Zähringen is the name of an old and influential
German noble family, taken from the castle and village
of that name. Zähringen today is part of the city of
Freiburg, which the dukes founded in 1120.
History
The earliest known member of the family was
Berthold I, Count in the
Breisgau (died 982), who was first mentioned in 962. Earlier ancestors, such as the
Ahalolfings are suspected. Bertholds's great-grandson
Berchtold I (d. 1078) was count of Zähringen and was related to the early
Hohenstaufen family.
Berchtold was promised the
duchy of Swabia, but this was not fulfilled. However, in 1061 he was made duke of
Carinthia. Although this dignity was a titular one, Bertold lost it when he joined a rising against the emperor
Henry IV in 1073. His son
Berchtold II, who like his father fought against Henry IV, inherited a lot of the land of the counts of
Rheinfelden, (but not there title, that stayed with the family von Wetter-Rheinfelden), in 1090 and took the title of duke of Zähringen; he was succeeded in turn by his sons,
Berchtold III (d. 1122) and
Conrad (d. 1152). In 1127 Conrad inherited some land in
Burgundy and about this date he was appointed by king
Lothair III rector of the kingdom of Burgundy or
Arles. This office was held by the Zähringens until 1218 and hence they are sometimes called dukes of Burgundy.
Berchtold IV (d. 1186), who followed his father Conrad, spent much of his time in Italy in the train of the emperor
Frederick I; his son and successor,
Berchtold V, showed his prowess by reducing the Burgundian nobles to order. This latter duke was the founder of the town of
Bern, and when he died in February 1218 the main line of the Zähringen family became extinct.
By extensive acquisitions of land the Zähringens had become very powerful in the districts now known as
Switzerland and
Baden, and when their territories were divided in 1218 part of them passed to the counts of
Kyburg and thence to the house of
Habsburg.
Cities
See also