Duke Johann Frederick von Württemberg

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Johann Friedrich von Württemberg, Herzog

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Montbéliard, Franche-Comte, France
Death: July 18, 1628 (46)
Heidenheim, Württemberg, Deutschland(HRR)
Place of Burial: Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Immediate Family:

Son of Friedrich I, Herzog von Württemberg and Sibylla
Husband of Barbara Sophia of Brandenburg
Father of Henriette von Württemberg, Prinzessin; Friedrich von Württemberg, Prinz; Antonie Of Wurttemberg; Antonia von Württemberg-Stuttgart, Prinzessin von Württemberg; Eberhard III, Duke of Württemberg and 7 others
Brother of Georg Friedrich von Württemberg-Mompelgard, Herzog; Ludwig Friedrich von Württemberg - Mömpelgard; Joachim Friedrich Von Württemberg-Mompelgard; Philipp Friedrich von Württemberg; Eva Christina von Württemberg, Herzogin zu Brandenburg-Jägerndorf and 21 others

Managed by: Arthur Rexford Whittaker
Last Updated:

About Duke Johann Frederick von Württemberg

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Frederick,_Duke_of_W%C3%BCrttem...

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Johann Frederick, Duke of Württemberg was born on 5 May 1582 in Mömpelgard and was the 7th Duke of Württemberg from 4 February 1608 until his death on 18 July 1628 whilst en route to Heidenheim.

Johann Frederick of Württemberg was the eldest son of Frederick I and Sibylla of Anhalt. He was born in Mömpelgard castle which he left at the age of four when his family moved its residence to Stuttgart.

Johann Frederick married Barbara Sophia of Brandenburg (1584–1636), daughter of prince-elector Joachim Frederick of Brandenburg. To mark his marriage on 5 November 1609, he had Castle Urach converted, turning the Golden Room into one of the finest surviving examples of renaissance banqueting halls in Germany.

Johann Frederick was a well-meaning, peace-loving ruler but he displayed a number of personal weaknesses and was often ill equipped to deal with the challenges of the era. Despite this he restored the constitution (which had been suspended by his father, Frederick I, subject to changes that were never implemented). He also restored the power of the councils of Duke Ludwig (which had been abolished by Frederick I). Most importantly, he had Frederick’s powerful chancellor Matthäus Enzlin condemned to a fortress for life for embezzlement and extortion, subjecting him later to an embarrassing trial on a count of high treason for which he was executed on the market place in Urach in 1613. He achieved little improvement in the state of affairs within the ducal household, however. In fact the duchy ran into further debt leading to unruly debate within the family and even the ranks of servants and eventually problems with the mint.

Johann Frederick continued the long-standing negotiations held by his father with other evangelical princes, resulting in talks in Auhausen near Nördlingen in May 1608 and the subsequent signing of the Union of Auhausen. In 1621 he moved with a Unionist army into the Palatinate region, although the alliance crumbled in the same year with little to show for its efforts.

Duke Johann Frederick continued to swear allegiance to the union. At the battle of Wimpfen (26 April 1622), Georg Frederick, the margrave (Markgraf) of Baden-Durlach , was defeated by Marshall Tilly and the duke’s youngest brother fell in battle. Despite a neutrality accord, the victors of this battle went on to sack the north western areas of the Duke's region and in the years that followed it suffered repeatedly under harmful raids and settlement.

On 28 May 1617, Johann Frederick entered into an agreement with a number of his many brothers; his eldest brother, Ludwig Frederick was given the countship of Mömpelgard - still not totally inseparable from the Duchy of Württemberg; the next brother down, Julius Frederick inherited the recently acquired sovereignty over Brenz and Weiltingen, leading to two new branch lines in the Duchy: Württemberg-Mömpelgard (which disappeared in 1723) and Württemberg-Weiltingen (which disappeared in 1792). His other brothers, Frederick Achilles and Magnus inherited the castles of Neuenstadt and Neuenbürg respectively. As both of the latter brothers were unmarried when they died their possessions were subsequently brought back into the main line of the Duchy.



War vom 4. Februar 1608 zu seinem Tod der siebte Herzog von Württemberg.

  • Am 5. November 1609 heiratete er Barbara Sophia von Brandenburg. Anlässlich dieser Hochseit ließ er das Schoß Urach umbauen, das heute mit dem Goldenen Saal einen der Schönstens Festsäle der Renaissance in Deutchland Zählt.
  • Reference: MyHeritage Family Trees - SmartCopy: Jan 31 2017, 21:05:56 UTC
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Duke Johann Frederick von Württemberg's Timeline

1582
May 5, 1582
Montbéliard, Franche-Comte, France
1610
December 12, 1610
Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
1612
March 15, 1612
Urach, Schwarzwaldkreis, Wurttemberg
1613
March 24, 1613
Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
March 24, 1613
Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
1614
December 16, 1614
Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Deutschland(HRR)
1615
December 19, 1615
Stuttgart, Württemberg, Deutschland(HRR)
12, 1615
Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
1616
1616
1617
May 15, 1617
Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany