*** Welcome to piglix ***

House of Anhalt

House of Ascania
Blason Principauté d'Anhalt (XIIIe siècle).svg
Country Germany, Russia, Ukraine, Estonia, Latvia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Lithuania
Founded 1036
Founder Esiko, Count of Ballenstedt
Final ruler Joachim Ernst, Duke of Anhalt
Deposition 1918 (Duchy of Anhalt)
Current head Eduard, Prince of Anhalt
Titles
House of Ascania
Wappen Deutsches Reich - Herzogtum Anhalt (Großes).png

HH The Prince of Anhalt

  • HH Princess Julia Katherina, Mrs Bernath
  • HH Princess Julia Eilika, Mrs Harte
  • HH Princess Julia Felicitas

HH Princess Edda, Mrs. Darboven


The House of Ascania (German: Askanier) is a dynasty of German rulers. It is also known as the House of Anhalt, which refers to its longest-held possession, Anhalt.

The Ascanians are named after Ascania (or Ascaria) Castle, known as Schloss Askanien in German, which was located near and named after Aschersleben. The castle was the seat of the County of Ascania, a title that was later subsumed into the titles of the princes of Anhalt.

The earliest known member of the house, Esiko, Count of Ballenstedt, first appears in a document of 1036. He is assumed to have been a grandson (through his mother) of Odo I, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark. From Odo, the Ascanians inherited large properties in the Saxon Eastern March.

Esiko's grandson was Otto, Count of Ballenstedt, who died in 1123. By Otto's marriage to Eilika, daughter of Magnus, Duke of Saxony, the Ascanians became heirs to half of the property of the House of Billung, former dukes of Saxony.

Otto's son, Albert the Bear, became, with the help of his mother's inheritance, the first Ascanian duke of Saxony in 1139. However, he soon lost control of Saxony to the rival House of Guelph.

Albert inherited the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1157 from its last Wendish ruler, Pribislav, and he became the first Ascanian margrave. Albert, and his descendants of the House of Ascania, then made considerable progress in Christianizing and Germanizing the lands. As a borderland between German and Slavic cultures, the country was known as a march.


...
Wikipedia

...