Louis, Count of Stolberg

Count Louis of Stolberg (12 January 1505 in Stolberg – 1 September 1574 in Wertheim) was a German nobleman. He ruled Eppstein-Königstein from 1535 until his death.

Louis, Count of Stolberg
Born12 January 1505
Stolberg
Died1 September 1574(1574-09-01) (aged 69)
Wertheim
Noble familyHouse of Stolberg
Spouse(s)Walburga of Wied-Runkel
FatherBodo VIII, Count of Stolberg-Wernigerode
MotherAnna of Eppstein-Königstein

Life

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Louis was born at Stolberg castle, as the son of Count Bodo VIII and his wife, Countess Anna of Eppstein-Königstein. He was their third son and the fourth of their twelve children. Among his siblings were Count Wolfgang, Abess Anna of Quedlinburg, Countess Juliana of Hanau-Münzenberg and later Nassau-Dillenburg, Count Henry of Stolberg-Wernigerode, Countess Catherine of Henneberg, Count Albert of Stolberg-Schwarza and Count Christopher of Stolberg-Gedern, who was provost at Halberstadt

From the age of nine, he was educated by his maternal uncle Eberhard IV of Eppstein in Königstein. Later, he studied at the University of Wittenberg, where he converted to Lutheranism in 1521. The expansion and consolidation of the Reformation became his main objective after his conversion. He acted as councillor to Emperor Charles V and his successors Ferdinand I and Maximilian II. He was frequently sent on diplomatic missions, inter alia to Queen Elizabeth I of England and to the Spanish court.

His maternal uncle Eberhard IV had no sons and made Louis his universal heir. From 1527, Louis acted as Eberhard's co-ruler. Emperor Charles V recognized Eberhard's will in 1528. In 1535, Eberhard died and Louis inherited his possessions. In 1540, he introduced the Reformation in his territory. However, he did not participate in the Schmalkaldic War.

Marriage and issue

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Louis married Walburga of Wied (died 1578), the daughter of John III of Wied (died 1533) and Elisabeth of Nassau-Dillenburg (1488–1559). Together, they had a son and three daughters:

His heirs

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As Louis had no surviving male heir, the County of Königstein fell to his younger brother Christopher. Louis' widow Walburga received the city, district, and winery of Butzbach as her Wittum[2]

The Electorate of Mainz annexed the district of Königstein after Christopher died childless in 1581. The Counts of Stolberg inherited the districts of Ortenberg and Gedern and shares of Butzbach and Münzenberg. In 1598, his son-in-law Louis III won a dispute over the County of Wertheim that had lasted for 20 years.

References

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  • Eduard Jacobs (1893), "Stolberg, Ludwig Graf zu", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 36, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 339–345
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Footnotes

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  1. ^ State Archive of Baden-Württemberg, file Wertheim, cabinet G-Rep. 10a, drawer III-IV, G-Rep. document A 76: Catherina, née von Stolberg, Countess of Wertheim, widow, transfers to her father Louis, Count of Stolberg, Königstein, Rochefort and Wertheim, and his heirs, the right to inherit the goods and possessions of Wertheim and its belongings
  2. ^ State Archive of Baden-Württemberg, file Wertheim, cabinet G-Rep. 10a, drawer III-IV, document A 85