Werle

Lordship of Werle
Herrschaft Werle (de)
State of the Holy Roman Empire

1235–1436
Map of the first partition of Mecklenburg, showing Werle-Güstrow (      western) and Werle-Waren (      eastern) in green, mainly surrounded by the Duchy of Mecklenburg (      sandy-coloured).
Capital Werle
Languages Pomeranian Low German
Government Principality
Historical era Middle Ages
   Established 1235
  Partitioned: W-Güstrow
    and W-Parchim
 
1277–1307
  Partitioned: W-Güstrow
    and W-Goldberg
 
1316–74
  W-Güstrow partitioned
    to create W-Waren
 
1337–1425
   Reverted to Mecklenburg September 7, 1436 1436

Werle (or Wenden) was a fiefdom, or Herrschaft in German, roughly equivalent to a barony, in the Holy Roman Empire that was founded in 1235. It was created in the partition of territories in Mecklenburg that followed the death of Henry Borwin II of Mecklenburg (died 1226).

The royal (fürstlich in German) House of Werle was a spur line of the House of Mecklenburg line of the Obotrites. The Fiefdom of Werle lay in the area around Güstrow in today's Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany, and stretched eastward to Müritz. It was named after the then-capital Werle, now a village in the municipality Kassow, Rostock district.

The fiefdom collapsed several times into separate dominions. In 1277 it was divided among the sons of the first lord, or Herr in German, into Werle-Güstrow and Werle-Parchim. In 1307, both were reunited by Nicholas II, but they were divided again in 1316 into Werle-Güstrow and Werle-Goldberg. In 1337, Werle-Waren split off from the Werle-Güstrow line. With the death of the William, the last lord on September 7, 1436, the fiefdom once again reverted to Mecklenburg. The title of Lord of Werle was thenceforth carried by all rulers of Mecklenburg. Werle is represented in one of the seven fields of the coat of arms of Mecklenburg.

List of lords

External links

This article was translated from the corresponding article on the German Wikipedia on February 20, 2007. Corrections to the translation were made April 25, 2009 to reflect the terms Herrschaft, Herr and fürstlich (royal) used in the German article.
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