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Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria

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Noble family
  
House of Welf

Mother
  
Judith of Flanders

Name
  
Henry Duke


Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Father
  
Welf I, Duke of Bavaria

Died
  
December 13, 1126, Ravensburg, Germany

Spouse
  
Wulfhilde of Saxony (m. ?–1126)

Children
  
Henry X, Duke of Bavaria, Welf VI, Judith of Bavaria, Duchess of Swabia

Parents
  
Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, Judith of Flanders, Countess of Northumbria

Grandchildren
  
Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor, Henry the Lion, Welf VII

Similar People
  
Frederick II - Duke of Swabia, Henry the Lion, Lothair II - Holy Roman E, Frederick I - Holy Roman E, Tostig Godwinson

Henry IX (1075 – 13 December 1126), called the Black, a member of the House of Welf, was Duke of Bavaria from 1120 to 1126.

Contents

Life and reign

Henry was the second son of Duke Welf I of Bavaria (d. 1101) from his marriage with Judith, daughter of Count Baldwin IV of Flanders. As a young man, he administered the family's Este property south of the Alps.

Through his marriage to Wulfhilde, daughter of Duke Magnus of Saxony, about 1095, he acquired part of the Billung estates around Lüneburg (the nucleus of the later Welf duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg). He aspired to succeed his father-in-law as Saxon duke when Magnus died without male heirs in 1106, but was denied as the new king Henry V enfeoffed his follower Count Lothair of Supplinburg.

Duke Henry nevertheless upheld close relations with the ruling Salian dynasty. In 1116, he joined Emperor Henry V's second Italian campaign to seize the estates of late Margravine Matilda of Tuscany. He succeeded his elder brother Welf II as Bavarian duke, when the latter died childless in 1120. Henry was also instrumental in bringing about the 1122 Concordat of Worms, ending the long-lasting Investiture Controversy between Pope and Emperor.

Upon the emperor's death, Duke Henry played a vital role in the royal election of 1125: first supporting his son-in-law, the Hohenstaufen duke Frederick II of Swabia, he switched his allegiance to his old rival Duke Lothair of Saxony —probably after Lothair promised that Gertrude, his only daughter and heir, would marry Henry's son Henry the Proud. The marriage was concluded in May 1127. The estrangement between the Welf and Hohenstaufen dynasties ("Guelphs and Ghibellines") lasted until the 13th century.

After Lothair won the tumultuous election, he imposed an Imperial ban on Frederick II, however, the king's forces were not able to conquer the Hohenstaufen territories in Swabia. In 1126 Henry abdicated as Bavarian duke in favour of his second son Henry the Proud and retired to the family foundation of Weingarten Abbey in Upper Swabia, possibly to not be obliged to participate in the prosecution of his son-in-law.

Henry died shortly thereafter and was buried in Weingarten. His wife Wulfhilde outlived him by only 16 days. Henry's epithet "the Black" has not been recorded before the 13th century. Both Emperor Frederick Barbarossa and his bitter rival Henry the Lion were his grandsons.

Issue

Henry and Wulfhilde had the following children:

  • Judith, married Frederick II, Duke of Swabia
  • Conrad (died 17 March 1126)
  • Henry X the Proud, married Gertrude of Süpplingenburg, succeeded his father as Duke of Bavaria
  • Welf VI (died 1191)
  • Sophia, married Duke Berthold III of Zähringen and secondly Margrave Leopold of Styria
  • Wulfhild, married Rudolf I, Count of Bregenz
  • Mathilde, married Diepold IV, Margrave of Vohburg and Count Gebhard III of Sulzbach
  • Adalbert, Abbot of Corvey
  • Literature

  • Bernd Schneidmüller: Die Welfen. Herrschaft und Erinnerung (819–1252) (= Urban-Taschenbücher 465). Kohlhammer, Stuttgart etc., 2000, ISBN 3-17-014999-7, pp. 149 ff.
  • Sigmund Ritter von Riezler (1880), "Heinrich IX", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), 11, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 461–462 
  • Kurt Reindel (1969), "Heinrich IX. der Schwarze", Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB) (in German), 8, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 343–343 ; (full text online)
  • References

    Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria Wikipedia