From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brunswick-Lüneburg (German: Braunschweig-Lüneburg, also English:
Brunswick-Lunenburg)
was a historical ducal state
during the period from the late Middle Ages until the late Early Modern era within the North-Western
domains of the Holy Roman Empire.
The main city of this feudal state was Lüneburg through much of the late Middle Ages,
Braunschweig
(Brunswick) - which itself lay in the duchy of Wolfenbuettel - being the name of
the family. Eventually Hanover, currently the capital of the federal state (or in German,
"Land")
of Lower Saxony
(Niedersachsen), grew into a city that economically
dominated the region and later dukes made it their main
administrative seat while keeping the family seat in the historic
domain, hence giving one reason of the change to the title when the
family ascended to the more recent and more prestigious rank of
"Elector".
Duchy of
Brunswick-Lüneburg
The state emerged from the inheritance of the first Saxon state of
Henry the Lion
in the late 12th century. In 1180 Henry was deposed by Emperor Frederick
Barbarossa as Duke of Saxony, but retained various Lower Saxon
lands which were inherited by his children as the Duchies of
Brunswick and Lüneburg.
The first duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg was Otto I, grandchild
of Henry the Lion, who reigned from 1235 onwards. After 1267 his
sons split the duchy into two parts, the Lüneburg-Celle line of John and the
Wolfenbüttel line of his brother Albert, which
later became a multitude of smaller states. All of them were ruled
by the Welf or Guelph dynasty and
maintained close relations—not infrequently by the practice of
marrying cousins— a practice far more common than one might think,
even among the peasantry of the Holy Roman Empire, for the salic inheritance laws in
effect, encouraged the practice of retaining control of lands and
benefits. The centres of power moved in the meantime from
Braunschweig and Lüneburg to Celle and Wolfenbüttel.
While there is a total of about a dozen subdivisions that
existed, some of them were only dynastic and were not recognised as
states of the Empire, which at one time had over 1500 such legally
recognized entities. In the List of Reichstag
participants (1792), the following four subdivisions of
Brunswick-Lüneburg had recognized representation:
- Lüneburg-Celle, created in 1269,
inherited in 1705 by George Louis of Calenberg.
- Calenberg and Göttingen, merged under Eric
I of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel in 1495. George, younger
brother of Duke Ernest II of Lüneburg-Celle
received Calenberg in 1635 and chose Hanover as his residence. His son Ernest Augustus was appointed Elector of Hanover in 1692.
- Grubenhagen,
established in 1291 under Henry the
Admirable, son of Albert of
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, adjudicated to Christian of
Lüneburg-Celle in 1617.
- The Duchy of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, created in 1269,
predecessor of the Duchy of Brunswick. Originally
called the Principality of Brunswick, the Dukes relocated their
residence to Wolfenbüttel in 1432.
By 1705 only two Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg survived, one
ruling Calenberg, Celle, and other possessions, and the other
ruling Wolfenbüttel.
From Lüneburg to
Hanover
One of the dynastic lines was that of the dukes of Lüneburg-Celle, who in 1635 acquired Calenberg for George, a junior
member of the family who set up residence in the city of Hanover. His son Christian
Louis and his brothers inherited Celle in 1648 and thereafter
shared it and Calenberg between themselves; a closely related
branch of the family ruled separately in Wolfenbüttel.
As a latter day development, what became the Electorate of
Hanover was initially called the Elector of
Brunswick-Lunenberg when the Holy Roman Emperor appointed Ernest Augustus, Duke of
Brunswick-Lunenberg an Elector in 1696 (two years before his
death) in a somewhat controversial move to increase the number of
Protestant electors—thereby offending the entrenched interests of
the extant prince-electors who would no longer be
so few—. As with most matters in Europe during these times, this
was part of the centuries-long religious unrest accompanied by
outright warfare (see Thirty Years' War) triggered by the
zealous advocates on either side of the Protestant Reformation and the
Catholic Counter-Reformation. Clearly, these
masked dynastic ambitions of grasping noblemen.
The territories of Calenberg and Lüneburg-Celle were made an Electorate by the
Emperor Leopold I in 1692
in expectation of the imminent inheritance of Celle by the Duke of
Calenberg, though the actual dynastic union of the territories did
not occur until 1705 under his son George I, and the Electorate was
not officially approved by the Imperial Diet until 1708.
The resulting state was known under many different names
(Brunswick-Lüneburg, Calenberg, Calenberg-Celle; its ruler was
often known as the "Elector of
Hanover". Coincidentally, in 1701 the Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg found himself in
the line of succession for the British crown later confirmed in
1707, by the Act of Union, and inherited that
creating a personal union of the two crowns in 20
October 1714.
After a little over a decade, the matter of the disputed
electorate was settled upon the heir, and the new Duke of
Brunswick-Lüneburg (acceded as duke on 23 January 1698), George Louis I was able to
style himself the Elector of Brunswick and
Lüneburg from 1708. It was not just happenstance but
similar religious driven politics that brought about the
circumstance that he was also been put into line of succession for
the British crown by the Settlement Act
of 1701— which was written to ensure a Protestant succession to
the thrones of Scotland and England in a day when anti-Catholic
sentiment ran high in much of Northern Europe and much of Great Britain. In
the event, George I succeeded his second cousin Queen Anne of
Great Britain — the last reigning member of the House of
Stuart, and subsequently formed a personal union from 1 August of 1714
between the British crown and the duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg
(electorate of Hanover) which would last until well after the end
of the Napoleonic wars more than a century
later—including even through the dissolution of the Holy Roman
Empire and the rise of a new successor kingdom. In that manner, the
"Electorate of Hanover" (the core duchy) was enlarged with the
addition of other lands and became the kingdom of
Hanover in 1814 at the peace conferences (Congress of
Vienna) settling the future shape of Europe in the aftermath of
the Napoleonic wars.
History of
the relationship to the British crown
The first Hanoverian King of England, George I of Great Britain was
the reigning Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, and was
finally made an official and recognized prince-elector of the Holy Roman Empire
in 1708. His possessions were enlarged in 1706 when the hereditary
lands of the Calenberg branch of the Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg
merged with the lands of the Lüneburg-Celle branch to form the
state of Hanover. Subsequently, George I was referred to as Elector
of Hanover.
In 1700 and 1701, when the English Parliament had addressed the
question of an orderly succession, with a particular religious bias
toward a Protestant ruler, from the childless ruling
Queen Anne (House of Stuart), it passed by the
provisions of the Act of Settlement 1701 to Sophia of
Hanover, granddaughter of James I. Sophia predeceased Queen
Anne by a few weeks, but her son and heir, George I, succeeded as
King of Great Britain when Anne, his second cousin, died in August
of 1714. Great Britain and Hanover remained united in personal union
until the accession of Queen Victoria in
1837.
George I was followed by his son George II and great-grandson
George
III. The last mentioned retained the position of elector even
after the Holy Roman Empire was abolished by its last emperor in
1806. George III contested the validity of the dissolution of the
Empire and maintained separate consular offices and staff for the
Electorate of Hanover until the peace conferences at the war's end.
After the fall of Napoleon, George III regained
his lands plus lands from Prussia as King of Hanover,
whilst giving up some other smaller scattered territories.
After the Congress of
Vienna
After the end of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, Calenberg-Celle
and its possessions were added to by the Congress of
Vienna ending the Napoleonic war being born anew under the name
of Kingdom of Hanover
(including Brunswick-Lüneburg). During the first half of the
nineteenth century, the Kingdom of Hanover was ruled as personal union by
the British
crown from its creation under George III of the United
Kingdom, the last elector of Hanover until the death of William
IV in 1837. At that point, the crown of Hanover went to
William's younger brother, Ernest, Duke of Cumberland and
Teviotdale under the Salic laws requiring the next male heir to
inherit, whereas the British throne was inherited by his first
cousin, Queen Victoria.
Subsequently, the kingdom was lost in 1866 by his son George V of
Hanover during the Austro-Prussian War when it was
annexed by Prussia, and
became the Prussian province of Hanover.
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
The Wolfenbüttel line retained its independence, except for the
period from 1807 to 1813, when both it and Hanover were merged into
the Napoleonic Kingdom of Westphalia. The Congress of
Vienna of 1815 turned it into an independent country under the
name Duchy of Brunswick. The Duchy
of Brunswick remained independent and joined first the North German Confederation
and in 1871 then the German Empire.
When the main line of descent became extinct in 1885, the German Emperor withheld the
proper heir, the Crown Prince of
Hanover, from taking control, instead installing a regent.
Decades later, the families were reconciled with the marriage of the Crown Prince's
son to the Emperor's only
daughter, and the Emperor allowed his son-in-law to assume rule
(his father having renounced his own right).
Today both polities are part of the federal state of Lower Saxony
(Niedersachsen), Germany.
Dukes of
Brunswick and Lüneburg 1235-1428
See also
For later rulers see:
See further:
External
links