Online Encyclopedia

JULICH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 550 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

JULICH  , Or JULIERS, Ducnv or . In the 9th

century a certain Matfried was count of Julich (pagus Juliacensis), and towards the end of the 1lth century one Gerhard held this dignity . This Gerhard founded a
See also:
family of hereditary
See also:
counts, who held Julich as immediate vassals of the emperor, and in 1356 the county was raised to the rank of a duchy . The older and reigning branch of the family died in 1423, when Julich passed to Adolph, duke of Berg (d . 1437), who belonged to a younger branch, and who had obtained Berg by virtue of the
See also:
marriage of one of his ancestors . Nearly a century later Mary (d . 1543) the heiress of these two duchies, married John, the heir of the duchy of Cleves, and in 1521 the three duchies, Julich, Berg and Cleves, together with the counties of Ravensberg and La Marck, sere
See also:
united under John's sway . John died in 1539 and was succeeded by his son William who reigned until 1592 . At the beginning of the 17th century the duchies became very prominent in
See also:
European politics . The reigning duke, John William, was childless and insane, and several princes were only waiting for his
See also:
demise in order to seize his lands . The most prominent of these princes were two
See also:
Protestant princes, Philip Louis, count palatine of
See also:
Neuburg, who was married to the duke's
See also:
sister Anna, and John Sigismund, elector of
See also:
Brandenburg, whose wife was the daughter of another sister . Two other sisters were married to princes of minor importance .

Moreover, by virtue of an imperial promise made in 1485 and renewed in 1495, the elector of

Saxony claimed the duchies of Jtilich and Berg, while the proximity of the coveted lands to the
See also:
Netherlands made their
See also:
fate a
See also:
matter of
See also:
great moment to the Dutch . When it is remembered that at this time there was a great
See also:
deal of tension between the
See also:
Roman Catholics and the Protestants, who were fairly evenly matched in the duchies, and that the rivalry between France and the
See also:
Empire was very keen, it will be seen that the situation lacked no element of discord . In March 1609 Duke John William died . Having assured themselves of the support of Henry IV. of France and of the Evangelical Union, Brandenburg and Neuburg at once occupied the duchies . To
See also:
counter this stroke and to support the Saxon claim, the emperor Rudolph II. ordered some imperialist and
See also:
Spanish troops to seize the disputed lands, and it was probably only the
See also:
murder of Henry IV. in May 1610 and the
See also:
death of the head of the Evangelical Union, the elector palatine, Frederick IV., in the following September, which prevented, or rather delayed, a great European war . About this time the emperor adjudged the duchies to Saxony, while the Dutch captured the fortress of Julich; but for all
See also:
practical purposes victory remained with the " possessing princes," as Brandenburg and Neuburg were called, who continued to occupy and to administer the lands . These two princes had made a compact at
See also:
Dortmund in 1609 to act together in defence of their rights, but proposals for a marriage
See also:
alliance between the two houses broke down and differences soon arose between them . The next important step was the timely conversion of the count palatine's heir, Wolfgang William of Neuburg, to Roman Catholicism, and his marriage with a daughter of the powerful Roman Catholic prince, Duke Maximilian of Bavaria . The rupture between the possessing princes was now
See also:
complete . Each invited
See also:
foreign aid . Dutch troops marched to assist the elector of Brandenburg and Spanish ones came to aid the count palatine, but through the intervention of England and France peace was made and the treaty of Xanten was signed in November 1614 . By this arrangement Brandenburg obtained Julich and Berg, the rest of the lands falling to the count palatine .

In 1666 the great elector, Frederick William of Brandenburg, made with William, count palatine of Neuburg, a treaty of mutual

succession to the duchies, providing that in case the male
See also:
line of either house became
See also:
extinct the other should inherit its lands . The succession to the duchy of Julich was again a matter of
See also:
interest in the earlier
See also:
part of the 18th century . The family of the counts palatine of Neuburg was threatened with extinction and the emperor Charles VI. promised the succession to Julich to the Prussian king, Frederick William I., in return for a guarantee of the pragmatic sanction . A little later, however, he promised the same duchy to the count palatine of Sulzbach, a kinsman of the count palatine of Neuburg . Then Frederick the Great, having secured
See also:
Silesia, abandoned his claim to Jtilich, which thus passed to Sulzbach when, in 1742, the family of Neuburg became extinct . From Sulzbach the duchy came to the electors palatine of the Rhine, and, when this family died out in 1799, to the elector of Bavaria, the head of the other branch of the house of
See also:
Wittelsbach . In 1801 Julich was seized by France, and by the settlement of 1815 it came into the hands of Prussia . Its
See also:
area was just over 160o sq. m. and its population about 400,000 . See Kuhl, Geschichte der Stadt Julich; M . Ritter, Sachsen and der Julicher Erbfolgestreit (1873), and Der Jiilicher Erbfolgekrieg, 76zo and 1611 (1877); A . Muller, Der Julich-Klevesche Erbfolgestreit im Jahre 1614 (1900) and H . H .

Koch, Die Reformation im Herzogtum Julich 1883-1888) .

End of Article: JULICH
[back]
JULIAN (FLAVIUS CLAUDIUS JULIANUS) (331-363)
[next]
JULICH (Fr. fullers)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.