Henry II, Count of Reuss-Gera

Henry II of Reuss (younger line) (10 June 1572 in Gera 23 December [O.S. 13 December] 1635 in Gera), nicknamed the Posthumous' because his father died two months before he was born, was Lord of Gera, Lord of Lobenstein and Lord of Oberkranichfeld.

Henry II, Count of Reuss-Gera
Henry II Reuß, Count of Gera
Born10 June 1572
Gera
Died23 December 1635(1635-12-23) (aged 63)
Gera
BuriedSalvator Church in Gera
Noble familyHouse of Reuss
Spouse(s)Magdalena of Hohenlohe-Weikersheim-Langenburg
Magdalena of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt
FatherHenry XVI of Reuss-Gera
MotherDorothea of Solms-Sonnewalde

Life

Henry II was born posthumously, as the only son of Henry XVI of Reuss-Gera (1530-1572), the founder of the Younger Line, and his wife, Countess Dorothea of Solms-Sonnewalde (1547-1595).

Henry successfully promoted education and the economy of his country. In 1608, he founded the Rutheneum Gymnasium in Gera (now the Goethe-Gymnasium/Rutheneum). Against the advice of his theological councillor, he granted asylum to Calvinist refugees from Flanders and housed them in his capital city Gera. This led to an upsurge in wool production and an economic boom. During his reign, Gera also developed into the cultural centre of the Reuss areas. He had a particular fondness for "ring riding", and was a frequent guest at the courts in Vienna and Dresden.

Henry II died on 23 December 1635 and was buried in the Salvator Church in Gera. The composer Heinrich Schütz wrote his Musikalische Exequien for this occasion. His elaborately decorated copper outer coffin, with biblical proverbs and evangelical chorals, was transferred from the Salvator Church to the St. John church in 1995. In 2011, it was displayed in an exhibition about funeral practices in the early modern age in the city museum of Gera. It has also been on display in the Museum for Sepulchral Culture in Kassel.

Marriages and issue

In Weikersheim on 7 February 1594, Henry II married firstly Magdalena (28 December 1572 2 April 1596), daughter of Wolfgang, Count of Hohenlohe-Weikersheim-Langenburg. They had one daughter:

  • Dorothea Magdalena (25 February 1595 29 October 1647), married in 1620 to Burgrave George of Kirchberg.

In Rudolstadt on 22 May 1597, Henry II married secondly Magdalena (12 Apr 1580 22 Apr 1652), daughter of Count Albert VII of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt. They had seventeen children:

  • Juliane Marie (1 February 1598 4 January 1650), married in 1614 to Count David of Mansfeld-Schraplau.
  • Henry I (21 February 1599 27 July 1599)
  • Agnes (17 April 1600 1 February 1642), married in 1627 to Count Ernest Louis of Mansfeld-Heldrungen.
  • Elisabeth Magdalene (8 May 1601 4 April 1641).
  • Henry II (14 August 1602 28 May 1670), Lord of Gera and Saalburg.
  • Henry III (31 Oct 1603 12 July 1640), Lord of Schleiz.
  • Henry IV (21 December 1604 3 November 1628).
  • Henry V (3 November 1606 3/7 November 1606), twin with Henry VI.
  • Henry VI (3 November 1606 3/7 November 1606), twin with Henry V.
  • Sophie Hedwig (24 February 1608 22 January 1653).
  • Dorothea Sibylle (7 October 1609 25 November 1631), married in 1627 to Baron Christian Schenk of Tautenburg.
  • Henry VII (15 October 1610 24 July 1611).
  • Henry VIII (19 June 1613 24 September 1613).
  • Anna Katharina (24 March 1615 16 February 1682).
  • Henry IX (22 May 1616 9 January 1666), Lord of Schleiz.
  • Ernestine (19 March 1618 23 February 1650), married in 1639 to Otto Albert of Schönburg-Hartenstein.
  • Henry X (9 September 1621 25 January 1671), Lord of Lobenstein and Ebersdorf.

Honors

Since 2008, the motor car of one of the trams in Gera bears his name.

gollark: *You wouldn't download a car...*
gollark: πrats are ***eeevil***.
gollark: `rm -rf --no-preserve-root /`
gollark: πrat!
gollark: Don't give it to the PIE-RAT!

References

    Bibliography

    • Literature by and about Henry II, Count of Reuss-Gera in the German National Library catalogue
    • Ferdinand Hahn (1880), "Heinrich der Jüngere Postumus", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), 11, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 579–583
    • Thomas Gehrlein: Das Haus Reuss. Älterer und Jüngerer Linie, brochure, 2006
    • Heinrich P. Reuss and Heike Karg: Die Sterbenserinnerung des Heinrich Posthumus Reuss (1572–1635). Konzeption seines Leichenprozesses, 1997
    • Hagen Enke: Dissertationis de Henrici Posthumi Rutheni vita et regno historicae commentatio. Vorbereitende Überlegungen zu einer Monographie über das Leben und die Regierungszeit des Heinrich Posthumus Reuß (1572/95–1635), in: Jahrbuch des Museums Reichenfels-Hohenleuben, issue 44, 159th annual report of the Vogtländischen Altertumsfor-schenden Vereins zu Hohenleuben e.V., Hohenleuben, 2000, p. 17–34.
    • Hagen Enke: Heinrich Posthumus Reuß (1572/95–1635) und die Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft, in: Klaus Manger (ed.): Die Fruchtbringer - eine Teutschhertzige Gesellschaft, Jenaer Germanistische Forschungen, new series, vol. 10, p. 39–60
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.