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House of Ascania
Dynasty of German rulers From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The House of Ascania (German: Askanier) was a dynasty of German rulers. It is also known as the House of Anhalt, which refers to its longest-held possession, Anhalt.[1]
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The Ascanians are named after Ascania (or Ascaria) Castle, known as Schloss Askanien in German, which was located near and named after Aschersleben.[2][3] The castle was the seat of the County of Ascania, a title that was later subsumed into the titles of the princes of Anhalt.
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History
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- Ballenstedt Castle
- First coat of arms of the family
- Map of Anhalt (1747–1793)
The earliest known member of the house, Esiko, Count of Ballenstedt, first appears in a document of 1036. Genealogists assume him to have been a grandson (through his mother) of Odo I, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark (r. 965–993). From Odo, the Ascanians inherited large properties in the Saxon Eastern March.
Esiko's grandson Otto, Count of Ballenstedt, died in 1123. By Otto's marriage to Eilika, daughter of Magnus, Duke of Saxony, the Ascanians became heirs to half of the property of the House of Billung, former dukes of Saxony.
Otto's son, Albert the Bear, became, with the help of his mother's inheritance, the first Ascanian duke of Saxony in 1139. However, he soon lost control of Saxony to the rival House of Guelph.
Albert inherited the area of the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1157 from its last Wendish ruler, Pribislav (died 1150), Albert's son's godfather. Albert became the first Ascanian margrave; he and his descendants of the House of Ascania then made considerable progress in Christianizing and Germanizing the Brandenburg lands. As a borderland between German and Slavic cultures, the country was known as a march (German: Mark Brandenburg, lit. 'the March of Brandenburg').
In 1237 and 1244, two towns, Cölln and Berlin, were founded during the joint rule of Otto and Johann, grandsons of Margrave Albert the Bear. (Later, in 1710, the two centres united into one city, Berlin. Emblems of the House of Ascania, a red eagle (for Brandenburg) and a bear, became heraldic emblems of Berlin.) In 1320, the Brandenburg Ascanian line came to an end.
After the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa deposed Henry the Lion, the Guelph Duke of Saxony, in 1180, Ascanians returned to rule the Duchy of Saxony, which had been reduced to its eastern half by the Emperor. However, even in eastern Saxony, the Ascanians could establish control only in limited areas, mostly near the River Elbe.
In 1212 the County of Anhalt was split off from the Duchy of Saxony, and c. 1296 the remaining Duchy was split into Saxe-Lauenburg and Saxe-Wittenberg. The Ascanian dynasties in these two Saxon states became extinct in 1689 and in 1422, respectively, but Ascanians continued to rule in the smaller state of Anhalt and its various subdivisions until the abolition of monarchy in 1918.
Catherine the Great, Empress of Russia from 1762 to 1796, was a member of the House of Ascania as the daughter of Christian August, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst.
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Rulers of the House of Ascania
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House of Ascania
Partitions of the House of Ascania
County of Weimar-Orlamunde (1113–1247) |
County of Ballenstedt (1030–1170) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Duchy of Saxony (1180–1296) |
Margraviate of Brandenburg (1157-1266/67) |
County of Anhalt (1123–1212) Raised to: Principality of Anhalt (1212–1252) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Weimar (1247–1372) |
Orlamunde (from 1354 in Schauenforst and Droyssig) (1247–1420) |
Zerbst (1st creation) (1252–1396) |
Bernburg (1st creation) (1252–1468) |
Aschersleben (1252–1315) | ||||||||||||||||||
Stendal[4] (1266–1318) |
Salzwedel[5] (1267–1317) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Plassenburg (1285–1340) |
Wittenberg (1296–1356) Raised to: Electorate of Saxe-Wittenberg (1356–1422) |
Lauenburg (1296–1303) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Lauenstein (1319–1460) |
Mölln (1303–1401) |
Ratzeburg (1303–15) |
Margraviate of Brandenburg (Stendal line) (1318–20) | |||||||||||||||||||
Bergdorf (1303–15) Renamed as Ratzeburg (1315–1401) |
Annexed to the House of Wittelsbach |
Annexed to Bishopric of Halberstadt | ||||||||||||||||||||
Annexed to the House of Wettin | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Lauenburg (Ratzeburg line) (1401–1689) |
Köthen (1st creation) (1396–1562) |
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Annexed to the House of Wettin |
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Dessau[6] (1st creation) (1396–1561) |
Zerbst (2nd creation) (1544–62) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Principality of Anhalt (Zerbst line) (1562–1603) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Plötzkau (1603–1665) |
Köthen (2nd creation) (1603–1847) |
Dessau (2nd creation) (1603–1863) |
Zerbst (3rd creation) (1603–1793) |
Bernburg (2nd creation) (1603–1863) | ||||||||||||||||||
Annexed to the House of Welf |
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Duchy of Anhalt (Dessau line) (1863–1918) |
Table of rulers
Heads of the House of Ascania since 1918
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Family trees
(genealogical list of the dynasty in German)

Armorial
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The original arms of the house of Ascania, from their ancestors the Saxon counts of Ballenstedt, were "Barry of ten sable and or".
The Ascanian margrave Albert the Bear was invested with the Saxon ducal title in 1138; when he succeeded the Welf's Henry the Lion, who was deposed by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa. In 1180, Albert's son Bernhard, Count of Anhalt received the remaining Saxon territories around Wittenberg and Lauenburg, and the ducal title. Legend, so unlikely to be true, goes that when he rode in front of the emperor, at the occasion of his investiture, he carried a shield with his escutcheon of the Ballenstedt coat of arms (barry sable and or). Barbarossa took the rue wreath he wore against the heat of the sun from his head, hanging it over Bernhard's shield and thus creating the Saxonian crancelin vert ("Barry of ten sable and or, a crancelin vert"). A more likely explanation is that it probably symbolized the waiver of the Lauenburg lands.[19]
From about 1260, the Duchy of Saxe-Wittenberg emerged under the Ascanian duke Albert II, who adopted the tradition of the Saxon stem duchy and was granted the Saxon electoral dignity, against the fierce protest of his Ascanian Saxe-Lauenburg cousins. This was confirmed by the Golden Bull of 1356. As the Ascanian Electors of Saxony also held the High office of an Arch-Marshal of the Holy Roman Empire, they added the ensign Per fess sable and argent two swords in saltire gules (the swords later featuring as the trademark of the Meissen china factory) to their coat of arms. When the line became extinct in 1422, the arms and electoral dignity were adopted by the Wettin by margrave Frederick IV of Meissen as it had become synonymous with the Saxon ducal title.
When upon German reunification the Free State of Saxony was re-established, the coat of arms was formally confirmed in 1991. [20]
- Original Arms of counts of Ballenstedt
- Arms of Ascania impaled with the Mark of Brandenburg
- Arms of Ascania impaled with the Mark of Brandenburg
- Arms of the Arch-Marshal/prince elector of the Saxons of the Holy Roman Empire
- Arms of the Elector/Duke of Saxony (Saxe-Wittenburg)
- Principality of Anhalt in the 15th century
- Principalities of Anhalt in the 17th century
- Principality of Anhalt-Köthen in the 18th century
- Principality of Anhalt-Zerbst in the 19th century
- Coat of Arms of the Duchy of Anhalt
- Achievement of the Duchy of Anhalt
The chivalric order was the House Order of Albert the Bear (German: Hausorden Albrechts des Bären or Der Herzoglich Anhaltische Hausorden Albrechts des Bären) which was founded in 1836 as a joint House Order by three dukes of Anhalt from separate branches of the family: Henry, Duke of Anhalt-Köthen, Leopold IV, Duke of Anhalt-Dessau, and Alexander Karl, Duke of Anhalt-Bernburg.
The namesake of the order, Albert the Bear, was the first Margrave of Brandenburg from the House of Ascania. The origin of his nickname "the Bear" is unknown.
- Collar of the Order of Albert the Bear
- Star of the Order of Albert the Bear
- House Order of Albert the Bear
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List of states ruled by the House of Ascania
- Saxony in 1180 with the Ascanian duchies in Saxony around 1235 (green). The former stem Duchy of Saxony is in gold with the official electorate duchy of Saxe-Wittenberg in green in the South East. Also shown is Saxe-Lauenburg in North West and the Welf Duchies of Brunswick-Luneburg in orange.
- The Duchy of Saxe-Lauenburg in 1400
- Duchy of Saxe-Wittenberg (dark green, centred on the town of Wittenberg)
- Brandenburg in 1320 under the Ascanians
- The Duchy of Anhalt, bordered by Prussia und Duchy of Brunswick-Luneburg
- Anhalt Principalities in 1789: Anhalt-Bernburg (AB), Anhalt-Köthen (AK), Anhalt-Dessau (AD) and Anhalt-Zerbst (AZ); on the rightside of the map: the Electorate of Brandenburg (blue) und Electorate of Saxony (orange)
- County, Principality, and Duchy of Anhalt: c. 1100–1918
- Duchy and Electorate of Saxony: 1112, 1139–1142, 1180–1422
- County of Weimar-Orlamünde: 1112–1486
- Margraviate of Brandenburg: 1157–1320
- Duchy of Saxe-Lauenburg: 1269–1689
- Principality of Lüneburg: 1369–1388
- Principality and Duchy of Anhalt-Bernburg: 1252–1468 and 1603–1863
- Principality of Anhalt-Zerbst: 1252–1396 and 1544–1796
- Principality of Anhalt-Aschersleben: 1252–1315
- Principality and Duchy of Anhalt-Köthen: 1396–1561 and 1603–1847
- Principality and Duchy of Anhalt-Dessau 1396–1561 and 1603–1863
- Principality of Anhalt-Plötzkau 1544–1553 and 1603–1665
- Principality of Anhalt-Harzgerode 1635–1709
- Principality of Anhalt-Mühlingen: 1667–1714
- Principality of Anhalt-Dornburg: 1667–1742
- Lordship of Jever: 1667–1796
- Principality of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym: 1718–1812
- Russian Empire: 1762–1796
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References
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