- Hermann I, Landgrave of Thuringia
Hermann I (died
April 25 ,1217 ),Landgrave ofThuringia , was the second son ofLouis II of Thuringia ("the Hard"), andJudith of Hohenstaufen , the sister of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa. The composition of theLatin hymns "Veni Sancte Spiritus" and "Salve palatine of Saxony" are attributed to him.Little is known of his early years, but in 1180 Hermann joined a coalition against
Henry the Lion , Duke of Saxony, and with his brother, LandgraveLudwig III of Thuringia , suffered a short imprisonment after his defeat at Weissensee by Henry. About this time he received from his brother Louis the Saxon palatinate, over which he strengthened his authority by marrying Sophia, sister of Adalbert, count of Sommerschenburg, a former count palatine.Louis II died in 1190. Emperor Henry VI attempted to seize Thuringia as a vacant fief of the
Holy Roman Empire , but Hermann frustrated the plan and established himself as the landgrave. Having joined a league against the emperor, he was accused, probably wrongly, of an attempt to murder him. Henry VI was not only successful in detaching Hermann from the hostile combination, but gained his support for the scheme to uniteSicily with the Empire.Hermann went on
crusade in 1197. When Henry VI died in 1198, Hermann's support was purchased by the late emperor's brother DukePhilip of Swabia , but as soon as Philip's cause appeared to be weakening he transferred his allegiance to Otto of Brunswick, the later Emperor Otto IV. Philip accordingly invaded Thuringia in 1204 and compelled Hermann to come to terms by which he surrendered the lands he had obtained in 1198. After the death of Philip and the recognition of Otto, Hermann was among the princes who invited Frederick of Hohenstaufen, afterwards Emperor Frederick II, to come to Germany and assume the crown. In consequence of this step the Saxons attacked Thuringia, but the landgrave was saved by Frederick's arrival in Germany in 1212.After the death of his first wife in 1195, Hermann married Sophia, daughter of Otto of Wittelsbach. By her he had four sons, two of whom,
Ludwig IV of Thuringia andHeinrich Raspe , succeeded their father in turn as landgrave. Hermann died at Gotha in 1217 and was buried atReinhardsbrunn .Hermann was fond of the society of men of letters, and
Walther von der Vogelweide and otherMinnesinger s were welcomed to his castle, theWartburg . In this connection he figures inRichard Wagner 's "Tannhäuser".References
*
E. Winkelmann , "Philipp von Schwaben und Otto IV. von Braunschweig" (Leipzig, 1873-1878);
*T. Knochenhauer , "Geschichte Thüringens" (Gotha, 1871);
*F. Wachter , "Thüringische and obersächsische Geschichte" (Leipzig, 1826).References
*1911
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