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WETTIN , the name of a See also: family from which several of the royal houses of See also: Europe have sprung, derived from a See also: castle which stood near the small See also: town of that name on the See also: Saale
.
Attempts to trace the descent to the Saxon chief Widukind or Wittekind, who died about 807, or to Burchard, See also: margrave of Thuringia (d
.
908), have failed, and the earliest known ancestor is one Dietrich, who was count of Hassegau or Hosgau, a See also: district on the See also: left See also: bank of the Saale
.
Dietrich was killed in 982 fighting the Hungarians, and his sons Dedo I
.
(d
.
1009) and See also: Frederick (d
.
1017) received lands taken from the See also: Wends, including the county or See also: Gau of Wettin on the right bank of the Saale
.
Dedo's son Dietrich II. inherited these lands, distinguished himself in warfare against the Poles, and married Matilda, daughter of Ekkard 1., margrave of See also: Meissen
.
Their son Dedo II. obtained the Saxon See also: east mark and See also: lower See also: Lusatia on the See also: death of his See also: uncle Ekkard II., margrave of Meissen, in 1046, but in 1069 he quarrelled with the emperor See also: Henry IV. and was compelled to surrender his possessions
.
He died in 1075, and his lands were granted to his son Henry I., who in 1089 was invested with the mark of Meissen
.
In 1103 Henry was succeeded by his
See also: cousin Thimo (d
.
1104), who built a castle at Wettin, and was called by this name
.
Henry II., son of Henry I., followed, but died childless in 1123; his cousin, See also: Conrad I., son of Thimo, claimed Meissen, of which he secured possession in 1130, and in 1135 the emperor See also: Lothair II. added lower Lusatia to his possessions
.
Abdicating in 1156, Conrad's lands were divided between his five sons, when the county of Wettin See also: fell to his See also: fourth son Henry, whose family died out in 1217
.
Wettin then passed to the descendants of Conrad's youngest son Frederick, and in 1288 the county, town and castle of Wettin were sold to the See also: arch-See also: bishop of See also: Magdeburg
.
They were retained by the archbishop until the See also: peace of Westphalia in 1648, when they passed to theelector of See also: Brandenburg, and afterwards became incorporated in the See also: kingdom of Prussia
.
Conrad I. and his successors had added largely to their possessions, until under Henry I., the Illustrious, margrave of Meissen, the lands of the Wettins stretched from the See also: Oder to the Werra, and from the See also: Erzgebirge to the Harz mountains
.
The subsequent See also: history of the family is merged in that of Meissen, See also: Saxony and the four Saxon dukedoms
.
In See also: June 1889 the 800th anniversary of the See also: rule of the Wettins in Meissen and Saxony was celebrated with See also: great splendour at See also: Dresden
.
See G
.
E
.
Hofmeister, Das Haus Wettin (See also: Leipzig, 1889); C
.
W
.
BSttiger, Geschichte See also: des Kurstaates and Konigreichs Sachsen (See also: Gotha, 1867—1873); O
.
Posse, Die Markgrafen von Meissen and das Haus Wettin (Leipzig, 1881) ; K . Wenck, Die WettinerSee also: im z4ten Jahrhundert (Leipzig, 1877); Kammel, Festschrift zur 800 jahrigen Jubelfeier des Hauses Wettin (Leipzig, 1889) ; and H
.
B
.
See also: Meyer, See also: Hof- and Zentralverwaltung der Wettiner (Leipzig, 1902)
.
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