Margraviate of Landsberg | ||||||||||
Markgrafschaft Landsberg | ||||||||||
State of the Holy Roman Empire | ||||||||||
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Margraviate of Landsberg (Osterland) after 1261
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Capital | Weißenfels | |||||||||
Government | Margraviate | |||||||||
Margraves | ||||||||||
• | 1265–1285 | Theodoric of Landsberg | ||||||||
• | 1285–1291 | Frederick Tuta | ||||||||
Historical era | Middle Ages | |||||||||
• | Theodoric I, "Margrave of Landsberg" | 1156 | ||||||||
• | Partitioned from Lusatia | 1261 | ||||||||
• | Acquired by Margrave Otto IV of Brandenburg | 1291 | ||||||||
• | Inherited by Sophia of Brandenburg-Stendal | 1318 | ||||||||
• | Sold to Margrave Frederick II of Meissen | 1347 | ||||||||
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The Margraviate of Landsberg (German: Mark Landsberg) was a march of the Holy Roman Empire that existed from the 13th to the 14th century under the rule of the Wettin dynasty. It was named after Landsberg Castle in present-day Saxony-Anhalt.
The territory located in the historic Osterland region comprised the westernmost part of the March of Lusatia (Saxon Eastern March) between the rivers Saale and Mulde. It comprised the margravial fortress of Landsberg and the nearby town of Delitzsch, as well as the adjacent Leipzig area formerly part of the Margraviate of Meissen. It stretched down to the former County of Groitzsch in the south, and up to Sangerhausen in the west, including the town of Weißenfels which became the margravial residence. It also comprised the castle of Grimma and the former Pleissnerland town of Zwickau.
Upon the death of Margrave Conrad in 1156, the Wettin domains of Meissen and Lusatia were re-arranged. Conrad's younger son Margrave Theodoric I of Lusatia had Landsberg Castle erected until 1174 and began to style himself a "Margrave of Landsberg".
However, an Imperial State in its own right was not established until in 1261, when Margrave Henry the Illustrious (against legal provisions) split off the western Landsberg territory from the March of Lusatia as a separate margraviate for his second son Theodoric. After Dietrich's son Frederick Tuta had died without male heirs in 1291, his uncle Margrave Albert II of Meissen sold it to the Ascanian margrave Otto IV of Brandenburg.