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Lippe
AD 1123 - 1528
Lippe was a parcel of territory that was located between the River Weser
and the south-eastern section of the Teutobergerwald, the great German
forest that had caused the
Romans
such a headache in AD 9. At that time, the
Dulgubnii tribe occupied the
Lippe lands, and were part of the
Germanic force that destroyed three Roman
legions in the forest. Lippe's capital was the town of Detmold, which was
first mentioned in 783 as Theotmalli, while to its south
Hesse was emerging. The first
reference to the future town of Horn was made in 1031, Oerlinghausen was
mentioned in 1036, and Lemgo in 1149.
The House of Lippe resided along the river of the same name, originating
in the person of Count Jobst Hermann of Lippe. He died around 1056, but his
grandson (or great-grandson, born around 1090), Bernard, succeeded him. In
1123, he was granted a parcel of territory by
Holy
Roman Emperor Lothar II of Supplinburg and, as the new, and first, 'Lord of
Lippe', Bernhard became Bernhard I.
(Information by Peter Kessler, with additional information by Jackie Speel,
and from External Links:
German Genealogy: Lippe, and European Heraldry: House of Lippe (dead
link), and
Lippe.) |
1123 - 1158 |
Bernard I |
First lord of Lippe. |
1158 - 1167 |
Herman I |
Son? |
1168 - 1196 |
Bernard II |
Son? |
1168/1185 |
The town of Lippe (modern Lippstadt) is founded by Bernard II, either in 1168 or 1185.
During his lifetime he also founds the city of Lemgo.
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The lordship, and later county and principality, of Lippe
occupied a central western location in the German territories of
the Holy Roman empire, and it was remarkably compact when
compared to the patchwork nature of many other Germanic states
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1180 |
Henry III, duke of
Saxony, refuses to follow his cousin,
Holy
Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, into war in Lombardy. In punishment
for this the duchy of Saxony is reduced by the emperor. Westphalia is handed to the
archbishop of Cologne, complete with most parts of Angria (the former
Angrivarii
tribal lands), while the duchies of Brunswick and Lüneburg remain
under the control of the Welfs.
Pomerania
is taken by Barbarossa. The Saxon ducal title is handed over to the Ascanian
dukes, but they have their base further east, in Lusatia and
Thuringia, near the Elbe, resulting in the name of Saxony migrating eastwards. |
1196 - 1229 |
Herman II |
Son. Co-regent with his father during the latter's
lifetime. |
1217/1218 |
Herman represents his brother, Otto II, bishop of Utrecht, as the
administrator of Utrecht. He promotes the city and gains the post of vogt
(reeve or advocate) of the monasteries of Clarholz and Herzebrock. His main
opponent during this period is Engelbert II of Berg, archbishop of Cologne,
a man who had earlier had Herman's support. |
1230 - 1265 |
Bernard III |
Son. |
1263 |
Bernard fortifies Detmold with stone walls. As well as being Lippe's
capital, the town is also an important crossroads on the trade route from
Paderborn to Lemgo. Two years later the town gains the rights to stage a
regular market which aids its economic development. |
1265 - 1275 |
Bernard IV |
Son. |
1265 - 1273 |
Herman III |
Brother. Lord of Lippstadt. |
1267 - 1269 |
Bernard takes part in the Battle of Zülpich alongside his uncle, Bishop
Simon I of Paderborn. Their opponent, the duke of Jülich, captures Simon,
and Bernard has to pay a large ransom to secure his release in 1269. The
money is borrowed, saddling Lippe with a large financial burden. |
1273 |
It is not entirely clear how the title progresses at this stage, with
Bernard IV the elder brother, and lord of Lippe, while Herman III is lord of
the city of Lippstadt. At various points, the two have been in dispute with
one another after Herman had joined Lippstadt to the Rhenish League of
Cities. And yet Simon succeeds his father in the year of
Herman's death and not Bernard's. |
1273 - 1344 |
Simon I |
Son of Bernard IV. |
1302 |
A dispute with Lippe's neighbours is triggered following raids against
Osnabrück. They are alleged to originate from Enger Castle, which is owned
by Simon of Lippe. Louis of Ravensberg, bishop of Osnabrück, forms an
alliance with his brother, Count Otto III of Ravensberg, along with the
bishops of Münster and Paderborn and the city of Herford. Their troops
besiege Enger Castle, capturing both it and Simon, and imprisoning the
latter for eighteen months in the Bucksturm tower in Osnabrück. He is
released only when he agrees to raze Enger Castle to the ground. |
1323 |
Lippe's territory reaches its largest extent when Simon acquires Varenholz
Castle. |
1344 |
Simon II |
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Bernard V |
Eldest son of Simon I. Prince-Bishop of Paderborn. |
1344 |
The lordship of Lippe is divided upon the death of Simon I (and the short-lived
and otherwise obscure appearance of Simon II). Otto becomes lord of the territory
around Lemgo (which had been founded in 1200 by the lord of Lippe). His younger
brother, Bernhard V, gains Rheda (a junior city that has sometimes been administered
by the heir apparent as a means of training them for the lordship. Both
this and Lemgo are now in the North Rhine-Westphalia state of modern
Germany). Both rule their respective divisions of Lippe until their
deaths. |
1344 - 1360 |
Otto |
Brother. Lord of Lippe-Lemgo. |
1344 - 1364 |
Bernard V |
Brother, and a second Bernard V. Lord of Lippe-Rheda. |
1360 |
When Otto dies, his son, Simon, inherits his title and lands as lord of
Lippe-Lemgo. Following the death of his uncle just four years later, Simon
apparently succeeds to become the single lord of Lippe, reuniting Lemgo and
Rheda under one lord. However, the situation is complicated by nobles who
declare in 1368 that future heirs to the lordship will only be recognised if
the cities of Lippstadt and Lemgo, Lippe's two main cities, agree on the
candidate. |
1360 - 1410 |
Simon III |
Son of Otto. Lord of Lippe-Lemgo until 1365. |
1364 - 1366 |
Upon the death of Bernard V, his widow, Richarda of the Marck, makes Otto VI
of Tecklenburg the beneficiary of his estates (he is her eldest daughter's
husband). She changes her mind in 1366 and selects her nephew, Simon III.
Otto quite naturally objects and a feud is triggered which is eventually
settled in Tecklenburg's favour. |
1371 - 1374 |
Otto VI of Tecklenburg takes Simon prisoner, only releasing him in 1374
after Simon pays a huge ransom. Two years later (in 1376), he also has to
pledge half of Lippstadt to his mother's relatives, the House of the Marck.
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Shown here is the coat of arms of the House of Lippe, which reached
its greatest territorial extent in the fourteenth century before
taking part in the general decline of German principalities as
that territory became increasingly fractured
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1379 |
The bishoprics of Münster, Osnabrück, and Paderborn form a brief alliance with
the cities of Münster and Osnabrück, together with Count Engelbert III of the
Marck, in order to conquer Lippe and its city of Rheda. They hand their new
possessions to Otto VI of Tecklenburg for the sum of 8,000 guilders. |
1410 - 1415 |
Bernard VI |
Son. |
1415 - 1429 |
Simon IV |
Son. |
1424 |
Count Adolph IX of Schauenburg attempts to reconquer the county of
Sternberg, which Schauenburg had pledged to Lippe in 1400. This leads to a
bitter feud, during which Extertal and the church and castle of Bösingfeld
are destroyed. However, Simon takes the appropriate measures to ensure that
he retains control of Sternberg. |
1429 - 1511 |
Bernard VII 'the Bellicose' |
Son. Succeeded aged 1. |
1429 - 1446 |
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Otto (I) |
Uncle and regent. Died. |
1446 - 1449? |
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Dietrich |
Great-uncle of Bernard VII. Archbishop of Cologne. |
1444 - 1449 |
Bernard VII concludes a treaty with Duke Adolph I of Cleves-Mark in which he
cedes to Adolph a fifty per cent share of the city of Lippstadt, which is
already mortgaged to Cleves. At the same time, he joins an alliance that
makes him part of the 'Feud of Soest' against his own great-uncle,
Archbishop Dietrich II of Cologne. In 1447, Dietrich calls in a
Bohemian
army that devastates the countryside in Lippe and levels the town of Blomberg.
The Bohemians also besiege the cities of Lippstadt and Soest, but are unsuccessful
in taking them. Detmold also suffers severe damage during the conflict and its
defences are considerably strengthened after the event, which is finally
settled in 1449. |
1468 |
The capital is moved to Detmold, then the smallest city in Lippe with a
population of just three hundred and fifty. Detmold Castle is expanded to
house the ruling family. |
1511 - 1528 |
Simon V |
Son. Became the first count of
Lippe
(1528). |
1528 |
Simon V becomes the first imperial count of Lippe
when the lordship is raised to a county at the command of
Holy
Roman Emperor Charles V. This is just one of about 140 imperial counties
that are created at this time. |
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County of Lippe
AD 1528 - 1613
The lordship was raised to a county in 1528, along with almost 140 other
minor lordships and other German states, at the command of
Holy
Roman Emperor Charles V. As a result, Simon V was the first lord of
Lippe to be able to style himself count. Detmold remained the county's
capital, and Lippe remained a small Germanic state with little influence or
impact. |
1528 - 1536 |
Simon V |
Former lord of Lippe.
First count of Lippe. |
1530 - 1535 |
The Reformation had taken hold of the city of Lemgo as early as 1518, and
this had quickly spread to Lippe's other cities even before the nobility
could become properly involved, with most of the population becoming Lutherans,
and Lutheran preaching taking place in many churches. But it is only in 1530 that
the wave of Lutheran reform has a visible effect on Lippe. Protestant hymns are
sung at a Catholic Easter Mass, and Count Simon is outraged. However, with
his own liege lord, Philip I, duke of
Hesse, already a Lutheran since 1524, his options are limited. In 1535,
Simon and Duke John III of Cleves invade Lippstadt, which has turned
Protestant. The city surrenders, but no further action is taken against it
or any other of Lippe's cities.
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Detmold Castle remained the principal place of residence for the
House of Lippe from Detmold's establishment as the capital in
1468 up to the present day
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1536 |
With the death of Simon V, his eldest son succeeds him as count of Lippe.
Bernard's younger brother is Hermann Simon, who becomes count of Sternberg
and marries Ursula of Pyrmont and Spiegelberg. This creates the subsidiary
line of Sternberg and Pyrmont. |
1536 - 1563 |
Bernard VIII |
Son. Succeeded aged 8. |
1536 - 1547 |
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Philip I |
Regent. Duke of
Hesse. |
1536 - ? |
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Adolph |
Regent. Count of Schaumburg? |
1536 - 1545 |
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Jobst II |
Regent. Count of Hoya. Died. |
1538 |
Lippe joins the Reformation under the direction of Philip I, duke of
Hesse, Bernard's guardian and feudal lord. Bernard himself is already
being brought up as a Protestant, in direct contrast to his father's staunch
Catholic beliefs, and he tries to strengthen and support the Protestant
faith in Lippe throughout his lifetime. |
1546 - 1547 |
Holy Roman Emperor
Charles V sees the tide of conversions to Protestant rites as a move by the
many princes and lords of the empire to gain more autonomy from imperial
governance. Many of them, organised by Elector John Frederick I of
Saxony
and Duke Philip I of
Hesse, had formed the Schmalkaldic League when meeting at the town of
Schmalkalden in
Thuringia in 1531. Now that Charles has returned from his war in
Italy,
the two sides concentrate their forces, with Charles intent on destroying
the Protestant league. Elector John is distracted by his cousin, Duke Maurice of
Saxe-Meissen,
invading his lands in Ernestine Saxony, and ultimately the league is
defeated. Lippe is occupied by imperial troops during the war and, following
the implementation of the Augsburg Interim from 1548, the county becomes an
imperial fief.
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Introduced in 1560, the system of imperial states replaced
the now-outdated feudal system, with an imperial circle
('reichskreis') being a regional grouping of the imperial
states (click or tap on map to view full sized)
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1563 - 1613 |
Simon VI |
Son. Succeeded aged 9. A true Renaissance man. |
1563 - 1579 |
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Hermann Simon of Pyrmont |
Uncle and regent. |
1602/1605 |
Lippe becomes a Calvinist state, which leads to extensive disagreements with
the Free Town of Lemgo (also a member of the Hanseatic League). Lemgo
refuses to switch from Lutheranism to Calvinism. It takes until 1617 and the
Peace of Röhrentrup to reach an agreement. |
1613 |
With the death of Simon VI, Lippe is divided in four:
Lippe-Detmold (held by the senior line
of descent under Simon VII),
Lippe-Brake
(passed to the next oldest son, Otto), Lippe-Schwalenberg (held by the next in line,
Hermann, who is included in the next section of this list), and
Lippe-Alverdissen
(held by the youngest, Philip I). Each division retains the status of a county. |
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County of Lippe-Detmold (& Lippe-Schwalenberg)
AD 1613 - 1789
Count Simon VI had been a Renaissance count of
Lippe, supporting and encouraging the sciences
and creating the basis for the future Lippe State Library at Detmold. His death in
1613 saw the county divided between his four sons (the eldest, Bernard, predeceased
his father in 1602). Simon VII gained the lion's share in Lippe-Detmold. He moved
the capital back from his father's residence at Brake Castle to Detmold as Brake
itself had gone to his brother, Otto, as part of
Lippe-Brake.
The next division was Lippe-Schwalenberg, which was held by Hermann, and then
Lippe-Alverdissen
which went to the youngest son, Philip I. He married Landgravine Sophie of
Hessen-Kassel, daughter of Maurice the Learned, in 1640, and went on to
found Schaumberg-Lippe in 1640 with a capital at Bückeburg. |
1613 - 1627 |
Simon VII |
Eldest son of Simon VI. First count of Lippe-Detmold. |
1613 - 1620 |
Hermann IV |
Brother. Count of Lippe-Schwalenberg-Sternberg. Died? |
1618 |
The beginnings of the Thirty Years' War in Central Europe sees a series
of destructive conflicts take place. Originally this is as a result of the
Reformation and its Papal
response, the Counter Reformation, but later it also serves as a continuation of the
Bourbon-Habsburg
struggle for supremacy. Simon VIII does his best to keep Lippe neutral so
that it might be spared as much as possible, but it suffers nevertheless
when imperial troops are billeted within its borders.
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Despite Simon's best efforts, Lippe could not entirely be spared
from the ravages of the brutal Thirty Years' War (1618-1648)
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1620 - 1624 |
Lippe-Schwalenberg is reunited with Lippe-Detmold, presumably upon the
untimely death of Simon's younger brother, Hermann. Four years later, in
1624, Simon VII passes a large dairy farm onto the bailiff of Schwalenberg
(one that had been created out of several failing farms by Simon VI in the
early years of the century). This is later sold to Simon's widow, Maria
Magdalena, and her youngest son, Jobst Hermann, builds the manor of
Biesterfeld there, creating the subsidiary line of
Lippe-Sternberg-Schwalenberg. |
1627 |
When Simon VII dies, his son, the youthful Simon Louis, succeeds him. As he is not
yet of age, a regent is selected for him in the form of Count Christian of Waldeck,
his step-grandfather. The most likely contender for the role is Otto of
Lippe-Brake, but
he cannot be selected due to the ongoing strained relationship between Detmold and
Brake. Simon Louis' maternal uncle, John Louis of
Nassau-Hadamar, is not asked as he is a Catholic. |
1627 - 1636 |
Simon Louis |
Son. Aged 17 at accession. Died of smallpox. |
1627 - 1631 |
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Christian |
Step-grandfather (and father-in-law in 1631). Count of
Waldeck. |
1634 - 1636 |
Simon Louis has gradually been moving away from the neutral pose adopted by
his father. After courting the powerful
Swedes, he suffers
from the presence of their troops in the region as part of the First
Polish-Swedish
War and their ongoing territorial conflicts with the
Holy Roman empire in
Pomerania.
Schwalenberg Castle is attacked and looted in 1634, and Varenholz Castle
suffers the same fate in 1636. |
1636 - 1650 |
Simon Philip |
Son. Aged 4 at accession. Died of smallpox. |
1636 - ? |
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Christian |
Step-great-grandfather and grandfather. Count of Waldeck. |
1636 |
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John Barnard |
Brother-in-law of Catherine of Waldeck. Claimed the
regency. |
? - 1650 |
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Catherine of Waldeck |
Mother and regent of Simon Philip. |
1643 |
Count Otto V of Holstein-Schaumburg dies without having produced an heir. The county of
Schaumburg is now divided between Brunswick-Lüneburg,
Hessen-Kassel, and Lippe, and Count Philip I of
Lippe-Alverdissen
is able to found the
Schaumburg-Lippe
line of the House of Lippe to incorporate the expanded territory that comes
to him. |
1648 |
The near-constant warfare and rapid change brought about by the Reformation
and Counter Reformation is finally ended by the Peace of Westphalia.
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This engraving by Matthäus Merian shows the town of Detmold in
1647, but which time it had been Lippe's capital for almost two
hundred years
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1650 - 1652 |
John Bernard |
Uncle of Simon Philip and regency claimant in 1636. |
1652 - 1666 |
Herman Adolph |
Brother. |
1663 - 1664 |
The Fourth Austro-Turkish War ends in the Battle of
Saint Gotthard on 1 August 1664 in which the
Ottomans
are defeated by
Austrian troops under Raimondo Montecuccoli (with a company of 140 men
being led by Count Herman Adolph). The Ottomans are forced to agree to the
Peace of Vasvár with Austria. |
1665 - 1697 |
Simon Henry |
Son. Co-ruler 1665-1666. |
1681 |
When Count Philip I of
Lippe-Alverdissen dies, his territory of
Schaumberg-Lippe (the former, enhanced, Lippe-Alverdissen) is divided
between his sons. Schaumberg-Lippe goes to Friedrich Christian, while the
title of Lippe-Alverdissen is revived for the younger son, Philipp Ernst, who
rebrands it Schaumburg-Lippe-Alverdissen. |
1697 - 1718 |
Frederick Adolphus |
Son. |
1709 |
Upon the death of the childless Count Louis Ferdinand, the territory of
Lippe-Brake
is reunited with that of Lippe-Detmold under Count Frederick Adolphus. |
1718 - 1734 |
Simon Henry Adolphus |
Son. |
1720 |
Holy Roman Emperor
Charles VI offers to raise Simon Henry to the rank of imperial prince for
the reasonable figure of 4,400 talers. Unfortunately, not only can Simon
Henry not raise the money, his finances are so fragile that he is forced to
sell off two lordships in the
Netherlands in 1725, those of Amiede and Vianen, and pledge Sternberg
Castle to Brunswick-Lüneburg in 1733. Opinion is divided on whether this
financial trouble is due to alleged profligacy by the count or hardships
inflicted by the Thirty Years' War that the count copes with admirably by
raising money where and when he can. |
1734 - 1782 |
Simon Augustus |
Son. Aged 7 at accession. |
1734 - 1756 |
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Johanna Wilhelmine of Nassau-Idstein |
Mother and regent. Died at Brake Castle in Lemgo. |
1736 |
Sternberg-Schwalenberg
is divided, with probably the majority of its territory going to form Lippe-Biesterfeld
(which may already exist as it is sometimes applied to Jobst Herman of
Sternberg-Schwalenberg). The remainder is used in 1762 to form
Lippe-Weissenfeld. The descendants of Rudolf Ferdinand are known as the
lords of Lippe-Biesterfeld. |
1762 |
A cadet branch of the counts of
Lippe-Biesterfeld
becomes the first count of
Lippe-Weissenfeld in the
form of Ferdinand Johann Ludwig. At the same time, the lord of Lippe-Biesterfeld
is raised to the rank of count. |
1782 - 1789 |
Leopold I |
Son. Raised to the rank of prince of
Lippe (1789). |
1789 |
The counts of Lippe-Detmold are raised to the rank of 'Prince
of the Empire', the title for the head of noble families rather than the offspring
of monarchs. |
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Princes of Lippe
AD 1789 - 1918
The county of Lippe-Detmold was raised
to a principality in 1789. Despite already being the senior line of descent for
the House of Lippe, it was clearly now superior to the other branches of the family,
and so the designation of Detmold was dropped from the title. The town of Detmold
itself remained the capital of the new principality. |
1789 - 1802 |
Leopold I |
Former count of Lippe-Detmold.
First prince of Lippe. |
1802 - 1851 |
Leopold II |
Son. |
1802 - 1820 |
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Pauline von Anhalt-Bernburg |
Mother and regent. |
1807 |
The county of
Schaumberg-Lippe
is raised to a principality, while Lippe is part of the Confederation of the Rhine,
dominated by Napoleon Bonaparte's
French First Empire. |
1815 |
Lippe
sends a battalion of infantry and a battalion of landwehr (militia) along
with three companies of the Detmold Landwehr and the
Schaumburg-Lippe
Battalion to join the allied forces that array themselves against
France
during the Hundred Days. The units are
attached to the Anhalt-Thuringian Infantry Brigade, part of the Army of
North Germany under the command of General Kleist von Nollendorf. As a
result of the subsequent Congress of Vienna, Lippe becomes a member of the
German Confederation.
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Lippe's position in northern Germany placed it in the path of
Prussian expansionism in the nineteenth century, making it more
likely that it would be gobbled up
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1851 - 1875 |
Leopold III |
Son of Leopold II. Died childless. |
1854 |
All of the main forms of worship in Lippe are granted equal status,
including the main two forms of Protestantism, Lutherism and Calvinism, as
well as the
Catholic Church. This allows Catholics to have their own parishes for
the first time since the Reformation. |
1866 |
Prussia
fights the Austro-Prussian War against
Austria,
essentially as a decider to see which of the two powers will be dominant in
Central Europe. Austria and its southern German allies are crushed in just
seven weeks (giving the conflict its alternative title of the Seven
Weeks' War), and Prussia is now unquestionably dominant. Bismark oversees
the seizure of four of Austria's northern German allies, and the new,
Prussian-dominated North German Confederation gains members in Lippe-Detmold and
Schaumburg-Lippe
Bückeburg, among many others. |
1870 - 1871 |
The
exile of Queen Isabella of
Spain to
France starts a
remarkable chain of events. Isabella's abdication on 25 June 1870 leads to
the Franco-Prussian war when France refuses to accept the possibility of the
Prussian
Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen gaining the Spanish
throne. French troops are humiliated by Prussia's ultra-modern army and the
siege of Paris brings about the downfall of its empire. Following the victory,
the Second Reich (Germanic
empire) is declared by Prussia, which now displaces
Austria
as the main Germanic power, as well as being the dominant power throughout
central and Western Europe. Lippe is incorporated into the empire as a
client state. |
1875 - 1895 |
Woldemar |
Brother. |
1895 - 1905 |
Alexander |
Brother. Suffered from mental illness, so regency council
ruled. |
1895 |
With
the accession of the incapacitated Alexander, the 'Lippe-Detmold
Question' is first raised. Its significance lies not so much in the
relatively obscure successional conflict that is triggered in Lippe but in
the way it highlights certain weaknesses within the administrative structure
of the
German empire. |
1895 - 1897 |
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Adolphus |
Regent. Prince to-be of
Schaumburg-Lippe. |
1897 |
With Prince Alexander remaining childless, his eventual death as the senior member
of the House of Lippe means that the Lippe-Detmold branch of the family will become
extinct. The future Count Leopold of Lippe-Biesterfeld
is due to succeed as prince and the head of the house, and is also in line to gain
the first physical territory for his branch of the family, but the neighbouring
principality of
Schaumburg-Lippe
disputes the assumed succession. As Schaumburg-Lippe is junior not only to the
Lippe-Biesterfeld line, but also the Lippe-Weissenfeld
line, a ruling goes in favour of Ernest of Lippe-Biesterfeld. Adolphus of
Schaumburg-Lippe steps down as regent in favour of the victorious Ernest. |
1897 - 1904 |
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Ernest |
Regent. Count of
Lippe-Biesterfeld. Died. |
1904 - 1905 |
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Leopold |
Regent. Count of
Lippe-Biesterfeld. Succeeded as Leopold
IV. |
1905 |
The imperial court is forced to rule on the decision of 1897 that had upheld the
claim by Ernest of Lippe-Biesterfeld
to be the rightful successor to Alexander. As Alexander is the last of the Lippe-Detmold
line, and the only other claimant, Count Adolphus of
Schaumburg-Lippe, is a
junior member of the Lippe princely house, Ernest's claim is upheld. |
1905 - 1918 |
Leopold IV |
Dispossessed of title in 1918. First
Hereditary prince of Lippe. |
1914 |
The German empire
(which includes Lippe-Detmold,
Lippe-Biesterfeld,
Lippe-Weissenfeld, and
Schaumburg-Lippe)
moves swiftly to support its ally,
Austria-Hungary,
in a long-anticipated Great War (later more readily known as the
First World War, or World War I). At the start it is successful
against the Russian
invasion of Prussia, routing their army at the Battle of Tannenberg, and in
the west its armies reach the northern outskirts of Paris before they are
stopped by the armies of
Britain
and France, together
with the small Belgian army.
Turkey
joins the German cause on 31 October, but
Afghanistan remains neutral, refusing to attempt an attack on British
India.
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Kaiser Wilhelm II of Prussia and the German empire inspects his
troops on the eve of war in 1914, a war that Lippe had no chance
of escaping
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1918 |
Emperor William II, at the Western Front with his troops from 29 October
following riots in Berlin, is forced to abdicate on 9 November, signalling
the end of the House of
Hohenzollern
in power. The next day he flees to neutral
Holland,
and the First World War officially ends on 11 November. The princes
of Lippe and
Schaumburg-Lippe
are forced to abdicate as part of the creation of the
Weimar republic,
ending seven hundred and ninety-five years of princely rule of Lippe. Lippe
becomes a free state. |
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Hereditary Princes of Lippe
AD 1918 - Present Day
Founded as the lordship of Lippe
in 1123, the modern region of Ostwestfalen-Lippe (East Wesphalia-Lippe) contains the
cities of Bielefeld, Detmold (the former capital), and Paderborn. The
present Kreis Lippe within the Regierungsbezirk Detmold (administrative
district) in Nordrhein-Westfalen (North Rhine-Westphalia) is almost
identical to the territory of the principality of
Lippe which preceded it.
Following collapse at the end of the First World War, Germany became a
republic with a new government, proclaimed on 9 November 1918, but without a
president until 1919. All the princely states in Germany were abolished and,
locally, Detmold served as the capital of the Free State of Lippe. This was
an autonomous region which retained a level of independence in local affairs
until January 1947, when the occupying forces of the
British sector merged Lippe into the newly-formed state of North
Rhine-Westphalia. The region paid host to a number of British military bases
during the occupation period.
After being forced to abdicate as prince of Lippe on 12 November 1018, Leopold
retreated to the residential palace, the Residenzschloss Detmold, which remained
in the possession of the prince and his family. The hereditary princes of Lippe
still live there today as their primary residence. The title of count of
Lippe-Biesterfeld
was merged with the principality of Lippe in 1905, when Leopold succeeded the now
extinct princely line. However, on 24 February 1916, Leopold upgraded various titles,
with that of 'Count of Lippe-Biesterfeld' becoming 'His Serene Highness, Prince'. The
same honour was bestowed on the same day upon the counts of
Lippe-Weissenfeld,
while other members of the family received upgraded titles on 9 November 1918.
The princes of
Schaumburg-Lippe
also lost their powers but retained their title, and their line survives to
the present day. |
1918 - 1949 |
Leopold IV |
Former prince of Lippe. |
1919 |
Germany adopts the democratic 'Weimar constitution' following the abolition
of the German
empire. This new Germany consists of the former German kingdoms and
duchies, all of which have now been abolished, including
Baden,
Bavaria,
Hesse,
Lippe,
Saxony and
Württemberg. |
1928 |
Prince Leopold's three sons by his first wife sign up to the National
Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP). The eldest, Prince Ernst, is
reputedly the first German prince to do so. |
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Bernard |
Prince of
Lippe-Biesterfeld. m the
Netherlands' Princess Juliana. |
1937 |
Prince Bernhard of
Lippe-Biesterfeld,
son of Leopold's brother, Bernard, marries Princess Juliana of the
Netherlands.
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The marriage between Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld and
Princess Juliana of the Netherlands was a major social event in
1937
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1945 - 1949 |
Following the Nazi surrender,
Germany
is occupied by the forces of Soviet
Russia, the
United States,
Britain, and
France
until 1949. The victorious Russians take
East Prussia
and annexe it directly to the state. The German population either flees or is
expelled and is replaced by an imported Russian population. In 1947, Lippe is
merged into the state of North Rhine-Westphalia by the regional British authorities. |
1948 |
Queen Wilhelmina
of the
Netherlands abdicates to make way for her daughter, Juliana. With the
latter having married Prince Bernhard of
Lippe-Biesterfeld
in 1937, their children are technically members of the House of Lippe, but officially
they remain part of the House of Orange-Nassau. |
1949 |
Both
of Leopold's eldest two sons had contracted unequal marriages, so Leopold
writes them out of his will, making his youngest son, Armin, by his second
wife his heir. When Leopold dies on 30 December 1949, Armin becomes the head
of the House of Lippe and possessor of Schloss Detmold. |
|
Ernst |
Prince of Lippe. Heir, but disinherited due to unequal
marriage. |
|
Chlodwig |
Brother. Prince of Lippe. Disinherited. |
1949 - 1953 |
Armin / Armand |
Half-brother. Born 1924. |
1953 |
Armin
renounces his position as head of the princely house in favour of his older
half-brother Leopold (the only one of the three half-brothers not to have
officially been dispossessed by his father - instead he had simply been
passed over). This move is far from popular, and several other princes begin
legal proceedings to prevent it. |
1953 - 1958 |
Leopold V |
Half-brother. |
1958 |
In
the game of princely musical chairs, Leopold now steps down in favour of his
elder brother, the disinherited Ernst. Later in the same year Ernst takes
steps to end the confusion by convening a family council. It is decided that
the eldest of all of Lippe's princes still alive in
Germany will henceforth
be head of the House of Lippe. The fifty-eight year-old Prince Simon Casimir
therefore becomes the hereditary prince of Lippe. |
1958 |
Ernst |
Elder brother. |
1958 - 1980? |
Simon Casimir |
Prince of
Lippe-Biesterfeld. Died 1980. |
|
Ernst
comes to regret his decision of 1958, qualifying it by announcing that all
princes of Lippe should be considered for the role of head of the house, and
not just those living in
Germany.
At a point between 1958 and 1990 he re-assumes his former role as head of the house
(possibly at the death of Simon Casimir in 1980), although this seems not to be with
universal agreement. Many still apparently view Armin as the head of the house, and
his son Stephan as his heir. |
1980 - Present |
Armin / Armand |
Restored. |
1980? - 1990 |
Ernst |
Made a claim of restoration. Disputed head of the house. |
1990 - Present |
Friedrich Wilhelm |
Son. Continued his father's claim as head of the House of
Lippe. |
|
Stephan |
Son of Armin and heir. Born 1959. |
1990 |
With
the death of Ernst, his son, Friedrich Wilhelm continues his claim to be
head of the House of Lippe, while the acknowledged head seems to be Armin,
perhaps restored following the death of the elderly Prince Simon Casimir.
However, Friedrich Wilhelm's offspring are all girls, so his claim is likely
to end with him, leaving Armin and his heir, Stephan, as undisputed heads of
the house. |
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