince provosts who were appointed by rich families to rule for life. Many were from the famed Wittelsbach family. As heads of state, provosts (47 ruled from 1102 to 1803) voted in the German parliament until Napoleons conquest...
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encyclopedia articles on: Wittelsbach  - 18 results

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WITTELSBACH vi t lsbakh, German dynasty that ruled...its name from the ancestral castle of Wittelsbach in Upper Bavaria. In 1180 Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I invested Count Otto of Wittelsbach with the much-reduced duchy of Bavaria...
...what is now Austria) on Otto of Wittelsbach. The political history of Bavaria...importance, became that of the Wittelsbach family, which ruled until 1918. Bavaria under the Wittelsbachs The Wittelsbach fiefs, including the Rhenish Palatinate...
...VII (Luxemburg), 1308 13 Louis IV (Wittelsbach), 1314 46 Charles IV (Luxemburg...Wenceslaus (Luxemburg), 1378 1400 Rupert (Wittelsbach), 1400 1410 Sigismund (Luxemburg...and other dynasties Charles VII (Wittelsbach-Hapsburg), 1742 45 Francis I (Lorraine...
...count of Hainaut, seized Holland, which came (1345) into the hands of the Bavarian house of Wittelsbach through marriage. The house of Wittelsbach retained possession of Holland until 1433, when Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, wrested...
...followed. Brandenburg acquired (1614) Cleves, Mark, and Ravensberg; the Palatinate-Neuburg line of the Bavarian house of Wittelsbach took Julich and Berg. The succession was not finally settled until 1666, when the Treaty of Cleves confirmed the division...
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