Georg "der Bärtige" von Sachsen

Georg "der Bärtige" von Sachsen

Mann 1471 - 1539  (67 år)

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  • Navn Georg "der Bärtige" von Sachsen 
    Kallenavn the Bearded(der Bärtige) 
    Fødsel 27 Aug 1471  Meißen, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR) Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet 
    Kjønn Mann 
    Død 17 Apr 1539  Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR) Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet 
    Begravelse Domkirche Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet 
    Person ID I96184  Boe
    Sist endret 16 Sep 2012 

    Familie Barbara of Poland,   f. 15 Jul 1478, Sandomierz, Kielce, Poland Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 15 Feb 1534, Leipzig, Leipzig, Sachsen, Germany Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet (Alder 55 år) 
    Ekteskap 21 Nov 1496  Leipzig,Leipzig,Saxony Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet 
    Barn 
     1. Christof I, Prince Of Saxony,   f. 8 Sep 1497, Dresden,Drsdn,Sxny Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 5 Des 1497 (Alder 0 år)
     2. Johann von Sachsen,   f. 24 Aug 1498, Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR) Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 11 Jan 1537, København, Roskilde domkirke, Roskilde, Sachsen Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet (Alder 38 år)
     3. Wolfgang, Prince Of Saxony,   f. Ca 1499, Of Dresden,Drsdn,Sxny Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 12 Jan 1500 (Alder 1 år)
     4. Anna, Princess Of Saxony,   f. 21 Jan 1500, Of Dresden,Drsdn,Sxny Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 23 Jan 1500 (Alder 0 år)
     5. Christof II, Prince Of Saxony,   f. 27 Mai 1501, Of Dresden,Drsdn,Sxny Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 27 Mai 1501 (Alder 0 år)
     6. Agnes, Princess Of Saxony,   f. 7 Jan 1503, Of Dresden,Drsdn,Sxny Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 16 Apr 1503 (Alder 0 år)
     7. Friedrich, Prince Of Saxony,   f. 15 Mar 1504, Dresden,Dresden,Saxony Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 26 Feb 1539, Dresden,Dresden,Saxony Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet (Alder 34 år)
     8. Christina von Wettin,   f. 25 Des 1505, Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR) Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 15 Apr 1549, Deggendorf, Hessen-Nassau, Deutschland(HRR) Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet (Alder 43 år)
     9. Magdalene von Sachsen, Wettin, Kurfürstin zu Brandenburg,   f. 7 Mar 1507, Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR) Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 25 Jan 1534, Berlin, Brandenburg, Deutschland(HRR) Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedet (Alder 26 år)
     10. Margarethe, Princess Of Saxony,   f. 7 Sep 1508, Dresden,Drsdn,Sxny Finn alle personer med hendelser på dette stedetd. 19 Des 1510 (Alder 2 år)
    Famile ID F30862  Gruppeskjema  |  Familiediagram
    Sist endret 27 Des 2023 

  • Notater 
    • {geni:about_me} George, Duke of Saxony

      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George,_Duke_of_Saxony

      Reign 12 September 1500 X 17 April 1539

      Predecessor Albert III & IV

      Successor Henry IV

      Spouse Barbara of Poland

      more... Issue

      Frederick, Hereditary Duke of Saxony

      Christine, Landgravine of Hesse

      Magdalena, Electoral Princess of Brandeburg

      Full name

      Heinrich der Fromme

      House House of Wettin

      Albertine Line

      Father Albert III, Duke of Saxony

      Mother Sidonie Podiebrad

      Born 27 August 1471

      Meissen

      Died 17 April 1539 (aged 67)

      Dresden

      George the Bearded, Duke of Saxony (b. Meissen, 27 August 1471 - d. Dresden, 17 April 1539), was duke of Saxony from 1500 to 1539.

      Duke George was a member of the Order of the Golden Fleece.

      Early life

      His father was Albert the Brave of Saxony, founder of the Albertine line of the Wettin family, his mother was Sidonie, daughter of George Podiebrad, King of Bohemia. Elector Frederick the Wise, a member of the Ernestine branch ofthe same family, known for his protection of Luther, was a cousin of Duke George.

      George, as the eldest son, received an excellent training in theology and other branches of learning, and was thus much better educated than most of the princes of his day.

      As early as 1488, when his father was in Friesland fighting on behalf of the emperor, George was regent of the ducal possessions, which included the Margraviate of Meissen with the cities of Dresden and Leipzig.

      [edit]Marriage and Children

      George was married at Dresden, on 21 November 1496, to Barbara of Poland, daughter of Casimir IV, King of Poland and Elisabeth, daughter of Albrecht II of Hungary. They had ten children, but all, with the exception of a daughter,died before their father:

      Christof (b. Dresden, 8 September 1497 - d. Leipzig, 5 December 1497).

      Johann (b. Dresden, 24 August 1498 - d. Dresden, 11 January 1537), Hereditary Duke of Saxony; married on 20 May 1516 to Elizabeth of Hesse. This union was childless.

      Wolfgang (b. Dresden, 1499 - d. Dresden, 12 January 1500).

      Anna (b. Dresden, 21 January 1500 - d. Dresden, 23 January 1500).

      Christof (b. and d. Dresden, 27 May 1501).

      Agnes (b. Dresden, 7 January 1503 - d. Dresden, 16 April 1503).

      Frederick (b. Dresden, 15 March 1504 - d. Dresden, 26 February 1539), Hereditary Duke of Saxony; married on 27 January 1539 to Elisabeth of Mansfeld. This union was childless.

      Christine (b. Dresden, 25 December 1505 - d. Kassel, 15 April 1549), married on 11 December 1523 to Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse.

      Magdalena (b. Dresden, 7 March 1507 - d. Berlin, 25 January 1534), married on 6 November 1524 to Joachim Hector, then Hereditary Elector of Brandenburg.

      Margarete (b. Dresden, 7 September 1508 - d. Dresden, 19 December 1510).

      [edit]Duke of Saxony

      In 1498, the emperor granted Albert the Brave the hereditary governorship of Friesland. At Maastricht, 14 February 1499, Albert settled the succession to his possessions, and endeavoured by this arrangement to prevent further partition of his domain. He died 12 September 1500, and was succeeded in his German territories by George as the head of the Albertine line, while George's brother Heinrich became hereditary governor of Friesland.

      The Saxon occupation of Friesland, however, was by no means secure and was the source of constant revolts in that province. Consequently Heinrich, who was of a rather inert disposition, relinquished his claims to the governorship, and in 1505 an agreement was made between the brothers by which Friesland was transferred to George, while Heinrich received an annuity and the districts of Freiberg and Wolkenstein. But this arrangement did not restore peace inFriesland, which continued to be an unceasing source of trouble to Saxony, until finally the duke was obliged, in 1515, to sell it to Burgundy for the very moderate price of 100,000 florins. These troubles outside of his Saxon possessions did not prevent George from bestowing much care on the government of the ducal territory proper. When regent, during the lifetime of his father, the difficulties arising from conflicting interests and the large demands on his powers had often brought the young prince to the verge of despair.

      In a short time, however, he developed decided ability as a ruler; on entering upon his inheritance he divided the duchy into governmental districts, took measures to suppress the robber-knights, and regulated the judicial systemby defining and readjusting the jurisdiction of the various law courts. In his desire to achieve good order, severity, and the amelioration of the condition of the people, he sometimes ventured to infringe even on the rights of the cities. His court was better regulated than that of any other German prince, and he bestowed a paternal care on the University of Leipzig, where a number of reforms were introduced, and Humanism, as opposed to Scholasticism, was encouraged.

      [edit]Years of the Reformation

      From the beginning of the Reformation in 1517, Duke George directed his energies chiefly to ecclesiastical affairs. Hardly one of the secular German princes held as firmly as he to the Church, he defended its rights and vigorously condemned every innovation except those which were countenanced by the highest ecclesiastical authorities. At first he was not opposed to Luther, but as time went on and Luther's aim became clear to him, he turned more and more from the Reformer, and was finally, in consequence of this change of attitude, drawn into an acrimonious correspondence in which Luther, without any justification, shamefully reviled the duke.

      The duke was not blind to the undeniable abuses existing at that time in the Church. In 1519, despite the opposition of the theological faculty of the university, he originated the Disputation of Leipzig, with the idea of helpingforward the cause of truth, and was present at all the discussions. In 1521, at the Diet of Worms, when the German princes handed in a paper containing a list of "grievances" concerning the condition of the Church, George added for himself twelve specific complaints referring mainly to the abuse of Indulgences and the annates.

      In 1525, he combined with his Lutheran son-in-law, Landgrave Philip of Hesse, and his cousin, the Elector Frederick the Wise, to suppress the revolt of the peasants, who were defeated near Frankenhausen in Thuringia. Some years later, he wrote a forcible preface to a translation of the New Testament issued at his command by his private secretary, Hieronymus Emser, as an offset to Luther's version. Lutheran books were confiscated by his order, wherever found, though he refunded the cost of the books. He proved himself in every way a vigorous opponent of the Lutherans, decreeing that Christian burial was to be refused to apostates, and recreant ecclesiastics were to be delivered to the bishop of Merseburg.

      For those, however, who merely held anti-catholic opinions, the punishment was only expulsion from the duchy. The duke deeply regretted the constant postponement of the ardently desired council, from the action of which so much was expected. While awaiting its convocation, he thought to remove the more serious defects by a reform of the monasteries, which had become exceedingly worldly in spirit and from which many of the inmates were departing. He vainlysought to obtain from the Curia the right, which was sometimes granted by Rome, to make official visitations to the conventual institutions of his realm. His reforms were confined mainly to uniting the almost vacant monasteries and to matters of economic management, the control of the property being entrusted in most cases to the secular authorities.

      In 1525, Duke George formed, with some other German rulers, the League of Dessau, for the protection of Catholic interests. In the same way he was the animating spirit of the League of Halle, formed in 1533, from which sprang in 1538 the Holy League of Nuremberg for the maintenance of the religious Peace of Nuremberg.

      The vigorous activity displayed by the duke in so many directions was not attended with much success. Most of his political measures, indeed, stood the test of experience, but in ecclesiastico-political matters he witnessed with sorrow the gradual decline of Catholicism and the spread of Lutheranism within his dominions, in spite of his earnest efforts and forcible prohibition of the new doctrine. Furthermore, during George's lifetime his nearest relations his son-in-law Philip of Hesse, and his brother Heinrich, joined the Reformers.

      He spent the last years of his reign in endeavours to secure a Catholic successor, thinking by this step to check the dissemination of Lutheran opinions. The only one of George's sons then living was the weak-minded and unmarriedFrederick. The intention of his father was that Frederick should rule with the aid of a council. Early in 1539, Frederick was married to Elizabeth of Mansfeld, but he died shortly afterwards, leaving no prospect of an heir. According to the act of settlement of 1499, George's Protestant brother Heinrich was now heir prospective; but George, disregarding his father's will, sought to disinherit his brother and to bequeath the duchy to Ferdinand, brother of Charles V. His sudden death prevented the carrying out of this intention.

      [edit]Character

      George was an excellent and industrious ruler, self-sacrificing, high-minded, and unwearying in the furtherance of the highest interests of his land and people. As a man he was upright, vigorous and energetic, if somewhat irascible. A far-seeing and faithful adherent of the emperor and empire, he accomplished much for his domain by economy, love of order and wise direction of activities of his state officials. The grief of his life was Luther's Reformation and what he regarded to be apostasy from the Old Faith. Of a strictly religious, although not narrow, disposition, he sought at any cost to keep his subjects from falling away from the Church, but his methods of attaining his object were not always free from reproach.

      This page was last modified on 30 October 2010 at 19:56