Henry the Lion

Henry the Lion (German: Heinrich der Löwe; 1129/1131[1] – 6 August 1195[1]) was a member of the Welf dynasty who ruled as the duke of Saxony as Henry III and Bavaria as Henry XII[2] from 1142 and 1156, respectively, until 1180.

Henry the Lion
Depiction in the Gospels of Henry the Lion
Duke of Saxony
Reign1142–1180
PredecessorAlbert the Bear
SuccessorBernard III
Duke of Bavaria
Reign1156–1180
PredecessorHenry XI
SuccessorOtto I
Bornc. 1129
Ravensburg
Died6 August 1195(1195-08-06) (aged 65–66)
Brunswick
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1147; div. 1162)
    (m. 1168; died 1189)
    Issue
    HouseWelf
    FatherHenry X, Duke of Bavaria
    MotherGertrude of Süpplingenburg

    Henry was one of the most powerful German princes of his time, until the rival Hohenstaufen dynasty succeeded in isolating him and eventually deprived him of his duchies of Bavaria and Saxony during the reign of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa and of Frederick's son and successor Henry VI.

    At the height of his reign, Henry ruled over a vast territory stretching from the coast of the North and Baltic seas to the Alps, and from Westphalia to Pomerania. Henry achieved this great power in part by his political and military acumen and in part through the legacies of his four grandparents.

    Family background

    Born in Ravensburg, in 1129 or 1131,[1] he was the son of Henry the Proud,[1] duke of Bavaria and Saxony, who was the heir of the Billungs, former dukes of Saxony. Henry's mother was Gertrude,[1] only daughter of Emperor Lothair II and Empress Richenza, heiress of the Saxon territories of Northeim and the properties of the Brunones, counts of Brunswick.[1]

    Henry's father died in 1139, aged 32, when Henry was still a child. King Conrad III had dispossessed Henry the Proud of his duchies in 1138 and 1139, handing Saxony to Albert the Bear and Bavaria to Leopold of Austria. This was because Henry the Proud had been his rival for the Crown in 1138.[1]

    Rule

    Contemporary depiction of Henry the Lion from the Historia Welforum

    Henry the Lion did not relinquish his claims to his inheritance, and Conrad returned Saxony to him in 1142.[1] A participant in the 1147 Wendish Crusade,[1] Henry also reacquired Bavaria by a decision of the new emperor, Frederick Barbarossa, in 1156. However, the East Mark was not returned and became the Duchy of Austria.[1]

    Henry was the founder of Munich (1157)[1] and Lübeck (1159);[1] he also founded and developed numerous other cities in Northern Germany and Bavaria, a.o. Augsburg, Hildesheim, Stade, Kassel, Güstrow, Lüneburg, Salzwedel, Schwerin and Brunswick. In Brunswick, his capital, he had a bronze lion, his heraldic animal, erected in the courtyard of his castle Dankwarderode in 1166—the first bronze statue north of the Alps. Later, he had Brunswick Cathedral built close to the statue.

    Henry's duchies Saxony and Bavaria

    In 1147, Henry married Clementia of Zähringen, thereby gaining her hereditary territories in Swabia. He divorced her in 1162, apparently under pressure from Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, who did not cherish Guelphish possessions in his home area and offered Henry several fortresses in Saxony in exchange. In 1168, Henry married Matilda (1156–1189), the daughter of King Henry II of England and Duchess Eleanor of Aquitaine, and sister of King Richard I of England.[1]

    Henry faithfully supported Emperor Frederick in his attempts to solidify his hold on the Imperial Crown and his repeated wars with the cities of Lombardy and the popes, several times turning the tide of battle in Frederick's favor with his Saxon knights. During Frederick's first invasion of northern Italy, Henry took part, among the others, in the victorious sieges of Crema and Milan.

    In 1172, Henry took a pilgrimage to Jerusalem (June–July), meeting with the Knights Templar and Knights Hospitaller,[3][lower-alpha 1] and spending Easter of that year in Constantinople.[4] By December 1172, he was back in Bavaria[4] and, in 1174, he refused to aid Frederick in a renewed invasion of Lombardy because he was preoccupied with securing his own borders in the east. He did not consider these Italian adventures worth the effort, unless Barbarossa presented Henry with the Saxon imperial city Goslar: a request Barbarossa refused.

    Fall

    The now-secularised St Peter's Church at Petersberg Citadel, Erfurt, where Henry the Lion submitted to Barbarossa in 1181

    Barbarossa's expedition into Lombardy ultimately ended in failure. He bitterly resented Henry for failing to support him. Taking advantage of the hostility of other German princes to Henry, who had successfully established a powerful and contiguous state comprising Saxony, Bavaria and substantial territories in the north and east of Germany, Frederick had Henry tried in absentia for insubordination by a court of bishops and princes in 1180.

    Declaring that Imperial law overruled traditional German law, the court had Henry stripped of his lands and declared him an outlaw. Frederick then invaded Saxony with an Imperial army to bring Henry to his knees. Henry's allies deserted him, and he finally had to submit in November 1181 at an Imperial Diet in Erfurt. He was exiled from Germany in 1182 for three years, and stayed with his father-in-law in Normandy before being allowed back into Germany in 1185. At Whitsun 1184, he visited the Diet of Pentecost in Mainz, probably as a mediator for his father-in-law Henry II. He was exiled again in 1188. His wife Matilda died in 1189.

    When Frederick Barbarossa went on the Crusade of 1189, Henry returned to Saxony, mobilized an army of his faithful, and conquered the rich city of Bardowick as punishment for its disloyalty. Only the churches were left standing. Barbarossa's son, Emperor Henry VI, again defeated Duke Henry, but in 1194, with his end approaching, he made his peace with the Emperor, and returned to his much diminished lands around Brunswick, where he peacefully sponsored arts and architecture.

    Children

    By his first wife, Clementia of Zähringen (divorced 1162),[5] daughter of Duke Conrad I of Zähringen and Clemence of Namur, Henry had:[6]

    Wedding to Matilda as depicted in the Gospels of Henry the Lion

    By his second wife, Matilda (married 1168), daughter of King Henry II of England and Duchess Eleanor of Aquitaine:[8]

    Three other children are listed, by some sources, as having belonged to Henry and Matilda:

    • Eleanor (born 1178); died young
    • Ingibiorg (born 1180); died young
    • Son (b. & d. 1182)

    By his lover, Ida von Blieskastel, he had a daughter, Matilda, who married Lord Henry Borwin I of Mecklenburg.

    Legacy

    The Henry the Lion Bible is preserved in near-mint condition from the year 1170; it is located in the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel, a town in Lower Saxony.

    Henry the Lion remains a popular figure to this day.[11] During World War I, a nail man depicting Henry the Lion, called Eiserner Heinrich, was used in Brunswick to raise funds for the German war effort.

    Nazi propaganda later declared Henry an antecessor of the Nazi's Lebensraum policy[12] and turned Brunswick Cathedral and Henry's tomb into a "National Place of Consecration".[13]

    Folklore and fiction

    Henry and his lion (title page illustration from Karl Joseph Simrock's retelling of the folktale Geschichte des großen Helden und Herzogen Heinrich des Löwen und seiner wunderbaren höchst gefährlichen Reise (1844))

    Shortly after his death, Henry the Lion became the subject of a folktale, the so-called Heinrichssage.[14] The tale was later also turned into the opera Enrico Leone by Italian composer Agostino Steffani.[15] The Heinrichssage details a fictional account of Henry's pilgrimage to the Holy Land. A popular part of the tale deals with the Brunswick Lion. According to legend, Henry witnessed a fight between a lion and a dragon while on pilgrimage. He joins the lion in its fight and they slay the dragon. The faithful lion then accompanies Henry on his return home. After its master's death, the lion refuses all food and dies of grief on Henry's grave. The people of Brunswick then erect a statue in the lion's honour.[16][17][18] The legend of Henry the Lion also inspired the Czech tale of the knight Bruncvík, which is depicted on a column on Charles Bridge in Prague.

    The book The Pope's Rhinoceros (1996) by Lawrence Norfolk opens with an allegory of a planned ransack by Henry's army of the monastery at Usedom where purportedly a treasure was kept. However, the night before the attack the poorly maintained monastery and its treasures crumble into the sea as the result of a storm, and henceforth constituting a loss to the military expedition.

    Notes

    1. As Arnold of Lübeck reports in his Chronica Slavorum, he was present at the meeting of Henry the Lion with Seljuk Sultan of Rûm Kilij Arslan II during the former's pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 1172. When they met near Tarsus, the sultan embraced and kissed the German duke, reminding him that they were blood cousins ('amplexans et deosculans eum, dicens, eum consanguineum suum esse'). When the duke asked for details of this relationship, Kilij Arslan II informed him that 'a noble lady from the land of Germans married a king of Russia who had a daughter by her; this daughter's daughter arrived to our land, and I descend from her.'

    References

    1. Emmerson 2013, p. 320.
    2. Jordan, Karl H.E. "Henry III, duke of Bavaria and Saxony". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
    3. Sterns, Indrikis (1985). "The Teutonic Knights in the Crusader States". In Zacour, Norman P.; Hazard, Harry W. (eds.). A History of the Crusades: The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 319. ISBN 9780299091446.
    4. Lock, Peter (2013). The Routledge Companion to the Crusades. Routledge. p. 151. ISBN 9781135131449.
    5. Previté-Orton 1912, p. 329 note 3.
    6. Lyon 2013, p. 249.
    7. Loud 2019, p. 94.
    8. Nicholson 2001, p. 129.
    9. Baldwin, John W. (2002). Aristocratic Life in Medieval France. Johns Hopkins University. p. 46. ISBN 9780801869129.
    10. Lyon 2013, p. 245.
    11. Heine, Matthias (31 May 2008). "Barbarossas Staatsfeind Nummer eins". Die Welt (in German). Retrieved 9 May 2013.
    12. "Heinrich der Löwe". Vernetztes Gedächtnis (in German). Retrieved 9 May 2013.
    13. "About the Cathedral". Braunschweiger Dom. Archived from the original on 23 January 2018. Retrieved 9 May 2013.
    14. Brothers Grimm. "Heinrich der Löwe" [Henry the Lion – The Brothers' Grimm version]. Deutsche Sagen (in German). Projekt Gutenberg-DE. Retrieved 10 May 2013.
    15. "Enrico Leone (Heinrich der Löwe)". Klassica (in German). Retrieved 9 May 2013.
    16. Combellack, C. R. B. (1955), "Die Sage von Heinrich dem Löwen. Ihr Ursprung, Ihre Entwicklung und Ihre Überlieferung by Karl Hoppe", Comparative Literature, 7 (2): 160–162, doi:10.2307/1769130, JSTOR 1769130
    17. Jäckel, Dirk (2006), Der Herrscher als Löwe: Ursprung und Gebrauch eines politischen Symbols im Früh- und Hochmittelalter (in German), Cologne / Weimar: Böhlau Verlag, pp. 163–164
    18. Pollach, Günter (2011), Kaleidoskop der Mächtigen: Randglossen zu überlieferten Mythen und Episoden der Geschichte (in German), pp. 64–67

    Sources

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