William of Winchester, Lord of Lunenburg

William of Winchester (11 April 1184 13 December 1213), also called in English William of Lunenburg (German: Wilhelm von Lüneburg) or William Longsword,[1] a member of the House of Welf, was heir to his family's allodial lands in the Duchy of Saxony after the deposition of his father, Duke Henry the Lion in 1180.

William of Winchester
Lord of Lüneburg
19th century portrait
Born11 April 1184
Winchester, England
Died13 December 1213(1213-12-13) (aged 29)
Lüneburg, Saxony
Noble familyWelf
Spouse(s)Helena of Denmark
Issue
FatherHenry the Lion
MotherMatilda of England

William was the fifth and youngest son of Henry the Lion and Matilda, the eldest daughter of King Henry II of England.[2] He was born in Winchester, England during his father's exile; he probably remained there when Henry returned to Saxony and was raised at King Richard's court.

After his unsuccessful uprising, Henry had submitted to the Hohenstaufen emperor Frederick Barbarossa in 1181 and though he had to leave Germany, he could retain the Welf possessions around Lüneburg, Brunswick, and Haldensleben. He finally reconciled with Frederick's son and successor Emperor Henry VI in 1194 and surrendered his younger sons William and Otto as hostages for the payment of the ransom for the release of their uncle King Richard. William was extradited to Duke Leopold V of Austria and temporarily held in Hungary.

When Henry the Lion died in 1195, William, Otto and their elder brother Henry V inherited his Saxon allods. The Welf brothers entered into an agreement with the Cologne archbishop Adolf of Altena, who in 1198 crowned Otto King of the Romans during the throne quarrel with the Hohenstaufen heir Philip of Swabia. Upon the death of their maternal uncle King Richard in 1199, William and Henry again went to England in order to assert their inheritance claims against their cousin John Lackland, though to no avail.

After the Danish conquest of Holstein in 1201, William met Valdemar, the brother of King Canute VI of Denmark in Hamburg, where he arranged his marriage with the king's sister Helena.[1] Both entered into matrimony in spring 1202, accompanied by the provision of a significant dowry. Their only child was Otto (1204–1252),[1] who inherited his father's property and became the first Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg in 1235.

William's hopes to assume the rule in Holstein, however, were disappointed by the Danish court. In May 1202, the Welf brothers met at Paderborn, where they divided their father's heritage. William received the northern territories up to the Danish border around the town of Lüneburg, the territory of Lauenburg beyond the Elbe River, Hitzacker, Lüchow, and Dannenberg, as well as the lands around Haldensleben and in the eastern Harz mountain range including Blankenburg and Heimburg with Regenstein Castle. William concentrated on consolidating his rule, strongly relying on the salt trade around Lüneburg, which became his permanent residence.

Upon William's death in 1213, Otto IV acted as a guardian for his brother's son Otto the Child. As both Otto IV and his brother Henry V died without male heirs, Otto the Child became sole ruler of the Welf possessions and progenitor of all Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg.

Ancestors

gollark: To be fair, these were teacher-assessed grades.
gollark: 9, 9, 9, 9, if you must know.
gollark: I also did Latin.
gollark: Mine, obviously.
gollark: Yes, I'm not very good at "English Literature" stuff. Ironically, I did better on Greek.

References

  1. Anderson, James (1732). Royal Genealogies: or, the genealogical tables of emperors, kings and princes, from Adam to these times in two parts. James Bettenham. p. 515. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
  2. Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Matilda (1156-1189)" . Dictionary of National Biography. 37. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 58–9.
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