Giselbert of Luxembourg
Giselbert of Luxembourg (c. 1007 – 14 August 1059) was count of Salm and of Longwy, then count of Luxemburg from 1047 to 1059. He was a son of Frederick of Luxembourg,[1] count of Moselgau, and perhaps of Ermentrude of Gleiberg.
At first count of Salm and of Longwy, on his brother Henry II's death he inherited the county of Luxembourg,[2] as well as providing the income for the abbeys of Saint-Maximin in Trier and Saint-Willibrord in Echternach. He got into an argument with the archbishop of Trier Poppon as to the abbaye Saint-Maximin, which was arbitrated by his brother Adalbero III, bishop of Metz.
In 1050, since the population of the town of Luxembourg had risen considerably, he expanded the city by building a new fortified wall around it.
By an unknown wife, he had:
- Conrad I, Count of Luxembourg[3] († 1086)
- Hermann of Salm († 1088), count of Salm, founder of the House of Salm
- daughter, married Thierry of Amensleben
- daughter, married Kuno, count of Oltingen
- Adalbéron († 1097 at Antioch), canon at Metz
- Jutta, married Udo of Limbourg
- Rudolph, abbot of Altmünster Abbey[3]
References
- Pit Péporté (2011). Constructing the Middle Ages: Historiography, Collective Memory and Nation-Building in Luxembourg. BRILL.
- Luxembourg Doing Business for Everyone Guide – Practical Information and Contacts. p. 39.
- Gades, John A. (1951). Luxembourg in the Middle Ages. Brill.