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Etichonids

The Etichonids were an important noble family, probably of origin, L’Alsace, berceau des Habsbourg by Philippe Nuss, lecturer at Université Louis Pasteur de Strasbourg who ruled the Duchy of Alsace in the Early Middle Ages (7th–10th centuries). The dynasty is named for Eticho (also known as Aldarich), who ruled from 673 to 690.

The earliest accounts record the family's beginnings in the around in northern Burgundy. In the mid-7th century a duke of the region named and his wife Aquilina are noticed as major founders and patrons of monasteries. King and his father made donations to them to recover their loyalty and compensate them for the losses that they had sustained as supporters of Queen Brunhild and her grandson, . Amalgar and his wife founded a convent at Brégille and an abbey at Bèze, installing a son and daughter in the abbacies. They were succeeded by their third child, Adalrich,He is referred to as Liutheric, a mayor of the palace, in the Life of Odilia. who was the father of Adalrich, Duke of Alsace. This second Adalrich was the first to secure the ducal title. His name, Eticho, a variation of Adalrich, is used by modern scholars as the name of the family.

Under the Etichonids, Alsace was generally divided into a northern and a southern county, Nordgau and . These counties, as well as the monasteries of the duchy, were brought under tighter control of the dukes with the rise of the Etichonids. There exists scholarly debate concerning whether or not the Etichonids were in conflict or alliance with the , but it is possible that they were both: opponents of the extension of 's authority in the 720s when he first made war on , but allies when the Alemanni, under Duke Theudebald invaded Alsace (which had a large Alemannic element in its population) in the early 740s. The last Etichonid duke, , may have died fighting Theudebald on behalf of Pepin the Short with his son, Hilfrid.

Among the descendants of the Etichonids, in the female line were Hugh of Tours and his family, including his daughter Ermengard, who was wife to and thus mother to three Carolingian kings. In the 10th century, the Etichonids remained powerful in Alsace as counts, but their power was circumscribed significantly by the ; by the 11th century, Pope Leo IX seemed unaware that his ancestors, the lords (or counts) of Dagsburg and for the previous half century were in fact the direct descendants of the last Etichonids. All notable European families trace their lineage to the Etichonids.


Etichonid dukes and counts in Alsace
(Note: Here the numbering of the counts is the same for all states, as all were titled Counts of Alsace, despite the different parts of land and its particular numbering of the rulers.)
Founder of the family and first count of Nordgau.
Also duke of Alsace.
Son of Adalbert I, retained Sundgau, the southern part of Alsace.
Son of Adalbert I, retained Nordgau, the northern part of Alsace.
Son of Eticho II.
Son of Adalbert I.
Son of Liutfrid I, probably a usurper. Left no descendants. Nordgau passed to the Alberic's heir, Eberhard.
Son of Alberic I.
Son of Liutfrid I.
769?UnknownProbably usurpers, as they don't seem to have family connections with the Etichonids.
770?
UnknownProbably usurpers, as they don't seem to have family connections with the Etichonids.
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Son of Liutfrid II.
Son of Eberhard II.
Son of Hugh I.
Probably usurper.
Son of Liutfrid III, left no descendants. He was succeeded by his brother Liutfrid.
Son of Liutfrid III.
Son of Eberhard III.
Son of Liutfrid IV.
Brother of Eberhard IV. Also known as Hugo III.
Son of Hugh III, ruled Sundgau for a period, before returning it to the heir of Liutfrid V. Guntram was grandfather of Radbot, Count of Habsburg, founder of the House of Habsburg.
Also known as Hugo IV.
Son or brother of Liutfrid V.
Brother of Hugh II.
Brother of Eberhard IV.
Son of Liutfrid VI. Left no descendants. The county seemed to have returned to non-hereditary rulership, by members of nobility with apparently no relation with the Etichonids.
  • c. 1003: Otto I
  • c. 1027: Giselbert
  • c. 1048: Berengar
  • c. 1052: Kuno
  • c. 1063: Rudolph
  • c. 1084: Henry

Then Sundgau might have been given to the .

Left no descendants.
1000–1016–Dagsburg
eight children
Acquired Eguisheim, and by marriage added Dagsburg to his patrimony. Among his children was Bruno of Eguisheim-Dagsburg. After his brother's death in 1016, he was the heir to Nordgau, which became annexed to Eguisheim.
1016–c.1030?–Dagsburg–Nordgau
c.10301038Nordgau
1038–1046–Nordgau
Left no descendants. Eguisheim reverted to his brother.
?c.1030?–104618 November 1049DagsburgMathilde d'Eename
two children
Inherited Dagsburg, and after his brother's death, reunited it with Eguisheim.
1046–1049–Dagsburg–Nordgau
Gerhard II ?1065c.1100?NordgauRicharda
four children
Inherits Dagsburg and Nordgau. He was dispossessed of Nordgau by Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, during the Investiture Controversy, and killed in the attempt of its recover. On his death with no descendants, his brother inherited only Dagsburg.
?1065-108924 August 1098Hedwig
one son

Ermesinde of Luxembourg
1096

two children
Dagsburg–
Also known as Henry Hugh.
After her death Eguisheim passed to Vaudémont line of the House of Lorraine.
Also known as Henry Hugh.
Also count of Moha.
With no heirs, after her death Dagsburg passed to the Leiningen family.


See also


Sources
  • Hummer, Hans J. Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe: Alsace and the Frankish Realm 600–1000. Cambridge University Press: 2005. See mainly pp 46–55.

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