Frederick II OF HOHENSTAUFFEN
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Frederick II OF HOHENSTAUFFEN (1090-1147)

Name: Frederick II OF HOHENSTAUFFEN 1
Sex: Male
Nickname: "One-Eyed"
Father: Frederick I OF HOHENSTAUFFEN (1050?-1105)
Mother: Agnes OF GERMANY (1073-1143)

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 1090
Occupation frm 1105 to 1147 (age 14-57) Duke of Swabia
Group/Caste Membership House of Hohenstaufen
Death 6 Apr 1147 (age 56-57)

Marriage

      picture     picture     picture     picture
      Judith of Bavaria     Frederick Barbarossa, middle, flanked by his two children, King Henry VI (left) and Duke Frederick VI (right). From the Welf Chronicle     Frederick Barbarossa in a 13th century chronicle     Barbarossa drowns in the Saleph. From the Gotha Manuscript of the Saxon Chronicle.
 
      picture    
      Frederick sends out the boy to see whether the ravens still fly.    
 
Spouse Judith OF BAVARIA (1100-1131)
Children Frederick III (Barbarossa) OF GERMANY (1122-1190)
Marriage btw 1119 and 1121 (age 28-31)

Individual Note

Frederick II (1090 – 6 April 1147), called the One-Eyed, was the second Hohenstaufen duke of Swabia from 1105. He was the eldest son of Frederick I and Agnes.

 

He succeeded his father in 1105. In 1121 he married Judith of Bavaria, a member of the powerful House of Guelph. On the death of Emperor Henry V, his uncle, Frederick stood for election as King of the Romans with the support of his younger brother Conrad, duke of Franconia and several houses. However, he lost this election of 1125 to Lothar III, crowned Emperor later in 1133.

 

A conflict erupted between Frederick and his supporters, and Lothar. Encouraged by Adalbert of Mainz, who loathed the supporters of the late Emperor Henry V, Lothar besieged Nuremberg in 1127. Frederick relieved the siege of Nuremberg in 1127 and occupied Speyer in 1128. The attempt of Henry the Proud, duke of Bavaria, to capture Frederick during negotiations failed (1129). However, afterwards supporters of Lothar won a number of victories both in Germany and in Italy. Speyer (1129), Nuremberg (1130) and Ulm (1134) were captured and in October 1134 Frederick submitted to the emperor. In 1135 both Frederick and Conrad were finally reconciled with Lothar. After Lothar's death (1137) and election of Conrad as King of the Romans (1138) Frederick supported his brother in the struggle with Guelphs. According to Otto of Freising, Frederick was "so faithful a knight to his sovereign and so helpful a friend to his uncle that by valor he supported the tottering honor of the realm, fighting manfully against its foes..."

 

Frederick's second wife, Agnes, was the niece of his old enemy Albert of Mainz.

 

Children

With Judith of Bavaria (1103- 22 February 1131), daughter of Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria:

 

Frederick III Barbarossa (1122–1190), duke of Swabia and Holy Roman Emperor as Frederick I

 

Bertha (Judith)[1] (1123–1195), married Matthias I, Duke of Lorraine

With Agnes of Saarbrücken (d.~1147):

 

Conrad of Hohenstaufen (also called Konrad) (1134/1136-1195), Count Palatine of the Rhine

 

Jutta (1135–1191), married Louis II, Landgrave of Thuringia

 

NOTES:

1 Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Swabia2

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 53, 45-25; 158, 166-25.
2"Wikipedia". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_II,_Duke_of_Swabia.