Frederick II of Zollern

Friedrich II, Count von Zollern (died: 1142[1] or after 1145[2]) was the eldest son of Friedrich I, Count of Zollern, and became Count of Zollern after his father's death around 1125.[3]

Friedrich II
Count of Zollern
BornBefore 1125
Died1142 or after 1145
Noble familyHohenzollern
Issue
Frederick I of Nuremberg
Bertold of Zollern
FatherFriedrich I, Count of Zollern
MotherUdilhild of Urach-Dettingen

Friedrich II supported Lothar of Supplinburg, who was King of Germany, then Holy Roman Emperor, from 1125 to Lothar's death in 1137 against the House of Hohenstaufen, then supported that same house (and the new German King, Conrad III of Germany) after 1138 against the House of Welf.[3]

It was also at this time that the counts of Zollern were able to greatly increase their possessions in terms of both territory and castles in the southwestern parts of today's Germany, expanding to the Rhine, and lower Danube, as well as adding territory in Alsace and by the Neckar. All of these possessions were in the form of allodial land. Land held in feudal tenure was added to these outright possessions to form the ancestral territory of the counts of Zollern.[3]

Family and children

Friedrich had at least two sons:

  • Friedrich III, Count of Zollern, (died: c.1200), who became Burgrave of Nuremberg as Friedrich I
  • Bertold of Zollern[4]
gollark: There are fancier and possibly more accurate ways to explain this but I can't currently be bothered.
gollark: `x mod y` is just the remainder when `x` is divided by `y`.
gollark: While you're here, consider some x where x^2 mod 384 = 8.3. Continue considering it. This is NOT to distract you.
gollark: So they should line up.
gollark: "Bad" inasmuch as you were seemingly saying that "balanced" outcomes were always the "good" ones earlier.

See also

References

  1. "Friedrich II. Graf von Zollern". Retrieved January 30, 2013.
  2. Schultze, Johannes; Seigel, Rudolf (1972). "Hohenzollern, Dynastengeschlecht". Neue deutsche Biographie, Bd.: 9, Hess – Hüttig, Berlin. Bayerische Staatsbibliothek. Retrieved January 30, 2013.
  3. "Friedrich I. Graf von Zollern". Retrieved January 30, 2013.
  4. Hohenzollern Ancestry,
Frederick II of Zollern
Born: before 1125 Died: ca. 1145
Preceded by
Friedrich I
Count of Zollern Succeeded by
Friedrich III


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.