List of states in the Holy Roman Empire (B)
List of states in the Holy Roman Empire | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Z |
Free Imperial Cities - Imperial abbeys - Imperial Knights - Imperial Villages |
This is a list of states in the Holy Roman Empire beginning with the letter B:
Name | Type | Circle | Bench | Formed | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Baar | Landgraviate | Swab | 1500: To Swabian Circle | ||
Babenhausen | Principality | 1237: 1st mention of the Lordship of Babenhausen 12th century: Babenhausen and Schonegg part of Lordship of Kellmunz 1200-1300s: To Lords of Schonegg 1378: To Lords of Rechberg 1539: Anton Fugger bought Lordship of Babenhausen 1803: Lordships of Babenhausen, Boos and Kettershausen erected into Principality of Babenhausen for Fugger family 1806: To Bavaria Area: 52 km²; Pop. 11,000 | |||
Babenhausen-Mindelheim-Cellmünz | Lordship | 1432: Partitioned from Staufeneck-Babenhausen | 1487: Divided into Frundsburg and Kronburg | ||
Baden | Margraviate | Swab | PR | c960 | 1190: Partitioned into Baden-Baden and Baden-Hachberg 1362: HRE Margrave 1387: Received a part of the County of Eberstein 1535: Partitioned into Upper Margraviate of Baden (Baden-Baden) and Lower Margraviate of Baden (Baden-Durlach) 1771: Baden-Baden line extinct; Baden reunited 1803: Electorate 1806: Joined Confederation of the Rhine as a Grand Duchy 1871: Joined the German Empire Title:Grand Duke of Baden, Duke of Zähringen, Landgrave of Nellenburg, etc., Overlord & Hereditary Lord[Ober- und Erbherr] in the Baar & of Stühlingen, Heiligenberg, Hausen, Möskirch, Hohenhöwen, Wildenstein & Waldsberg, Mosbach & Dürn, Bischofsheim, Hardheim & Lauda, the Klettgau, Krautheim, Wertheim, Neudenau & Billigheim, Count of Salem, Petershausen & Hanau |
Baden-Baden | Margraviate | Swab | PR | 1190: Partitioned from Baden | 1291: Partitioned into Baden-Baden, Baden-Eberstein and Baden-Pforzheim 1335: Extinct; divided between Baden-Eberstein and Baden-Pforzheim 1348: Partitioned from Baden-Pforzheim 1515: Partitioned into itself, Baden-Durlach and Baden-Sponheim 1536: Partitioned into itself and Baden-Rodemachern 1588: Extinct; to Baden-Rodemachern 1622: Partitioned from Baden-Durlach 1771: Extinct; united to Baden-Durlach to form Baden |
Baden-Durlach | Margraviate | Swab | PR | 1515: Partitioned from Baden-Baden | 1577: Partitioned into itself, Baden-Hachberg and Baden-Sausenburg 1771: Inherited Baden-Baden and renamed to Baden |
Baden-Eberstein | Margraviate | n/a | n/a | 1291: Partitioned from Baden-Baden | 1353: Annexed to Baden-Pforzheim |
Baden-Hochberg | Margraviate | Swab | PR | 1190: Partitioned from Baden | Also named Baden-Hachberg 1290: Partitioned into itself and Baden-Sausenburg 1415: Annexed to Baden-Baden 1482: Partitioned from Baden-Baden 1488: Annexed to Baden-Baden 1577: Partitioned from Baden-Durlach 1591: Annexed to Baden-Durlach |
Baden-Pforzheim | Margraviate | n/a | n/a | 1291: Partitioned from Baden-Baden | 1315: Partitioned into itself and Baden-Baden 1361: Annexed to Baden-Baden |
Baden-Rodemachern | Margraviate | 1537: Partitioned from Baden-Baden as fief of the Duchy of Luxembourg | 1575: Partitioned into itself and Baden-Rodenheim 1596: Annexed to Baden-Durlach 1622: Partitioned from Baden-Durlach 1666: Annexed to Baden-Baden | ||
Baden-Rodenheim | Margraviate | 1575: Partitioned from Baden-Rodemachern | 1620: Annexed to Baden-Durlach | ||
Baden-Sausenberg | Margraviate | Swab | PR | 1290: Partitioned from Baden-Hachberg | 1503: Annexed to Baden-Baden 1577: Partitioned from Baden-Durlach 1604: Annexed to Baden-Durlach |
Baden-Sponheim | Margraviate | Upp Rhen | PR | 1515: Partitioned from Baden-Baden | 1533: Annexed to Baden-Baden |
Badenweiler | Lordship | 1028: First mentioned, property of the Zähringen 1268: To Counts of Freiburg 1444: To Baden-Sausenberg 1503: Inherited by Baden-Baden | |||
Baindt | Abbacy | Swab | SP | 1240 | 1376: HRE Princess Abbey 1803: Secularised and ceded to Aspremont-Lynden |
Bamberg | Bishopric | Franc | EC | 1007 | c1242: Prince-Bishopric 1802: Annexed to Bavaria 1803: Secularized to Bavaria |
Bar Bar-le-Duc Barrois |
Duchy | Upp Rhen | PR | 951 | 951: County 959-1033: Under Lorraine 1197-1214: Union of Bar and Luxemburg 1301: Vassal of King of France for the Western part of his territory (Barrois Mouvant) and vassal of the HRE for the Eastern part 1354: Emperor Charles IV granted title of Margrave of Pont-a-Mousson and rank of Prince to Duke of Bar 1399: Bar inherited Lordship of Cassel 1473: Union of Bar and Duchy of Lorraine 1480: Permanently united 1508: Inherited by Lorraine 1634-1659, 1670–1697, 1702–1714: French occupation 1766: Together with Lorraine, permanently annexed to France |
Barby | County | Upp Sax | 1497 | 961: 1st mention of Barby 974: Emperor gave Barby to his sister, Mathilde, Abbess of Quedlinburg 1050: To Lords of Arnstein as an imperial fief Partitioned into: Barby-Arnstein (1209–1284), Barby-Barby (1213-1651), Barby-Lindow (1211–1372), Barby-Mühlingen (1565–1659) and Barby-Ruppin 1497: HRE County 1524: Barby-Ruppin to Brandenburg 1651: Barby-Barby to Barby-Mühlingen (1360–1524) 1659: Barby-Mühlingen to Saxe-Weissenfels 1372: Barby-Lindow to Anhalt 1659: To Elector of Saxony | |
Barmstedt | Lordship | Acquired by Rantzau | |||
Basel | Bishopric | Upp Rhen | EC | 999 | 1579: Allied to the Swiss Confederation 1792: Left-bank territories annexed to the Rauracian Republic 1803: Right-bank territories secularised and ceded to Baden |
Basel | Free Imperial City | Upp Rhen | RH | 374: First mentioned as Basilea | 10th century: To the Bishopric of Basel 1392: Acquired semi-independence 1501: Joined the Swiss Confederation 1648: Left the Empire as part of Switzerland |
Bassenheim | Lordship | Originally belonging to Isenburg-Braunsberg as a fief of the Archbishopric of Cologne, passed to the House of Walpot which assumed the name "Waldbott of Bassenheim" 1729: Immediate HRE Lordship | |||
Battenburg | County | n/a | n/a | 1101: First mentioned | 1238: Partitioned into itself and Wittgenstein 1291: Half sold to Mainz 1296: Remainder sold to Mainz 1310: Extinct 1464: Sold to Hesse |
Baumburg (Baumberg; Naumburg) | Raugraviate | n/a | n/a | c. 1148: Partitioned from the Wildgraviate | 1172: Partitioned into Stolzenberg and itself 1253: Partitioned into Neuenbaumburg and Altenbaumburg |
Bavaria | Kingdom | Bav | EL | 6th century | 888: Bavaria a stem duchy 1185: Inherited lands of Burgraves of Regensburg 1214: Invested with County Palatinate of the Rhine 1255: First division into Upper (including Palatinate and Regensburg) and Lower Bavaria 1314: Division of Upper Bavaria into Palatinate and Upper Bavaria 1340: Lower Bavaria line died out; Upper and Lower Bavaria reunited as Bavaria 1349: Partitioned into: Brandenburg; Upper Bavaria; and Lower Bavaria 1353: Division of Lower Bavaria into Bavaria-Landshut and Bavaria-Straubing (with Hainaut, Holland and Zeeland) 1392: Division of Bavaria-Landshut into Bavaria-Ingolstadt (extinct 1447), Bavaria-Landshut (extinct 1503) and Bavaria-Munich 1505: Bavaria reunited by Bavaria-Munich 1545: Bavaria reunited after many divisions 1623: Electoral vote of Palatinate and Upper Palatinate transferred to Bavaria 1806: Became a Kingdom, then joined Confederation of the Rhine Title: King of Bavaria, Count-Palatine of the Rhine, Duke of Bavaria, Franconia & in Swabia, etc. |
Bavaria-Dachau | Duchy | Bav | PR | 1467 | 1467: Partitioned from Bavaria-Munich 1501: Extinct; to Bavaria-Munich |
Bavaria-Ingolstadt | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1392 | 1392: Partitioned from Bavaria-Landshut 1445: Extinct; to Bavaria-Landshut |
Bavaria-Landshut | Duchy | Bav | PR | 1353 | 1353: Partitioned from Lower Bavaria 1392: Partitioned into Bavaria-Ingolstadt, Bavaria-Landshut and Bavaria-Munich 1503: Extinct; succession dispute between Bavaria-Munich and Palatinate-Neuburg 1505: Annexed to Bavaria-Munich |
Bavaria-Munich | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1392 | 1392: Partitioned from Bavaria-Landshut 1467: Partitioned into Bavaria-Munich and Bavaria-Dachau 1505: Became D. of Bavaria |
Bavaria-Straubing | Duchy | Bav | PR | 1353 | 1353: Partitioned from Lower Bavaria 1425: Extinct; divided between Bavaria-Ingolstadt, Bavaria-Landshut and Bavaria-Munich |
Bayreuth | Principality | 1194: 1st mention of Bayreuth 1248: To Counts of Zollern & Burgraves of Nuremberg 1363: Counts of Zollern as HRE Princes 1398: Principality 1420-1440: Under Nuremberg 1457-1486: Administered by Ansbach 1495-1515: Administered by Ansbach 1557-1603: Administered by Ansbach 1791: Integrated into Prussia 1806: French administration 1810: To Bavaria | |||
Beckenried | Abbacy | Swab | SP | 1521: Identified in the Reichsmatrikel 1521 as an Imperial Abbey, but the house has not been identified. Assumed to be at Beckenried, Nidwalden | |
Bedburg | County | 1465: Partitioned from Neuenahr | 1519: Annexed to Mörs | ||
Beichlingen | Lordship | 1144 | 1275: Partitioned into Beichlingen-Beichlingen and Beichlingen-Rothenburg 1567: Annexed to Gleichen | ||
Beilstein | County | 1500: Westphalian Circle 1512: Electoral Rhenish Circle 1679: The Lordship became a County (for House of Metternich) | |||
Belfort | Jurisdiction | 13th century: To Counts of Montbeliard 1307: Granted a charter To Austria 1648: Ceded to France Louis XIV of France gave it to Cardinal Mazarin | |||
Benevento | Duchy | 576 | 899: Atenulf I of Capua conquered Benevento and united the 2 duchies 1053: To Papal States | ||
Bentheim Count of Bentheim, Tecklenburg, Steinfurt & Limburg, Lord of Rheda, Wevelinghoven, Hoya, Alpen, Helpenstein, Baron of Lennep, Hereditary Advocate[Erbvogt] of Köln |
County (1182) 1486: HRE County |
Low Rhen | WE | 1050 | 1115: Passed to Count Otto of Salm Marriage of Otto's heiress, Sophia (d.1176), Countess of Rheineck, Salm and Bentheim to Dirk VI, Count of Holland 1146-1182: A fief of Bishopric of Utrecht 1176: Passed to Counts of Holland 1263: Annexed County of Tecklenburg 1279: Partitioned into Tecklenburg and Bentheim 1421: To House of Götterswyk, who assumed Bentheim as primary title 1421/1468: Bentheim became an immediate fief of the Empire 1454: Partitioned into Bentheim-Steinfurt and Bentheim-Bentheim 1530-1643: To County of Steinfurt 1606/1610: Division into Bentheim-Tecklenburg (with Rheda and Hohenlimburg) and Bentheim-Steinfurt 1752: Bentheim mortgaged to and was seized by Elector of Hanover 1804: Annexed to Steinfurt 1806: Mediatised to Berg 1810: Annexed to France 1815: To Hanover |
Bentheim-Alpen | County | n/a | n/a | 1606 | 1606: Appanage line under Bentheim-Steinfurt and Neuenahr 1629: Extinct; to Bentheim-Steinfurt |
Bentheim-Bentheim | County | 1643 | 1643: Partitioned from Bentheim-Steinfurt 1753-1803: Seized by the Elector of Hanover 1803: Bentheim reunited with Bentheim-Steinfurt 1804: Extinct | ||
Bentheim-Limburg | County | n/a | n/a | 1606 | 1606: Appanage line under Bentheim-Steinfurt and Neuenahr 1618: Extinct; to Bentheim-Alpen |
Bentheim-Steinfurt | County | Low Rhen | WE | 1454 | 1454: Partitioned from Co. of Bentheim 1606: Partitioned into Bentheim-Tecklenburg-Rheda, Bentheim-Steinfurt, and appanages Bentheim-Limburg and Bentheim-Alpen 1643: Partitioned into Bentheim-Steinfurt and Bentheim-Bentheim 1804: Renamed to Bentheim and Steinfurt |
Bentheim-Tecklenburg | County | 1277 | Name sometimes given to the County of Tecklenburg under the rule of the House of Bentheim 1277 - 1328 | ||
Bentheim-Tecklenburg-Rheda | County | Low Rhen | WE | 1606 | 1606: Partitioned from Bentheim-Steinfurt 1696: Tecklenburg to Solms-Braunfels; family retains the name though confined to Rheda and Limburg 1807: Mediatised to Berg |
Bentheim and Steinfurt | County | Low Rhin | WE | 1804 | 1804: Renamed from Bentheim-Steinfurt 1806: Mediatised to Berg (which obtained Bentheim) and Prussia (which obtained Steinfurt) |
Bentinck HRE Count of Bentinck and Aldenburg, Lord of the free Lordship of Knyphausen, Noble Lord of Varel |
HRE Counts (1732) | 1733/1800 immediate Lords of Knyphausen & Varel Aug 1806-1807 sovereign Lords of Knyphausen & Varel 1814/15 Lords of Knyphausen & Varel under the overlordship of Oldenburg | |||
Berchtesgaden Prince, Provost and Lord of Berchtesgaden |
Provostry | Bav | EC | 1108 | 1108: Abbey established 1194: Gained imperial immediacy 1380: HRE Prince 1491: Abbey became a Provostry 1559: Raised to Bench of Spiritual Princes 1803: Secularised to Grand Duchy of Salzburg 1805: Annexed to Austria 1809: Annexed to Bavaria |
Berg | Duchy | Low Rhen | PR | 1077 | 1077: County, to the counts of Berg, an offshoot of the House of Ezzonen 1160: Partitioned into itself and Mark 1218: To Duchy of Limburg 1380: Duchy 1437: To Duchy of Julich 1511: To Duchy of Cleves 1521: United with Mark and Cleves 1609: War of Succession between Brandenburg and Palatinate-Neuburg 1614: To Palatinate-Neuburg 1685: To the Electorate of the Palatinate 1777: To Bavaria 1807: To Grand Duchy of Berg 1815: To Prussia |
Bern Berne |
Imperial Free City (1218) | n/a | n/a | 1218 | 1218: Free Imperial City 1353: Joined the Swiss Confederation 1415: Invaded and acquired Aargau 1536: Invaded and acquired Vaud 1648: Left the Empire 1798: French occupation |
Besançon |
Archbishopric | Upp Rhen | EC | 1288 | 1288: HRE Prince 1493: Lost City of Besançon; retained seat in the Imperial Diet until 1803 1678: Annexed to France |
Besançon |
Imperial City (1184) | Burg | RH | 1307 | 1307: Free Imperial City 1493: Obtained full independence from Archbishopric of Besançon 1648: Annexed by Free County of Burgundy ("Franche-Comté") 1678: Ceded to France |
Biberach an der Riß | Imperial City | Swab | SW | 1281/2 | 1281/2: Free Imperial City 1803: Annexed to Baden 1806: Ceded to Württemberg |
Biberbach | Lordship | n/a | n/a | 1279: Partitioned from Pappenheim | 1514: Sold to Fugger 1624: Extinct |
Billung March | Margraviate | n/a | n/a | 928 | 983: Conquered by the Obotrites |
Bilstein | County | n/a | n/a | 1073 | 1145: 1st mention of "Counts of Bilstein" 1301: Line of counts died out; Bilstein sold to Hesse 1303: Annexed to Hesse |
Birkenfeld | County (1569) 1817: Principality |
Originally part of the County of Sponheim 1444: Part of Zweibrücken 1801: Annexed by France 1816: Prussian rule 1817: Principality of Birkenfeld in personal union with Oldenburg | |||
Bitburg | Abbacy | ||||
Bitsch | Lordship | n/a | n/a | 1297: Ceded by Lorraine to Zweibrücken-Bitsch 1570: Zweibrücken extinct; succession war between Lorraine and Hanau-Lichtenberg 1606: To Lorraine 1766: Annexed by France | |
Blamont | Lordship | n/a | n/a | 13th century | 1506: Ceded to Co. of Montbéliard by Neuchâtel 1748: Ceded to France |
Blankenburg | Abbacy | Low Rhen | RP | 1521: Identified in the Reichsmatrikel 1521 as an Imperial Abbey, but the house has not been identified | |
Blankenburg | County (1123) 1707: Principality of Imperial immediacy |
Low Sax | WE | 1123: First mentioned; fief of Saxony | c. 1162: Partitioned into itself and Regenstein 1180: Fief of Halberstadt 1202: Fief of Brunswick and Lüneburg 1344: Fief of Halberstadt 1368: Extinct; to Regenstein-Blankenburg 1599: To Halberstadt 1624: To Max von Waldstein 1629: To John II of Merode 1631: To Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel 1642: To Tattenbach as fief of Halberstadt 1671: To Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel as fief of Halberstadt 1690: To Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Blankenburg as fief of Halberstadt 1707: Imperial immediacy; Bench of Counts of Westphalia 1731: In personal union with Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel 1805: Annexed to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel 1807: To Westphalia 1814: To Brunswick |
Blankenheim | Lordship (1112) 1380: County 1461: HRE County of Manderscheid and Blankenheim |
Low Rhen | WE | 1149: Partitioned from Blankenheim-Schleiden | 1112: 1st mention of Lord of Blankenheim Acquired Lordships of Kronenburg, Junkerath, Dollendorf, Gerolstein, Erp, Neuerburg, Oberkail, Falkenstein, Bettingen, Manderscheid, Osann-Monzel 1406: Counts of Blankenheim died out; passed by female succession to Lords of Heinsberg To Counts of Manderscheid 1699: Imperial Estate Counts of Manderscheid-Blankenheim died out; passed by marriage to Counts of Sternberg 1794: Annexed to France 1803: Sternberg-Manderscheid compensated with Schussenried and Weißenau 1813: To Prussia |
Blankenheim-Schleiden | Lordship | n/a | n/a | c1115 | 1149: Partitioned into Blankenheim and Schleiden |
Bludenz | County | n/a | n/a | 12th century | Originally a property of the Co. of Werdenberg-Heiligenberg 1394: Sold to Austria |
Blieskastel | County | n/a | n/a | 1125: Partitioned into itself and Saarwerden 1237: Extinct; to Salm 1284: To Finstingen 1337: To Trier 1660: To Leyen-Adendorf 1705: To Leyen-Hohengeroldseck 1793: To France 1814: To Bavaria | |
Blumenegg | Lordship 1396: Imperial County |
n/a | n/a | 1258 | Originally a property of the Co. of Montfort 1243: To Werdenberg-Sargans 1328: To Werdenberg-Vaduz 1391: To Brandis 1510: To Sulz 1613: To Wengarten Abbey 1803: To Nassau-Orange-Fulda 1804: Sold to Austria |
Bockstädt | County | n/a | n/a | 1231: Partitioned from Stolberg | 1346: Extinct; to Hohnstein-Heldrungen |
Bohemia | Principality (845) Duchy 1198: Kingdom |
None | EL | c890: Joined the Empire | 1356: Prince-Elector |
Bonndorf | County | Swab | SC | Originally a property of Gurtweil, later of Küssaburg 1250: To Lupfen 1582: To Pappenheim 1609: To St Blaise's Abbey 1803: To Knights of St. John 1805: To Württemberg 1806: To Baden | |
Boos | Lordship | n/a | n/a | 10th century ? | Originally a fief of Kempten Abbey held by the Lords of Boos 1176: To Ottobeuren Abbey 1551: Sold to Fugger 1693: To Fugger-Boos 1777: To Fugger-Babenhausen 1806: To Bavaria |
Bopfingen | Imperial Free City | Swab | SW | 1241 | 1241: Free Imperial City 1802: Annexed to Bavaria 1810: To Württemberg |
Bouillon | County Duchy |
n/a | n/a | 959 | 1095: Sold to the Bishopric of Liège 1456: Bishop of Liège assumed the title "Duke of Bouillon" 1482: To La Marck 1521: To the Bishopric of Liège 1552: To France, who bestowed it upon La Marck 1559: To Bishopric of Liège 1676: To France 1678: Bestowed upon La Tour d'Auvergne as protectorate 1794: Annexed by France |
Brabant | Landgraviate (1085/1086) 1090: Duchy1183/1184: Duchy Claimed status of archduchy |
Burg | PR | 11th century: Emerged from division of the Duchy of Lower Lorraine into several feudal states | 1283: John I of Brabant bought the Duchy of Limburg from Adolph V of Berg 1430: Passed to D. of Burgundy 1477: Passed to the House of Habsburg 1512: Burgundian Circle 1556: Passed to the Spanish Habsburgs 1582: HRE Council of Princes 1609: northern Brabant awarded to the United Provinces; southern portion remain part of Spanish (later Austrian) Netherlands |
Brakel | Imperial City | Low Rhen | RH | Held by Bp. of Paderborn 1803: To Prussia | |
Brandenburg | Margraviate 1356: HRE Prince-Elector |
Upp Sax | EL | 1157: Originally created as the "Northern March" | 1415: Hohenzollerns purchase Brandenburg from HRE |
Brandenburg | Bishopric | Upp Sax | EC | 949 | 983: Wendish uprising; diocese lost though bishops continued to be appointed 1165: Bishopric restored to Brandenburg 1569: Annexed to the secular Electorate of Brandenburg |
Brandenburg-Ansbach | Margraviate | Franc | PR | 1440 as a partition of Bgv. Nuremberg | 1486: Partitioned into itself and Brandenburg-Kulmbach 1515: Partitioned into itself and Brandenburg-Kulmbach 1603: Partitioned into itself and Brandenburg-Bayreuth 1791: Sold to Brandenburg |
Brandenburg-Bayreuth | Margraviate | Franc | PR | 1603: Partitioned from Brandenburg-Ansbach | 1655: Appanage line Brandenburg-Kulmbach created 1726: Inherited by appanage Brandenburg-Kulmbach 1769: Passed to Brandenburg-Ansbach |
Brandenburg-Kulmbach | Margraviate | Franc | PR | 1440 as a partition of Bgv. Nuremberg | 1464: Extinct; to Brandenburg-Ansbach 1486: Partitioned from Brandenburg-Ansbach 1495: Extinct; to Brandenburg-Ansbach 1557: Extinct; to Brandenburg-Ansbach 1655: Appanage created from Brandenburg-Bayreuth 1726: Inherited Brandenburg-Bayreuth; appanage abolished |
Brandenburg-Küstrin | Margraviate | Upp Rhen | PR | 1535: Partitioned from Brandenburg | 1571: Extinct; to Brandenburg |
Brandis | Barony | Swab | SC | 12th century | 1394: Purchased many territories from Werdenberg 1437: Purchased Maienfeld 1509: Sold Maienfeld to the Grey Leagues 1510: Sold remaining territories to Sulz |
Brauneck | Lordship | n/a | n/a | 1230 as a partition of Hohenlohe | 1249: Partitioned into Brauneck-Brauneck and Brauneck-Haltenbergstetten |
Brauneck-Brauneck | Lordship | n/a | n/a | 1249 as a partition of Brauneck | 1429: Extinct; to Burgraviate of Magdeburg of the House of Hardegg 1448: Sold to Brandenburg-Ansbach 1791: To Prussia 1806: To Bavaria 1810: To Württemberg |
Brauneck-Haltenbergstetten | Lordship | n/a | n/a | 1249 as a partition of Brauneck | 1268: Partitioned into itself and Brauneck-Neuhaus 1366: Sold to Hohenlohe-Speckfeld 1412: To Castell and Limpurg 1415: To Lordship of Rosenberg as fief of the Bishopric of Würzburg 1632: To the Bishopric of Würzburg 1636: To Hatzfeld 1794: To the Bishopric of Würzburg 1803: To Hohenlohe-Bartenstein-Jagstberg 1806: To Württemberg |
Brauneck-Neuhaus | Lordship | n/a | n/a | 1268 as a partition of Brauneck-Haltenbergstetten | 1320: Fief of the Bishopric of Würzburg 1340: Extinct 1431: To the Teutonic Order 1809: To Württemberg |
Breda | Barony | Burg | WE | 11th century: A direct fief of the Holy Roman Emperor 1327: Sold to Brabant 1350: Sold to Wassenaar 1403: Raised to Barony; To Counts of Nassau by marriage | |
Bregenz | County | Swab | SW | 9th - 10th century | 926: 1st mention of Ulrich VI as "Count of Bregenz" 1171: To Tübingen by marriage 1180: To Montfort 1258: To Montfort-Bregenz 1338: To Montfort-Tettnang 1354: To Montfort-Tettnang-Bregenz 1379: To Elder and Younger lines of Montfort-Tettnang-Bregenz 1451: Elder line sold to Austria 1523: Younger line sold to Austria 1805: To Bavaria 1814: To Austria |
Brehna | County | n/a | n/a | 1034: Partitioned from the County of Eilenberg | 1106: Extinct; to Wettin 1157: Recreated on partition of Wettin lands 1290: Extinct; to Saxe-Wittenberg 1356: To the Electorate of Saxony 1658: To Saxe-Merseburg 1738: To the Electorate of Saxony |
Breisgau | County Landgraviate |
n/a | n/a | 771 | 1077: Annexed by Zähringen 1218: To Baden-Hachberg 1306: To Baden-Hachberg-Sausenberg 1318: To Freiburg 1368: To Austria 1395: To Baden-Hachberg-Sausenberg 1398: To Austria; combined with other Habsburg lands in the Black Forest as part of Further Austria 1801: To Breisgau-Modena 1805: To Baden |
Breisgau-Modena | Duchy | Aust | PR | 1801: Compensation for the former Duke of Modena | 1803: Acquired the Ortenau 1805: Divided between Baden and Württemberg |
Breiteneck Breitenegg |
HRE Lordship HRE County 1635 |
Bav | SC | 10th century | To Prunn by 1129: To Breitenbrunn 1229: To Laaber-Prunn 1285: To Hirschberg 1302: To Laaber 1433: To Gumppenberg 1463: To Laaber 1465: To Pappenheim 1473: To Wildenstein 1534: 1/2 to Welden by marriage 1583: Extinct; other half to Haslangg and Rinderbach 1592: Welden half sold to Palatinate-Neuburg 1595: Haslangg and Rinderbach half sold to Bavaria 1611: Palatinate-Neuburg half sold to Bavaria; Breitenegg reunited under Bavarian rule 1624: To Tilly as fief of Bavaria 1631: To Tilly with sovereign rights 1648: Joined Bavarian Circle 1654: Seat in the Imperial Diet 1744: Extinct; to Gumppenberg 1792: Sold to Bavaria |
Bremen | Archbishopric (1072) 1180: HRE Prince-Archbishopric 1648: Duchy |
Low Sax | EC | 1180: partitioned from the Duchy of Saxony | 805: Bishopric founded 848-1072: In personal union with Bishopric of Hamburg 1648: secularised as Duchy of Bremen, ruled as Bremen-Verden in personal union with the Principality of Verden |
Bremen | Imperial City (1646) | Low Sax | RH | 1202 | 1358: Joined Hanseatic League 1810: Annexed by France 1815: Free City |
Bremen-Verden | Duchy of Bremen and Principality of Verden | Low Sax | 1648: secularised Prince-Archbishopric of Bremen and Prince-Bishopric of Verden, always ruled in personal union | 1648: In personal union (p.u.) with Sweden 1712: Danish occupation 1715: Sold to the Electorate of Hanover 1719: In personal union with Hanover 1807: Annexed to the Kingdom of Westphalia 1810: Annexed to France 1813: In personal union with Hanover 1814/1823: Merged in the Kingdom of Hanover as Stade Region | |
Bretzenheim HRE Prince of Bretzenheim and Count of Lindau |
HRE Count of Bretzenheim (1774) 1790: HRE Principality |
Upp Rhen | SC | 10th century | 10th century: Fief of the Archbishopric of Cologne Fief held by Electoral Palatinate Fief held by Falkenstein 1642: To Velen 1664: Immediate Barony 1733: Extinct; to Archbishopric of Cologne 1734: To Virmont 1744: Extinct; to Archbishopric of Cologne 1747: To Roll zu Bernau 1772: To Heydeck 1790: Imperial estate 1795: To France 1803: Heydeck granted Lindau am Bodensee in compensation |
Brixen | Bishopric (1027) 1179: Prince-Bishopric |
Aust | EC | 1027 | 1179: Prince of the Empire 1803: Secularized and annexed by Austria to Tyrol 1805: To Bavaria 1814: To Austria 1918: To Italy |
Broich | Lordship | 1093: 1st mention of Lords of Broich | 11th century: Fief of Berg held by the Lords of Broich 13th century: Broich asserts immediacy against Berg 1372: Extinct; to Limburg-Styrum 1376: Made fief of Berg 1439: Fief to Limburg-Broich 1505: Fief to Dhaun-Falkenstein 1682: Fief to Leiningen-Dagsburg | ||
Bruchhausen | County | n/a | n/a | 1199: Partitioned from Wildeshausen | 1234: Partitioned into Neubruchhausen and Altbruchhausen |
Bruchsal and Odenheim | Abbacy 1503: Provostry |
Upp Rhen | RP | 1110-8: Established at Odenheim | 1161: Gained imperial immediacy 1496: HRE Lords 1503: Abbey converted to provostry 1507: Relocated to Bruchsal 1803: To Baden |
Brunnen | Abbacy | SP | 1521: Identified in the Reichsmatrikel 1521 as an Imperial Abbey, identified as Mariabrunn Abbey in Carinthia | ||
Brunswick and Lüneburg | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1235 | 1269: Partitioned into Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and Lüneburg |
Brunswick-Calenberg | Duchy | Low Sax | PR | 1432: Partitioned from Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel | 1463: Inherited Brunswick-Göttingen; renamed to Brunswick-Calenberg-Göttingen 1634: Partitioned from Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel 1692: Made Electorate of Hanover |
Brunswick-Calenberg-Göttingen | Duchy | Low Sax | PR | 1463: Renamed from Brunswick-Calenberg | 1503: Partitioned into Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and itself 1584: Extinct; to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel |
Brunswick-Dannenberg | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1569: Appanage created from Brunswick-Lüneburg | 1598: Appanage Brunswick-Hitzacker created 1636: Extinct; to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel |
Brunswick-Göttingen | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1291: Partitioned from Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel | 1344: Partitioned into Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and itself 1463: Extinct; to Brunswick-Calenberg |
Brunswick-Grubenhagen | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1291: Partitioned from Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel | 1361: Partitioned into Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Salzderhelden and Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Osterode 1452: Reunited by Salzderhelden line 1479: Partitioned into Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Heldenberg and Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Osterode 1526: Reunited by Osterode line 1596: Extinct; to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel |
Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Heldenberg | Duchy | Low Sax | PR | 1479: Partitioned from Brunswick-Grubenhagen | 1526: Extinct; to Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Osterode |
Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Osterode | Duchy | Low Sax | PR | 1361: Partitioned from Brunswick-Grubenhagen | 1452: Extinct; to Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Salzderhelden 1479: Partitioned from Brunswick-Grubenhagen 1526: Renamed to Brunswick-Grubenhagen after extinction of Heldenberg line |
Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Salzderhelden | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1361: Partitioned from Brunswick-Grubenhagen | 1452: Renamed to Brunswick-Grubenhagen after extinction of Osterode line |
Brunswick-Hitzacker | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1598: Appanage created from Brunswick-Dannenberg | 1634: Inherited Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel; appanage abolished |
Brunswick-Lüneburg | Duchy | Low Sax | PR | 1388: Formed after defeating the Electorate of Saxony in the War of the Lüneburg Succession | 1527: Partitioned into Brunswick-Lüneburg-Harburg and itself 1539: Partitioned into itself and Brunswick-Lüneburg-Gifhorn 1569: Appanage Brunswick-Dannenberg created 1705: Extinct; to Electorate of Hanover |
Brunswick-Lüneburg-Gifhorn | Duchy | Low Sax | PR | 1539: Partitioned from Brunswick-Lüneburg | 1642: Extinct; to Brunswick-Lüneburg |
Brunswick-Lüneburg-Harburg | Duchy | Low Sax | PR | 1527: Partitioned from Brunswick-Lüneburg | 1642: Extinct; divided between Brunswick-Celle and Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel |
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1269: Partitioned from Brunswick and Lüneburg | 1291: Partitioned into Brunswick-Grubenhagen, Brunswick-Göttingen and itself 1292: Extinct; to Brunswick-Göttingen 1344: Partitioned from Brunswick-Göttingen 1432: Partitioned into Brunswick-Calenberg and itself 1482: Extinct; to Brunswick-Calenberg-Göttingen 1503: Partitioned from Brunswick-Calenberg-Göttingen 1634: Partitioned into itself and Brunswick-Calenberg 1667: Appanages Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern and Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Calvörde created 1690: Partitioned into itself and Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Blankenburg 1806: Inherited by appanage Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Oels 1814: Renamed to Duchy of Brunswick |
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1667: Appanage created from Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel | 1735: Inherited Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel; appanage passed to Duke's younger brother 1809: Appanage extinct; to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Oels |
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Blankenburg | Duchy | Low Rhen | WE | 1690: Partitioned from Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel | 1731: Inherited Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel |
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Calvörde | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1667: Appanage created from Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel | 1685: Inherited Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel; appanage abolished |
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Oels | Duchy | n/a | n/a | 1792: Appanage created for Frederick Augustus, husband of the late Duchess of Württemberg-Oels | 1806: Inherited Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel; appanage abolished |
Buchau | Abbacy | Swab | SC | 1347: Imperial immediacy | 1625: Acquired Lordship of Strassberg 1803: Secularized to Prince of Thurn und Taxis 1806: Annexed to Württemberg; Strassberg to Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen |
Buchau | Imperial City | Swab | SW | c1250 | 1803: Mediatised to Thurn und Taxis 1806: To Württemberg |
Buchhorn (Friedrichshafen) | Imperial City | Swab | SW | 1089 | 1803: To Württemberg |
Burgau | Margraviate | n/a | n/a | 1212 | 1301: Extinct; to Austria 1304: Invested in sons of King Albert I Later made part of Further Austria 1805: To Bavaria |
Burgbrohl | Lordship | 1451: Partitioned from Saffig | 1533: Annexed to Saffig-Olbrück | ||
Burgundy Franche-Comté |
Free County (915) County Palatine |
Burg | PR | 1127 | 1330: Passed to D. of Burgundy 1405-1556: To Dukes of Burgundy 1556: To Habsburg Kings of Spain 1678: Annexed to France |
Burgundy | Duchy | n/a (Burg) | PR | 1477 | Whilst not part of the empire, the Dukes of Burgundy possessed extensive territories within the Empire 1477: Burgundian Netherlands under Mary 1516: Spanish Netherlands 1714: Austrian Netherlands 1795: To France |
Bürresheim Burresheim |
Lordship | n/a | n/a | 10th century | Originally held by the Lords of Bürresheim 1157: One half to Archbishopric of Cologne 1189: Other half to Archbishopric of Trier, fief held by Schöneck 1473: Schöneck half sold to Breitbach 1477: Part of Cologne half sold to Breitbach 1659: All to Breitbach, who renamed to "Breitbach-Bürresheim" as fief of the Archbishoprics 1691: HRE Baron 1796: Extinct; to France though rights passed to Renesse |
Burtscheid | Abbacy | 997 | 1018: Obtained surrounding territory 1138: Imperial immediacy and HRE Prince 1220: Converted to a nunnery 1794: To France 1802: Abbey dissolved | ||
Butzweiler | Lordship | ||||
Buxheim | Abbacy | n/a | n/a | c. 1100 | 1548: Imperial immediacy 1803: To Ostein 1806: To Bavaria |
References
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