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词条 Mark an der Sann
释义

  1. Territory

  2. History

     Old Souna  Margrave Wilhelm  The donations of Countess Hemma  Spanheimer etc 

  3. Subsequent history

      Otakars    Bohemia    Habsburg    Savinja valley to Styria   Counts of Cilli 

  4. See also

  5. References

{{italic title}}{{Infobox country
|native_name =
|conventional_long_name = Mark an der Sann
|common_name = Mark an der Sann
|era = Medieval
|status = March
|status_text =
|empire = Holy Roman Empire
|government_type = March
|today = {{SVN}}
|event_start =
|date_start =
|year_start = before 980
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|date_event3 =
|event4 =
|date_event4 =
|event_end = Last Margrave died
|date_end =
|year_end = 1137/44
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|event_post =
|date_post =
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|image_map = Mark an der Sann locator map (1000).svg
|image_map_alt =
|image_map_caption = A map of the Mark an der Sann (red) within the Duchy of Carinthia (pale) at the beginning of the 11th century. The March's southern subdivision is Gau Sauna while the northern one is Gau Zistanesfeld.
|capital =
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|title_leader = Margrave
}}

The {{lang|de|Mark an der Sann}} (German for "March on the Savinja"; other designations and variations of the name include {{lang|de|Sannmark}}, {{lang|de|Sann-Grafschaft}} (or {{lang|de|Markgrafschaft}}), ({{lang|de|Mark}}){{lang|de|grafschaft Soune, Soun}} and {{lang|de|Saunien}}, as well as simply {{lang|de|Sanntal}} – Savinja valley) was a border march of the Holy Roman Empire. It was established in the second half of the 10th century to protect the Empire against its enemies to the east.

Territory

The territory included the catchment of the Savinja and extended to the Sava in the south and the Sutla in the east.

History

By 895 there was already a "Mark an der Sawe", although whether it included the entire Savinja valley is unclear.

Old Souna

The first recorded mention of the Savinja county ({{lang-de|Sann-Grafschaft|link=no}}) is on 24 October 980, when Emperor Otto II granted count Willihalm the entirety of his royal possessions in "Rachwin's county" between the Dobritsch mountains north of Heilenstein/Polzela near Cilli, Stenitz southeast of Weitenstein near Lindeck and Wresen southwest of Weitenstein for his faithful service.[1]

The march was subordinate to the Duchy of Bavaria until 1002, and then the Duchy of Carinthia.

During the second phase of colonisation the possessions of the Archbishopric of Salzburg, which already included Rann an der Save in Carolingian times, were confirmed by Emperors Otto II and Otto III.

Margrave Wilhelm

The next Margrave (or Count) was {{Interlanguage link|Wilhelm (Sann)|lt=Wilhelm II|de}}, the son of the afore mentioned count Willihalm and husband of Hemma of Gurk. On 15 April 1016, following intervention by Empress Kunigunde, Archbishop Heribert of Cologne, and Bishop {{Interlanguage link|Eberhard, Bishop of Bamberg|lt=Eberhard|de|Eberhard I. (Bamberg)}} of Bamberg, Emperor Henry II granted him in "his county in the {{lang|de|Sanngau}}" thirty {{lang|de|Hufen}} (a quantity of land of roughly {{convert|7|-|15|ha}}[2]) in the Drachenburger Land, as well as all of the royal property between the rivers Sava, Sann (Savinja), Sutla and Neiring (Mirna).[3] That is, the later Windisch-Landsberg, Peilenstein, Wisell and Nassenfuß of the Bishops of Gurk along with Rohitsch, Montpreis, Hörberg and Königsberg.[4]

In 1025 the Windic March on the Savinja was detached from the Duchy of Carinthia.[5]

In Bamberg on 11 May 1025, following the intervention of Queen Gisela and Archbishop Aribo of Mainz King Conrad II granted Wilhelm 30 {{lang|de|Hufen}} in his county (referred to in Latin as {{lang|la|Souna}}) between the rivers Kopreinitz (Koprivnica), Köttnig/Kötting (Hudinja) and Wogliena/Wogleina (Voglajna), and between the rivers Gurk and Sava (in Carniola) as well as all of his royal property in the mountains, valleys and forests.[6]

On 30 December 1028 in Augsburg, at the request of (now) Empress Gisela, their son Henry and Patriarch Poppo of Aquileia, the now Emperor Conrad II bestowed upon count Wilhelm (or confirmed his possession of) 30 {{lang|de|Hufen}} in villa Traskendorf (Drachenburger Land) and the possessions of his predecessor Henry II between the Sava and Savinja, Sutla and Mirna in the county of {{lang|de|Sanngau}}; additionally, he dedicated a further 30 {{lang|de|Hufen}} in the same county between the Koprivnica, Hudinja and Voglajna and between the Gurk and Sava.[7]

In 1036 Count Wilhelm II was killed by the deposed Carinthian Duke {{Interlanguage link|Adalbero von Eppenstein|de}} as a means of revenge. Thereafter the {{Interlanguage link|counts of Ebersberg|de|Grafen von Ebersberg}} held the march along with neighbouring Carniola.

The donations of Countess Hemma

On 6 January 1043, Countess Hemma, Wilhelm's widow, handed over the majority of their possessions in Carinthia and the marches (particularly Reichenburg) to Archbishop {{Interlanguage link|Balduin of Salzburg|de|Baldwin (Salzburg)}} in exchange for baptismal, funeral and tithe rights for Carinthian churches. The Savinja valley Allod later came to the Prince-Bishopric of Gurk. On 15 August 1043 Hemma donated their wholly owned property in the Savinja valley, that is all the afore mentioned territories acquired in the years 980, 1016 and 1025, to the church, using her Vogt Pretzlaus as a proxy. Hemma expressly exempted the villages of "Terenperch", Köttnig/Kötting, "Steindorf" and Sirdosege from her gifts, along with Reichenburg which had already been exchanged with Balduin of Salzburg.[4]

Thanks to their affinity to Hemma, the {{lang|de|{{Interlanguage link|Askuiner|de}}}} exercised great influence and power in this area as hereditary Vogts of Gruk. Indeed, by the 11th century they had already established the Fortress of Obercilli.

Spanheimer etc

Under Conrad II (1024–39) count Siegfried von Spanheim from Rheinfranken Richgard of Lavant married a {{Interlanguage link|Sieghardinger|de}} with a great deal of wealth in the march and in Carinthia. Count Siegfried was granted tree-covered crown land mostly consisting of forest by the King, particularly in Drau and Savinja areas, but also extending to the karst.

After 1036 the Savinja March was again separated from the Windic March.

It has also been established that the Aribonids in the Drau and Savinja valleys were wealthy at this time.

Alongside these large landowners in the Savinja valley were also the freemen of Kager, the {{Interlanguage link|Counts of Bogen|de|Bogen (Adelsgeschlecht)}} and {{Interlanguage link|Counts of Heunburg|lt=Heunburg|de|Grafen von Heunburg}}, as well as the Sanneckers and the freemen of Hochenegg. They and their overlords seem to have led the great colonisation in this region.

In perhaps 1105, but certainly before 1122, the Askuiner Margrave Starkhand died, who with his brother Ulrich in 1103 appear to have born witness to the document in which Duke Henry of Eppenstein of Carinthia remunerated St. Lambrecht's Abbey; his successor was Günther, a son of the {{Interlanguage link|Heunburger|de}} Pilgrim von Hohenwart-Pozzuolo, the last Margrave of Soune (marchio de Cylie).

After his death in 1137 or 1144 the title of Margave was no longer held. Thereafter there were many extraterritorial areas in the march: in the south east lay the possessions of Salzburg and Gurk; in the west those of Aquileia and the Bishopric of Oberburg; in the south the Spanheim Lordship of Tüffer.

The Spanheims, having sided with the Pope during in 1105/1106 during the Investiture Controversy, took as part of their possessions that which the Gurkish hereditary Vogts, the Askuin counts, Starkhand and Werigand had lost.

In 1131 Archbishop Conrad I of Salzburg came to the Savinja area to secure peace with the Hungarians and to build the episcopal border fortresses of Pettau and Reichenburg against the Hungarians, as Countess Hemma's progeny had failed to provide an effective defence of the eastern border.

Subsequent history

Otakars

In 1147 Count {{Interlanguage link|Bernhard von Trixen|lt=Bernhard von Trixen-Spanheim|de}} died and Tüffer (and Sachsenfeld along with Sachsenwart) reverted to Margrave Ottokar III of Styria. The resulting lordship stretched along the Savinja from Cilli to the Sava and next to the Sava over Trifail, and further down along the Sava until finally reaching Lichtenwald. It covered approximately {{convert|300|km2|sqmi}}, and moderately enclosed the Salzburg episcopal territory of Lichtenwald-Rann, which perhaps arose from Countess Hemma's territory of Reichenburg. Thereafter it belonged to the large lordship of Tüffer and to Sachsenfeld, Sachsenwart and Hochenegg, the castles of Klausenstein and Freudenegg as well as the Amt of Ratschach in Carniola.

There was a Styrian Amt attested from 1182 and from 1227 the court of Tüffer stretched across the Sava, to which Schärfenberg evidently also belonged from 1287. H. Pirchegger believed{{citation needed|date=May 2016}} that the later territory of the Otakars extended as far as the Archidiakonat Sanntal. The lordship of Tüffer was part of the {{lang|la|ducatus}} (duchy), and from Tüffer the Duke of Styria also succeeded in the acquisition of the {{lang|de|Vogtei}} over the nearby Gurkish Lordships.

Bohemia

After seizing Carniola, the Windic March, Windischgraz and the Savinja valley in 1269, King Ottokar II of Bohemia united the territories into a march.[5]

Habsburg

In 1282 Carniola and the Windic March were loaned to the son of King Rudolf I (these lands were in fact subordinate to Meinhard II of Görz-Tirol)

Around 1300 the Counts of Heunburg (extinct by 1322) acquired the lordship of Cilli, the centre of the march. Only from about 1300 was there a strong lordly enforcement in the Savinja valley by way of the freemen of Sanneck.

Savinja valley to Styria

On 14 July 1311 Duke Henry of Carinthia of the Meinhardiner dynasty, having been worn down by the Habsburgs, ceded the Savinja valley on either side of the Sava to Styria.

Counts of Cilli

In 1323 Cilli passed to the Counts of Pfannberg, then in 1335 to the Sanneckers, who became known as the Counts of Cilli in 1341. Following their extinction in 1456, Cilli and its associated lordships passed to the Habsburgs in 1460.

See also

  • County of Cilli

References

1. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.manfred-hiebl.de/genealogie-mittelalter/wilhelminer_juengere/wilhelm_3_graf_in_karantanien_1010_wilhelminer/wilhelm_3_graf_in_karantanien_1010.html|title=Wilhelm III: Graf in Karantanien|trans-title=Wilhelm (or William) III: Count in Carantania|language=German}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.duden.de/rechtschreibung/Hufe|title=Hufe {{!}} Rechtschreibung, Bedeutung, Definition, Herkunft|work=Duden online|publisher=Duden|language=German}}
3. ^{{cite book|url=http://regesten.regesta-imperii.de/index.php?uri=1016-04-15_2_0_2_4_1_697_1879|author-link=Johann Friedrich Böhmer|last=Böhmer|first=J. F.|title=Regesta Imperii II. Sächsisches Haus 919-1024; Vierte Abteilung: Die Regesten des Kaiserreiches unter Heinrich II. 1002-1024; Eintrag 1879|trans-title=Regesta Imperii II. Saxon House 919-1024; Section 4: The Regests (Regiters) of the Empire under Henry II 1002-1024; Entry 1879|work=Regesta Imperii|language=German|ISBN=3 205 08705 4|date=1971|publisher=Hermann Böhlaus Nachf.}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.manfred-hiebl.de/genealogie-mittelalter/wilhelminer_juengere/jaksch_august_geschichte_kaerntens.html|author=Jaksch, August|pages=146, 165–166, 177, 179, 184–186|title=Geschichte Kärntens bis 1335|trans-title=The history of Carinthia up to 1335|language=German}}
5. ^{{cite book|url=http://www.literature.at/viewer.alo?objid=19290&viewmode=fullscreen|title=Grundriß der Verfassungs- und Verwaltungsgeschichte des Landes Steiermark|trans-title=Outline of the constitutional and administrative history of the state of Syria|last=Mell|first=Anton|year=1929|language=German}}
6. ^{{cite book|url=http://regesten.regesta-imperii.de/index.php?uri=1025-05-11_1_0_3_1_0_74_32|title=Regesta Imperii III. Salisches Haus 1024-1125; Erster Teil: 1024-1039; Erste Abteilung: Die Regesten des Kaiserreichs unter Konrad II. 1024-1039; Eintrag 32|trans-title=Regesta Imperii III. Salian House 1024-1125; Part 1: 1024-1039; Section 1: The Regests (Registers) of the Empire under Conrad II 1024-1039; Entry 32|author=Böhmer, J. F.|work=Regesta Imperii|language=German|date=1951|publisher=Hermann Böhlaus Nachf.}}
7. ^{{cite book|url=http://regesten.regesta-imperii.de/index.php?uri=1028-12-30_1_0_3_1_0_246_139|title=Regesta Imperii III. Salisches Haus 1024-1125; Erster Teil: 1024-1039; Erste Abteilung: Die Regesten des Kaiserreichs unter Konrad II. 1024-1039; Eintrag 139|trans-title=Regesta Imperii III. Salian House 1024-1125; Part 1: 1024-1039; Section 1: The Regests (Registers) of the Empire under Conrad II 1024-1039; Entry 139|author=Böhmer, J. F.|work=Regesta Imperii|language=German|date=1951|publisher=Hermann Böhlaus Nachf.}}

3 : Medieval Slovenia|History of Styria|Marches of the Holy Roman Empire

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