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County of Culemborg

Coordinates: 51°55′N 5°11′E / 51.917°N 5.183°E / 51.917; 5.183
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County of Culemborg
Heerlijkheid Culemborg
Graafschap Culemborg
1318–1798
Culemborg in 1665
Culemborg in 1665
StatusTerritory within the Holy Roman Empire (1318–1548)
Territory in the Burgundian Circle (1548–1648)
Vassal state of the Dutch Republic (1588-1720)
Located in the Nijmegen Quarter (1720-1795)
CapitalCulemborg
History 
• Established
1318
• Disestablished
1798
Succeeded by
Batavian Republic

The lordship of Culemborg (alternatively Kuilenburg and Cuylenburg), elevated to a county in 1555, in the current province of Gelderland, was an independent polity that until 1720 was in principle not part of the Dutch Republic, but in practice was largely dependent on it. It consisted of the city of Culemborg and the villages of Everdingen, Goilberdingen and Zijderveld.

History

In 1318, Culemborg received city rights from the lord, Jan van Beusichem.[1]: 143  From 1341, the lords of Culemborg also owned the domain of Werth (Weert) near Borken.[2] The coat of arms of this domain (black lion in silver) was included in the coat of arms of the domain of Culemborg (three red columns in gold).[3]

Shortly before the death of the last lady of Culemborg, Elisabeth van Culemborg (who died on December 9, 1555, and was married to Antoine of Lalaing), Emperor Charles V elevated the seigneury to a county.[1]: 144  Floris van Pallant, a grandson of her eldest sister, inherited the county.[1]: 144  Floris was also ruler in the county of Wittem and played an important role in the Dutch revolt against royal authority. In 1639 the county came to Count Philip Theodoor van Waldeck-Eisenberg through his mother Anna van Baden-Durlach.[1]: 145  The last Count of Waldeck-Eisenberg, George Frederik (who died in 1692) left the county to his daughter Louisa Anna.[3] Following her death without issue in 1714, the county passed to the son of her deceased sister Sophia Henriette, who had been married to Ernst of Saxe-Hildburghausen.[3] In 1709 the manor of Werth was sold to the Prince-Bishopric of Münster.[2]

Duke Ernst Frederik sold the county in 1720 to the Landstände of the Nijmegen Quarter, who in turn donated it to Stadtholder William IV in 1748.[1]: 146  The House of Orange still carries the title of Count or Countess of Culemborg.[citation needed]

Protestant Reformation

In the sixteenth century the Anabaptists were active in Culemborg, which the Diet fiercely opposed in 1539. In 1534/1535, a resident of Culemborg, Wolter Tesschenmacher, acted at the fall of the Anabaptist kingdom in Munster. In 1566, sympathizers of the iconoclasts manifested themselves with the active cooperation of the Count of Culemborg Floris van Pallandt. In the same year, Floris handed over the chapel of the Sint-Pietersgasthuis to the Calvinists, which became the first Protestant church building in the Netherlands.[4]: 10–11 

In the 1570s, the Johan Willemsvolk gang from Wesel in particular was active in Culemborg.[5]: 366  The People of Johan Willemsz was the largest splinter group of the Batenburg sect that combined political criticism with criminality in its actions. People lived by robbery and murder in the countryside in the border region of Holland and Germany.[6]

The free tolerance policy during the reformation had hardly worked in Gelre, in contrast to Holland. The free domain of Culemborg was an exception to this.[citation needed]

With the arrival of the German Van Waldeck-Eisenberg family as counts of Culemborg, Lutheranism entered Culemborg. In 1640, a preacher came from Germany to conduct services for the count's family and staff in the castle's court chapel.[1]: 189 

Lords and Counts of Culemborg

Reign Name Birth Death Family
1271-1309 Hubert III van Bosinchem/Hubert I van Culemborg 1309 Originating from the Van Bosinchem family
1296-1322 Jan I van Bosinchem 1322 Son
1322-1347 Hubert IV van Bosinchem/Hubert II van Culemborg 1347 Son
1347-1394 Gerard I 28-5-1394 Brother
1394-1422 Hubert III circa 1439 Son
1422-1452 Jan II 1-4-1452 Brother
1452-1480 Gerard II 9-3-1480 Brother
1480-1506 Jasper ca. 1456 21-11-1506 Son
1506-1555 Elizabeth 1475 9-12-1555 Daughter
1555-1598 Floris I van Pallandt 1537 29-9-1598 Nephew
1598-1639 Floris II van Pallandt 28-5-1578 4-6-1639 Son
1639-1645 Philip Dietrich, Count of Waldeck 2-11-1614 7-12-1645 Great-grandson of Floris I
1645-1664 Henry Wolrad, Count of Waldeck 28-3-1642 15-7-1664 Son
1664-1692 Prince Georg Friedrich of Waldeck 31-1-1620 19-11-1692 Paternal uncle
1692-1714 Louise Anna van Waldeck-Eisenberg 18-4-1653 30-6-1714 Daughter
1714-1720 Ernest Frederick I, Duke of Saxe-Hildburghausen 21-8-1681 9-3-1724 Nephew (sister's son)
1720-1748 Landstände of the Nijmegen Quarter Sold
1748-1766 William IV 1-9-1711 22-10-1751 Donation
1766-1795 William V 8-3-1748 9-4-1806 Son

With the arrival of the Batavian Republic, the counties ceased to exist. However, due to the donation to William IV, the head of the House of Orange-Nassau (the Dutch head of state) continues to use the title Count/Countess of Culemborg to this day.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f de Beaufort, R.F.P.; van den Berg, Herma M. (1968). "Culemborg". De Betuwe [Batavia] (in Dutch). The Hague: Staatsuitgeverij.
  2. ^ a b "Chronik der Stadt Werth" [Timeline of the City of Werth]. Heimatverein Werth (in German). 2014-10-01. Retrieved 2023-11-29.
  3. ^ a b c "De Heeren en Graven van Culemborg" [The Lords and Counts of Culemborg]. Genootschap AWK Voet van Oudheusden (in Dutch). Dec 2018. Retrieved 2023-11-29.
  4. ^ Borggreve, J.G.; Jakobs-Lommers, Yvonne E.; Lägers, Hans L.F., eds. (May 2010). "Middeleeuwse kerken en kapellen" [Medieval churches and chapels]. Sporen van religieus erfgoed in Culemborg [Traces of religious heritage in Culemborg] (PDF) (in Dutch). Culemborg: Oudheidkundig Genootschap A.W.K. Voet van Oudheusden. ISSN 0929-1334.
  5. ^ Frijhoff, W.T.M. (2003). "De protestantse Reformatie in de Nederkwartieren" [The Protestant Reformation in the Netherlands]. In Stinner, Johannes; Jacobs, I.D.; Evers, M. (eds.). Het hertogdom Gelre: geschiedenis, kunst en cultuur tussen Maas, Rijn en IJssel [The Duchy of Guelders: history, art and culture between Maas, Rhine and IJssel] (in Dutch). Utrecht: Stichting Matrijs. ISBN 9789053451953.
  6. ^ Dash, Mike (2002). Batavia's Graveyard: The True Story of the Mad Heretic Who Led History's Bloodiest Mutiny. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0575070242.

51°55′N 5°11′E / 51.917°N 5.183°E / 51.917; 5.183