List of states in the Holy Roman Empire (H)
List of states in the Holy Roman Empire | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Z |
Free Imperial Cities - Imperial abbeys |
This is a list of states in the Holy Roman Empire beginning with the letter H:
Name |
Type |
Circle |
Bench |
Formed |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Haag | HRE County | 1500: Bavarian Circle 1567: Line died out; to Dukes of Bavaria | |||
Habsburg | County | 1040 | 1305: Annexed to Austria, gave its name to the archducal dynasty which became the de facto imperial dynasty 1414: Annexed to Bern | ||
Habsburg-Lauffenburg (Habsburg-Laufenburg) | County | 1239: Partitioned from Habsburg | Partitioned several times 1282-1408: Acquired Landgraviate of Klettgau 1408: Partitions all annexed to Sulz | ||
Hadeln | "Farmer Republic" under loose overlordship of Saxe-Lauenburg | earliest records from mid-12th century | Before 1180: Part of older Duchy of Saxony, till emperor deposed Henry the Lion 1180: To sharply belittled younger Saxony 1260: Overlordship by Saxe-Lauenburg 1305-1401: Joint overlordship by both dynastic Bergedorf-Mölln and Ratzeburg-Lauenburg lines of Saxe-Lauenburg 1330-?: By way of pawn to Hamburg 1402-1481: By way of pawn to Hamburg 1481: Redeemed by Saxe-Lauenburg 1689-1731: Imperial custody for dynasty extinct 1731: Enfeoffed to Hanover 1803-1813: Conquests/annexations in the Napoleonic Wars 1813: Returned to Hanover (kingdom in 1814) 1852: Traditional autonomy cancelled 1866: Annexed to Prussia 1884: Distinct Estates dissolved | ||
Haguenau (Hagenau) | Imperial Free City | Upp Rhen | 1260 | 1648: Annexed to France | |
Hagenau | "Landvogtei" | ||||
Hainaut | County (unification of countship of Bergen, margraviate of Valenciennes and the southern countship of the Brabant shire) | Burg | PR | 1071 | 1299: United with the County of Holland 1436: To Burgundy 1512: Burgundian Circle |
Hainburg | County | 1240: Partitioned from Regenstein | 1368: Re-annexed by Regenstein 1599: Annexed to the Prince-Bishopric of Halberstadt | ||
Halberstadt | Bishopric 1180: HRE Prince-Bishopric |
Low Sax | EC | 996: diocese est. 1180: Partitioned from the older Duchy of Saxony |
Before 1180: Part of older Duchy of Saxony, till emperor deposed Henry the Lion 1180: Gained Imperial immediacy at the carve-up of the older Duchy of Saxony 1648: Secularized as a principality to Brandenburg |
Halberstadt | Principality | Low Sax | 1648: Secularized from Bp. of Halberstadt | From 1648 to 1918, the "Princes of Halberstadt" were the Electors of Brandenburg, the Kings of Prussia and finally the Emperors of Germany, except when Halberstadt was part of the Kingdom of Westphalia from 1807 to 1813. | |
Haldenstein | Barony | ||||
Hall | |||||
Hallermund | County | Low Rhen | c. 1163 | 1398: Annexed to Corvey 1408: Annexed to Minden 1436: Annexed to Brunswick 1707: Annexed to Platen-Hallermund | |
Hals | 1280: County | 12th century | 1443: Annexed to Leuchtenberg 1486: Sold to Aichberg 1511: Inherited by Degenberg 1517: Sold to Bavaria To Cronenstein To Sinzendorf 1715: To Bavaria | ||
Hamburg | Imperial City | Low Sax | RH | 1189 | 1241: Founding member of the Hansa 1510: Imperial city 1810: Annexed to France 1815: Free City |
(after 1642) Hanau From 1642: Count of Hanau, Rieneck and Zweibrücken, Lord of Münzenberg, Lichtenberg and Ochsenhausen |
1429: HRE County | Upp Rhen | WT | 13th century | 1243: 1st mention of Hanau castle 1458: Divided into Hanau-Münzenberg and Hanau-Lichtenberg 1642: Hanau-Münzenberg and Hanau-Lichtenberg reunited 1736: Line extinct, inherited by Hesse-Kassel and Hesse-Darmstadt |
Hanau-Lichtenberg | 1458: HRE County | Upp Rhen | WT | 1458 | 1458: Created by a division from Hanau-(Münzenberg) 1480: Acquired Lordship of Lichtenberg 1642: Inherited Hanau-Münzenberg after extinction of that line 1736: Line extinct, inherited by Hesse-Darmstadt |
Hanau-Münzenberg | 1429: County | Upp Rhen | WT | 1458 | 1458: After splitting away Babenhausen (which became later Hanau-Lichtenberg) the county of Hanau was renamed Hanau-Münzenberg 1642: Male line extinct; inherited by Hanau-Lichtenberg 1736: Hanau-Lichtenberg extinct, inherited by Hesse-Kassel |
Hanover | Duchy 1692: HRE Prince-Elector |
Low Sax | EL | 1636 | |
Harburg | Principality | ||||
Hardegg | 1383: HRE County | 1188: 1st mention of Counts of Hardegg 1260: To Counts of Plain 1273-1483: To Counts of Maidburg 1495: Sold to Barons and Counts of Pruschenk by Habsburgs Still exists in Seefeld and Stetteldorf lines Acquired Lordships of Kadolz, Seefeld and Stetteldorf | |||
Harrach Count of Harrach in Rohrau and Thannhausen, etc. |
1628: HRE County (Personalist) | n/a | SW | 1628 | Acquired non-immediate County of Rohrau Acquired non-immediate County of Thannhausen |
Harmersbach | Imperial Valley | ||||
Hartelstein | Lordship | 1460: Partitioned from Saffig | 1477: Annexed to Saffig-Olbrück | ||
Hatzfeld HRE Prince of Hatzfeld-Gleichen-Trachenberg, Baron of Wildenburg, Lord of Crottorf, Schönstein, Kranichfeld, Blankenhain, etc. |
Lordship 1635: HRE County 1748: HRE Principality |
Upp Sax | 1418: Line extinct; territory passed to Hatzfeld by female succession 1639: Acquired Gleichen 1640: Imperial estate; immediate HRE Counts of Gleichen 1741: non-immediate Princes of Trachenberg in Prussia 1806: To Grand Duchy of Berg 1815: To Prussia | ||
Hauenstein | County | ||||
Hausen | Lordship | ?? | 1500: Franconian Circle | ||
Havelberg | Bishopric | ||||
Hegau | County | Included the Lordships of Aach and Engen | |||
Heggbach | Abbacy | Swab | 1793: Council of Princes | ||
Heideck (Heydeck) | HRE Lordship | Acquired Bretzenheim 1471: To Bavaria | |||
Heilbronn | Imperial Free City | Swab | SW | 1350 | 1803: Mediatized |
Heiligenberg | County | Swab | |||
Heiligkreuzthal | Abbacy | ||||
Heinsberg | County | 1085 | 1479: Annexed to Jülich | ||
Helffenstein (Helfenstein) | 1351: HRE County | 1113 | 1100: Helfenstein castle built 1200: Marriage of heiress of Counts of Helfenstein with Count of Spitzenberg and Sigmaringen 1226: Union of Counties of Spitzenberg and Helfenstein 1258: Inherited, through female succession, some territories of Counts of Dillingen Wiesenstein line inherited County of Geislingen 1356: Division into Blaubeuren (extinct 1517) and Wiesenstein (extinct 1627)lines 1383: Geislingen and Helfenstein castle pawned to Imperial City of Ulm 1396: Wiesenstein line sold (paid off debts of 123,439 guldens) Helfenstein castle, lands in Ulm and Advocacy of Elchingen Abbey to Ulm 1447: Sold Lordship of Blaubeuren to Wurttemberg 1448: Sold Lordship of Heidenheim to Wurttemberg 1450-1457: Wurttemberg had temporary possession of Wiesenstein 1450-1504: Electorate of Bavaria had temporary possession of Lordship of Heidenheim Heidenheim to Wurttemberg 1626: Male line of Helfensstein died out 1627: Blaubeuren passed to Wurttemberg; 1/3 of Wiesenstein passed to Furstenberg and 2/3 to Electorate of Bavaria 1643: To Bavaria and Wurttemberg | ||
Helmarshausen | RA | ||||
Henneberg | County 1471: HRE Princely Count of Henneberg |
Franc | PR | 1037 | 1096: 1st mention of Henneberg Division into Henneberg, Botenlauben and Strauf 1274: Division into Henneberg-Schleusingen, Henneberg-Aschach-Romhild and Henneberg-Hartenberg 1310: Henneberg-Schleusingen raised to HRE Prince Partitions annexed to Mansfeld-Bornstedt, Meißen, Saxony and Stolberg-Stolberg 1500: Franconian Circle 1554: Pact of mutual succession between Dukes of Saxony and Counts of Henneberg 1582: HRE Council of Princes 1583: Counts of Henneberg died out |
Herford Abbey | 823: Imperial Abbey 1523: Princess-Abbess |
Low Rhen | c. 800 | 819: Benedictine Abbey of Herford founded by Emperor Louis the Pious 1793: Council of Princes 1803: Secularized to Prussia | |
Herford | 1631: Free City | Low Rhen | RH | 1652: Annexed to Brandenburg | |
Héricourt | Lordship | ||||
Herrenzimmern | Lordship 1530: County |
1495: Partitioned from Zimmern | 1570: Annexed to Mötzkirch | ||
Herrstein | Lordship | ||||
Hersfeld | HRE Abbey | 1232 | 1432: To Hesse 1606: Under administration by Hesse-Kassel 1648: Secularized to Hesse-Kassel | ||
Hesse HRE Prince-Elector, Sovereign Landgrave of Hesse, Grand Duke of Fulda, Prince of Hersfeld, Hanau, Fritzlar & Isenburg, Count of Katzenelnbogen, Dietz, Ziegenhain, Nidda, Schaumburg |
1265: Landgraviate 1292: HRE Prince 1500: Duchy 1806: Grand Duchy 1866: Electorate |
Upp Rhen | PR | 1247 Split off from Thuringia | Acquired Giessen AcquiredZiegenhain Acquired Nidda Acquired Katzenelnbogen 1432: Overlordship over Abbey of Hersfeld 1567: Partitioned into Hesse-Darmstadt, Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel), Hesse-Marburg, and Hesse-Rheinfels 1582: HRE Council of Princes |
Hesse-Darmstadt Grand Duke of Hesse and of the Rhine |
Landgraviate 1806: Grand Duchy |
Upp Rhen | PR | 1567: Created on partition of Hesse | 1582: HRE Council of Princes 1736: Inherited Hanau-Lichtenberg 1806: Joined Confederation of the Rhine |
Hesse-Homburg Landgrave of Hesse, Prince of Hersfeld, Count of Katzenelnbogen, Dietz, Ziegenhain, Nidda, Schaumburg, Isenburg & Büdingen |
1622: Division from Hesse-Darmstadt | 1650: Divided into Hesse-Homburg and Hesse-Homburg-Bingenheim 1668: Becomes independent of Hesse-Darmstadt 1681: Homburg and Bingenheim reunited 1806: Hesse-Homburg annexed to Hesse-Darmstadt 1815: Hesse-Homburg reinstated 1866: To Hesse-Darmstadt 1866: To Prussia | |||
Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel) Prince-Elector of Hesse, Grand Duke of Fulda, Prince of Hersfeld, Hanau, Fritzlar & Isenburg, Count of Katzenelnbogen, Dietz, Ziegenhain, Nidda & Schaumburg |
1265: Landgraviate 1803: Electorate |
Upp Rhen | PR | 1567: Created on partition of Hesse | 1582: HRE Council of Princes 1736: Inherited Hanau-Münzenberg 1815: Acquired Prince-Bishopric of Fulda 1866: To Prussia |
Hesse-Marburg | 1265: Landgraviate | Upp Rhen | PR | 1567: Created on partition of Hesse | 1582: HRE Council of Princes 1604: Merged into Hesse-Kassel |
Hesse-Rheinfels | 1265: Landgraviate | Upp Rhen | PR | 1567: Created on partition of Hesse | 1582: HRE Council of Princes 1583: Territory partitioned between Hesse-Darmstadt, Hesse-Marburg, and Hesse-Rheinfels |
Hildesheim | 815: Bishopric c. 1221: Prince-Bishopric |
Low Sax | EC | 888: diocese est. 1180: Partitioned from the older Duchy of Saxony |
Before 1180: Part of older Duchy of Saxony, till emperor deposed the Welf Henry the Lion 1180: Stayed under influence of the Welf allodial estates c. 1221: Gained Imperial immediacy 1793: Council of Princes 1802: Annexed to Brandenburg 1803: Secularized to Prussia |
Hildesheim | Free City | Low Sax | EC | 1300 | 1803: Annexed to Brandenburg |
Hillesheim (Hillesheimb) HRE Count of Hillesheim, (?)Lord of Reipoltskirchen | Barony 1712: HRE County |
1722: immediate Lords of Reipoltskirchen | |||
Höchberg | Margraviate | ||||
Hochstaden | County | 1144 | 1261: Annexed to Abp. of Cologne | ||
Hohenberg | HRE County | 1280/1287: Acquired Lordship of Altensteig 1381: To Austria (Leopoldine line) Acquired Lordships of Wildberg, Nagold, Altensteig and Horb Purchased Lordship of Oberndorf 1253: Division into Hohenberg-Rottenburg and Hohenberg-Nagold Division of Hohenberg-Nagold into Hohenberg-Nagold and Hohenberg-Wildberg | |||
Hohenberg-Altensteig | 1397/1398: Sold to Margraves of Baden 1603: To Duchy of Wurttemberg | ||||
Hohenberg-Nagold | County | 1253: Partitioned from Zollern and Hohenberg | 1264: Annexed to Zollern-Nuremberg 1363: Sold to Wurttemberg | ||
Hohenberg-Rottenburg | County | 1253: Partitioned from Zollern and Hohenberg | 1264: Annexed to Zollern-Nuremberg | ||
Hohenberg-Wildberg | 1200: Wildberg castle built 1237: 1st mention of Wildberg c. 1237: Wildberg, Nagold and other places passed through by marriage from Count Palatine of Tübingen to Counts of Hohenberg 1318: Burkhard V established seat of his territorial lordship, including Altensteig and Neubulach 1355: Division into Hohenberg-Burlach and Hohenberg-Altensteig 1364: To the Electorate of the Palatinate 1440: To Wurttemberg | ||||
Hohenems Hohen-Embs HRE Count of Hohenems, Lord of Lustenau |
1333: County 1560: HRE County |
Swab | c. 1210 | ?: Immediate Lords of Hohenems 1603: Imperial Estate 1613: Counts of Sulz sold Vaduz and Schellenberg to the Counts of Hohenems 1613-1712: immediate Counts of Vaduz ?: immediate Lords of Lustenau 1646: Partitioned into Hohenems-Hohenems and Hohenems-Vaduz 17__: Lost Imperial Estate status 1765: Acquired by Austria | |
Hohenems-Hohenems | County | 1646: Partitioned from Hohenems | 1718: Annexed to Hohenems-Vaduz | ||
Hohenems-Vaduz | County | 1646: Partitioned from Hohenems | 1712: Purchased by House of Liechtenstein 1719: Annexed to P. of Liechtenstein | ||
Hohenfels | HRE Lordship | ||||
Hohengeroldseck | 12th century: Lordship 1705: County Principality |
Swab | 1692-1705: Under Imperial Administration Acquired by Leyen 1815: To Austria 1819: To Baden | ||
Hohenlohe | 12th century: County 1450: HRE County |
Franc | 1192 | 12th century: Henry I was the 1st to take title of Count of Hohenlohe 1230: Division into Hohenlohe-Hohenlohe and Hohenlohe-Brauneck 1256: Partitioned into Hohenlohe-Möckmühl, Hohenlohe-Röltingen and Hohenlohe-Weikersheim 1500: Franconian Circle 1390: Hohenlohe-Brauneck line extinct; lands passed to Brandenburg 1412: Hohenlohe-Uffenheim-Speckfeld line extinct 1551: Division into Hohenlohe-Neuenstein and Hohenlohe-Waldenburg 1631: Hohenlohe-Neuenstein inherited County of Gleichen 1805: Senior line of Hohenlohe-Neuenstein extinct 1701: Junion line of Hohenlohe-Neuenstein divided into Hohelohe-Langenburg, Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen and Hohenlohe-Kirchberg 1861: Hohenlohe-Kirchberg line died out 1824: Hohenlohe-Schillingsfurst inherited the Duchies of Rabibor and Corbie Area (1806): 680 sq. mi.; Pop: 108,000 | |
Hohenlohe-Bartenstein | 1688: HRE County 1764: HRE Principality |
1688: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst | 1798: Division into Hohenlohe-Bartenstein and Hohenlohe-Jagstberg 1806: Mediatised to Wurttemberg | ||
Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen | 1701: County 1764: HRE Principality |
1701: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Langenburg 1806: Annexed by Bavaria |
1806: Mediatised to Wurttemberg | ||
Hohenlohe-Jagstberg | 1798-1806: Principality | 1798: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Bartenstein | 1806: Mediatised to Wurttemberg | ||
Hohenlohe-Kirchberg | 1650: County 1764: HRE Principality |
1650: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Langenburg 1701: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Langenburg |
1675: Reunited with Hohenlohe-Langenburg 1806: Mediatised to Bavaria 1810: Traded to Wurttemberg | ||
Hohenlohe-Künzelsau | 1676-1689: County | 1676: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | 1689: Reunited with Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | ||
Hohenlohe-Langenburg | 1586: County 1764: HRE Principality |
1586: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | 1806: Mediatised to Wurttemberg | ||
Hohenlohe-Möckmühl | County | 1256: Partitioned from Hohenlohe | 1340: Divided between Hohenlohe-Uffenheim and Hohenlohe-Wernsberg | ||
Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | 1472: County 1772: HRE Principality |
1472: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Weikersheim | 1698: To Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Öhringen 1702: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Öhringen 1708: Annexed to Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Öhringen | ||
Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Ingelfingen HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Gleichen, Lord of Langenburg & Kranichfeld |
1764: HRE Principality | ||||
Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Kirchberg HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Gleichen, Lord of Langenburg & Kranichfeld | 1764: HRE Principality | ||||
Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Langenburg HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Gleichen, Lord of Langenburg & Kranichfeld) |
1764: HRE Principality | ||||
Hohenlohe-Neuenstein-Öhringen | 1698: County 1764: HRE Principality |
1702: Division into Hohenlohe-Öhringen and Count of Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | |||
Hohenlohe-Öhringen | 1641: HRE County 1764: HRE Principality |
1676: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | 1765: Annexed to Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen 1805: Passed to Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen | ||
Hohenlohe-Röltingen | County | 1256: Partitioned from Hohenlohe | Extinct in 1290 | ||
Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst | County | 1615: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Waldenburg | 1688: Partitioned into Hohenlohe-Bartenstein and Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst | ||
Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst-Weikersheim | County | 1472: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Weikersheim | 1545: Annexed to Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | ||
Hohenlohe-Uffenheim | County | 1262: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Möckmühl | 1387: Annexed to Nuremberg | ||
Hohenlohe-Waldenburg | 1553: County 1557: HRE Prince 1757: HRE Principality |
1553: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | 1615, 1679: Partitioned into various states | ||
Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Bartenstein (HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Waldenburg, Lord of Langenburg) | 1744: HRE Principality | 1746: Franconian Imperial Circle | |||
Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst HRE Prince of Hohenlohe, Count of Waldenburg, Lord of Schillingsfürst & Langenburg |
1697: HRE County 1744: HRE Principality |
1688: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst 1806: Annexed by Bavaria |
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Hohenlohe-Weikersheim | County | 1256: Partitioned from Hohenlohe | 1490: Annexed to Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst-Weikersheim | ||
Hohenlohe-Weikersheim | County | 1610: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Neuenstein | 1756: Annexed to Hohenlohe-Öhringen | ||
Hohenlohe-Wernsberg | County | 1267: Partitioned from Hohenlohe-Möckmühl | 1350: Annexed to Hohenlohe-Uffenheim | ||
Hohenrechberg | Lordship | 1163 | 1585: Annexed to Staufeneck | ||
Hohenrechberg and Aichen | Lordship 1626: County |
1605: Partitioned from Aichen | 1676: Annexed to Donzdorf | ||
Hohenwaldeck and Maxlrain Hohen-Waldeck |
Lordship | 1500: Bavarian Circle | |||
Hohenzollern HRE Prince of Hohenzollern, Burgrave of Nuremberg, Count of Sigmaringen & Vöringen, Count of Berg, Lord of Haigerloch & Werstein, etc. |
County 1363: HRE Prince 1623: HRE Princely County |
1309: Emerged from the countships of Zollern | 1061: 1st mention of Hohenzollerns 1267: 1st mention of Zollern Castle 1512: Partitioned into Hohenzollern-Hechingen & ? | ||
Hohenzollern-Haigerloch | County 1630: Principality |
1575: Partitioned from Hohenzollern-Hechingen | 1767: Annexed to Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen | ||
Hohenzollern-Hechingen Prince of Hohenzollern-Hechingen, Burgrave of Nuremberg, Count of Sigmaringen and Veringen, Count of Berg, Lord of Haigerloch and Werstein, etc |
County 1623: HRE Principality |
Swab | 1512: Partitioned from Hohenzollern | 1653: HRE Council of Princes 1806: Joined Confederation of the Rhine 1815: Joined German Confederation 1849: To Prussia 1869: Hohenzollern-Hechingen line became extinct | |
Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen HRE Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Burgrave of Nuremberg, Count of Sigmaringen and Veringen, Count of Berg, Lord of Haigerloch and Werstein, etc. |
County 1623: Principality |
Swab | 1575: Partitioned from Hohenzollern-Hechingen | 1849: To Prussia | |
Hohnstein (Hohenstein) | County | Upp Sax | 1123: county est. as fief of the older Duchy of Saxony | Before 1180: Fief of the older Duchy of Saxony, till emperor deposed Henry the Lion 1180: Gained Imperial immediacy at the carve-up of the older Duchy of Saxony 1238-1267: Counts of Hohenstein acquired County of Klettenberg as a fief of the Prince-Bishop of Halberstadt 1268: Acquired Lordship of Sömmerda 1300s: Acquired County of Lohra 1315: Division into 3 lines 1593: Line of Counts of Hohenstein died out 1648: Annexed to Brandenburg, Schwarzburg and Stolberg Under partial overlordship of Hanover | |
Holland | 11th century: HRE County 1806-1810: Kingdom of Holland |
c. 1150: Split off from Bishopric of Utrecht | 1064: 1st mention of Holland c. 1100: Title Count of Holland 1st used 1299: United with the County of Hainaut 1349-1433: To Bavarian Wittelsbachs 1433-1482: To Duchy of Burgundy; later the dominant hegemon of the United Provinces, but as a republic, the house of Orange being merely styled stadholder 1482-1581: To Habsburgs 1512: Burgundian Circle 1813: Kingdom of the Netherlands | ||
Holstein Duke of Schleswig, Holstein, Stormarn, Ditmarshes, Lauenburg & Oldenburg |
County 1111-1474: HRE County 1474-1806:HRE Duchy |
Low Sax | PR | 1111 | 1111: Emperor Lothair enfeoffed Adolf of Schauenburg with Holstein and Stormarn 1261: Division into Holstein-Itzehoe, Holstein-Kiel, Holstein-Pinneberg, Holstein-Plön, Holstein-Rendsburg, Holstein-Segeberg 1386: Acquired Duchy of Schleswig 1474: Merged into Schleswig-Holstein 1582: HRE Council of Princes |
Holstein-Glückstadt | 1582: HRE Council of Princes | ||||
Holstein-Gottorp | 1582: HRE Council of Princes | ||||
and Holstein-Pinneberg HRE Prince, Count of Holstein, Schaumburg and Sternberg, Lord of Gemen |
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Holzapfel (Holzappel) | 1641: HRE County | Low Rhen | 1641 | 1727: Passed to Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym | |
Homburg | Lordship | ||||
Horburg | County | ||||
Horne | County | After 1568: Personal union with Bp. of Liège | |||
Horneck | Commandery | ||||
Hörstgen (Horstgen) | Lordship | Under overlordship of Mors To Counts of Drachenfels 1530: Inherited by Millendonk-Mirlar Passed to Brochhorst Passed to Croy Passed to Burlepsch Passed to Ostein 1754: Passed to Barons of Knesebeck 1794: French occupation 1815: To Prussia | |||
Höwen | Lordship | ||||
Hoya | 1202: County | Low Rhen | 1204 | Before 1180: Part of older Duchy of Saxony, till emperor deposed Henry the Lion 1202: 1st mention of "Count of Hoya" 1215: Purchased the free county of Nienburg Purchased County of Altbruchhausen Purchased County of Neubruchhausen 1345: Division into Upper Hoya (Nienburg) and Lower Hoya (Hoya) 1497: Hoya line extinct; territories to Nienburg 1512: Occupied by Brunswick-Luneburg 1519: Counts of Hoya regained territories 1582: Line died out; territories to Hanover 1866: To Prussia |
References
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