Bertha OF TURIN
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The Rest of the Story: The Ancestors of Sarah May Paddock Otstott
See also
Bertha OF TURIN's brother: Amadeus II (I) OF SAVOY (1050?-1080)

Bertha OF TURIN (1051-1087)

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      Bertha of Turin    
 
Name: Bertha OF TURIN 1
Sex: Female
Father: Eudes (Odo) OF MAURIENNE ( -1060)
Mother: Alix (Adelaide) OF TURIN (1015?-1091)

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 21 Sep 1051
Occupation Holy Roman Empress
crowned 31 Mar 1084 (age 32) Rome
Group/Caste Membership House of Savoy
Child Count 5
Marriage Count 1
Death 27 Dec 1087 (age 36) Mainz
Burial Cathedral of Speyer

Additional Information

crowned Holy Roman Empress

Marriage

      picture     picture     picture     picture
      Henry IV of Germany, Holy Roman Emperor     Henry IV begging Matilda of Canossa     Henry IV (left), count palatine Herman II of Lotharingia and Antipope Clement III (center), from Codex Jenensis Bose (1157).     The abdication of Henry IV in favour of Henry V from the Cronichle of Ekkehard von Aura.
 
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      The funeral of the Emperor Henry IV.     Stained-glass painting of Agnes, c. 1290, in the well-house of Heiligenkreuz Abbey, Austria    
 
Spouse Henry IV OF GERMANY (1050-1106)
Children Agnes OF GERMANY (1073-1143)
Marriage 13 Jul 1066 (age 14) Trebur

Additional Information

Marriage They were betrothed on 25 December 1055 in Zürich.

Individual Note

Bertha of Savoy (Turin) (21 September 1051 – 27 December 1087), also called Bertha of Turin, was the first wife of Emperor Henry IV, and was German Queen and Holy Roman Empress. She is buried in the cathedral of Speyer.

 

Bertha of Savoy was a daughter of Otto of Savoy (also called Eudes and Odo) and Adelaide of Susa. Her maternal grandparents were Ulric Manfred II of Turin and Bertha of the Obertenghi.

 

As children, during the lifetime of Emperor Henry III, Bertha and Henry IV were betrothed on 25 December 1055 in Zürich. The wedding took place on 13 July 1066 in Trebur. While Bertha was apparently in love with Henry from the outset, Henry initially viewed his wife with aversion. Although she was apparently a pretty young woman, the Saxon chronicler Bruno, an avowed opponent of Henry IV, reported on the Emperor's continual unfaithfulness: "He had two or three Kebsweiber (concubines) at the same time, in addition [to his wife], yet he was not content. If he heard that someone had a young and pretty daughter or wife, he instructed that she be supplied to him by force. (...) His beautiful and noble wife Bertha (...) was in such a manner hated by him that he never saw her after the wedding any more than necessary, since he had not celebrated the wedding out of free will."

 

In 1069, Henry began procedures for a divorce, supplying what was for the time an unusually honest reason for the divorce: "The king explained publicly (before the princes), that his relationship with his wife was not good; for a long time he had deceived others, but now he did not want to do so any longer. He could not accuse her of anything that justified a divorce, but he was not capable of carrying out conjugal relations with her any longer. He asked them for the sake of God to remove him from the bonds of a marriage closed under bad signs ... so that the way to a luckier marriage might be opened. And nobody knowing any objection to raise, and his wife being an obstacle to a second marriage ceremony, he then swore that she was as he received her, unstained and her virginity intact." (Bruno of Merseburg)

 

The German episcopacy dared not submit to the King's demands, and called on Pope Alexander II for assistance. He sent Petrus Damiani as his Legate to the Synod in Frankfurt, and rejected the divorce. Henry then apparently submitted to his fate, his first daughter by Bertha being born in the year after the divorce attempt.

 

Bertha also accompanied her husband on his dangerous journey to Canossa, carrying her three-year-old son Conrad. She remained with her husband between 25 January and 28 January 1077 in freezing cold weather before the walls of the castle, in order to reach the solution to Henry's dispute with the Pope. Together with Henry, Bertha later also journeyed to Rome, and on 31 March 1084 was crowned Empress.

 

On 27 December 1087, Bertha died in Mainz.

 

Children:

 

From her marriage with Henry there were eventually five children:

 

Adelheid (1070 – 4 June 1079)

Henry (1071 – 2 August 1071)

Agnes of Germany (1072/73 – 24 September 1143)

Conrad (12 February 1074 – 27 July 1101), later Roman-German King and King of Italy

Henry V (8 January 1086 – 23 May 1125), later Roman-German King and Holy Roman Emperor

 

SOURCES:

Bruno von Merseburg: Brunonis Saxonicum bellum. Brunos Sachsenkrieg. - Übersetzt v. Franz-Josef Schmale. - In: Quellen zur Geschichte Kaiser Heinrichs IV. - Darmstadt, 1968. - (Ausgewählte Quellen zur deutschen Geschichte des Mittelalters. Freiherr vom Stein-Gedächtnisausgabe ; 12). - S. 191-405.

Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines 45-23, 274-22, 274-23.2

Sources

1Weis, Frederick Lewis & Sheppard, Walter Lee, Jr, "Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and other Historical Individuals". p 52, 45-23; 263, 274-23.
2"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertha_of_Savoy.