County of Nidda
County of the Holy Roman Empire / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The County of Nidda (German: Grafschaft Nidda was a small county of the Holy Roman Empire centred on the city of Nidda in modern Wetteraukreis, Hesse. It was located on the northern edge of the Wetterau river valley and consisted of a relatively cohesive block of land held in fief from the Abbey of Fulda.
County of Nidda Grafschaft Nidda | |||||||||
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1065–1333 | |||||||||
Status |
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Capital | Nidda 50°24′46″N 9°0′33″E | ||||||||
Government | County | ||||||||
Count | |||||||||
History | |||||||||
• Established | 1065 | ||||||||
• Merged with County of Ziegenhain | 1206 | ||||||||
• Imperial immediacy for City of Nidda | 1234 | ||||||||
• Separated from Ziegenhain | 1258 | ||||||||
• Merged with County of Ziegenhain | 1333 | ||||||||
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Today part of | Germany |
The County was created by a decree of the Abbey of Fulda, which consolidated the Abbey's possessions in the northern Wetterau. The name "County of Nidda" had become attached to the area by the second half of the eleventh century, when the position of Vogt over the area was given as a fief to Volkold I of Malsburg [de]. The marriage of his son, Volkold II [de], into the Nürings [de] around 1100 expanded the family's possessions. From these territories, the County of Nidda was created. The first reference to a member of the family as "Count of Nidda" dates to 1104, during the reign of Volkold II.
In 1155, after supporting Count palatine Hermann of Stahleck [de] against the Archbishop Arnold of Selenhofen, the family lost Malsburg and other possessions in northern Hesse, meaning that the County was henceforth concentrated in the northern Wetterau region. An endowment of 1187 gives information on the extent of the County. At that point, it contained at least the area between the settlements of Ranstadt, Einartshausen, Wenings und Gelnhaar. The patchy record makes it unclear what other territories belonged to the County. This document was produced in the reign of Berthold II [de]. He died childless in 1205/6, so the county was inherited by his nephew, Louis I of Ziegenhain [de], son of Rudolf II, Count of Ziegenhain [de] and his wife Mechthild, sister of Berthold II. Smaller sections of the county were probably given away as dowries for two of his sisters: Adelheid of Ziegenhain, who married Ulrich I of Münzenberg, and Mechthild, who married Gerlach II, Count of Isenburg.
From 1205/06, the County of Nidda was in the possession of the Counts of Ziegenhain, for whom it had only secondary significance compared to the substantially larger County of Ziegenhain [de]. Nidda was formally separated from Ziegenhain and passed to a junior line during the period 1259-1330, but it returned to the Ziegenhain main line after John I, Count of Ziegenhain [de] married Lukardis (Luitgart), daughter of the last Count of Nidda, Engelbert I. After John II died childless in 1450, the County of Nidda, along with the County of Ziegenhain, passed to the Landgraviate of Hesse and ceased to exist as a separate lordship. By this point, it consisted of the Amt Nidda [de] with the assizes of Widdersheim [de], Rodheim [de] , Ulfa [de] and Wallernhausen [de], the Lordship of Lissberg [de], the Fuldish Mark [de] with the half vogteien of Echzell, Berstadt [de], Dauernheim [de] und Bingenheim [de] (except for the castle), and the assizes of Burkhards [de] and Crainfeld [de]