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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > German Political Geography > Saxony
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Saxony, German Political Geography

Related Category: German Political Geography

Saxony[sak´sunE] Pronunciation Key - History-

The geographic concept of Saxony has undergone great shifts and has acquired many meanings in the past 15 centuries. The land of the Saxons, Saxony was in Frankish times roughly the area in NW Germany between the Elbe and Ems rivers; it also included part of S Jutland. (This area corresponds in part to the state of Lower Saxony, created after World War II.)

The Duchy of Saxony

After Charlemagne's conquest (772–804) of the Saxons, their land was incorporated into the Carolingian empire, and late in the 9th cent. the first duchy of Saxony. Including the four divisions of Westphalia, Angria, Eastphalia, and Holstein, it occupied nearly all the territory between the Elbe and Saale rivers on the east and the Rhine on the west; it bordered on Franconia and Thuringia in the south. Duke Henry I (Henry the Fowler) of Saxony was elected Gon, Emperor Otto I, bestowed (961) Saxony on Hermann Billung (d. 973), a Saxon nobleman, whose descendants held the duchy until the extinction of the male line in 1106. Lothair of Supplinburg (see Lothair II) bestowed it on his Guelphic son-in-law, Henry the Proud, who was already duke of Bavaria.

In 1142 the duchy passed to Henry the Lion, son of Henry the Proud. The struggle between Henry the Lion and Emperor Frederick I ended with Henry's loss of all his fiefs in 1180. The stem duchy was broken up into numerous fiefs. The Guelphic heirs of Henry the Lion retained only their allodial lands, the duchy of Brunswick. The ducal title of Saxony went to Bernard of Anhalt, a younger son of Albert the Bear of Brandenburg and founder of the Ascanian line of Saxon dukes. Besides Anhalt, Bernard received Lauenburg and the country around Wittenberg, on the Elbe. These widely separate territories continued after 1260 under separate branches of the Ascanians as Saxe-Lauenburg and Saxe-Wittenberg.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Albert the Bear
Augustus II
Austrian Succession, War of the
Austro-Prussian War
Brunswick, former state, Germany
Dresden
Frederick I, elector of Saxony
Frederick Augustus I, 1750–1827, king and elector of Saxony
Germany
Henry the Lion
Henry the Proud
Lothair II
Lower Saxony
Lusatia
Maurice, duke and elector of Saxony
Prussia
Saxons
Saxony-Anhalt
Thuringia
Westphalia
Wettin
Wittenberg

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Places > Germany, Scandinavia, and Central Europe
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