Adolf VII of Berg

Adolf VII of Berg (also referred to as Adolf IV, especially in the Netherlands and in Germany) (c. 1220 – 22 April 1259) was the eldest son of Henry IV, Duke of Limburg and Irmgard of Berg.[1]

In 1247, Adolf succeeded his father as Count of Berg while his brother Waleran succeeded as Duke of Limburg. Adolf stood with his brother-in-law, Conrad of Hochstaden, Archbishop of Cologne, in the anti-Hohenstaufen camp, supporting King William II of Holland and received significant Imperial fiefs, including Kaiserswerth, Remagen, Rath, Mettmann and the Duisberg district of the national forest.

In 1234, Adolf participated in the Crusade against the Stedinger. In 1255, he laid the foundation of the gothic Cathedral at Altena along with his brother Waleran. He died on 22 April 1259 as a result of wounds received during a tournament at Neuss.

Family and children

He married Margaret of Hochstaden, daughter of Lothar I, Count of Hochstaden. She died on 30 January 1314, aged more than 100 years. Adolf and Margaret had the following children:

  1. Adolf (c. 1240–1296)
  2. William (c. 1242–1308)
  3. Henry (bef. 1247–1290/96)
  4. Engelbert, Provost of St. Cunibert, Cologne
  5. Walram, Provost of St. Maria, Cologne
  6. Conrad (died 25 May 1313), Provost of Cologne Cathedral, Bishop of Münster (1306–1310)
  7. Irmgard (c. 1256–1294), married Eberhard II, Count of the Mark
gollark: If KSP has taught me anything, ion engines also work awfully in atmospheres.
gollark: Unless you do something ridiculous like run superconducting cables to the other side of the planet, so it's *always* sunny somewhere!
gollark: More efficient stuff would mean you can use less land, at least, but you *still* need lots of storage.
gollark: Apparently existing widely-deployed stuff is something like ~20% efficiency, which actually beats plants massively.
gollark: There are limits to how much sunlight you can get per m² anyway.

References

  1. Walther Möller, Stammtafeln westdeutscher Adelsgeschlechter im Mittelalter (Darmstadt, 1922, reprint Verlag Degener & Co., 1995), Vol. 3, page 211.
Preceded by
Henry IV, Duke of Limburg
Count of Berg
12471259
Succeeded by
Adolf VIII
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.