Immediate Family
-
wife
-
daughter
-
mother
-
father
-
sister
-
brother
-
sister
-
sister
-
sister
About Eberhard ll von Ebersberg
Ein Todesdatum lässt sich nicht eindeutig feststellen. Es werden folgenden Daten angegeben: 24. Juli 1040, 1041, 1044, 1045 oder 1065.[8]
In einer Quelle wird Eberhard II. auch als Graf von Murach, Murau oder Mureck ausgewiesen, dem auch die Gründung des Klosters Geisenfeld zugeschrieben wird.
Neue Quellen schreiben Eberhard II. aber zwei Söhne zu:[6]
1. Ulrich von Ebersberg, Graf von Bozen: Stammvater der Grafen von Eppan
2. Altemar von Ebersberg
{ [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eberhard_II._%28Ebersberg%29 https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eberhard_II._(Ebersberg)] }
Family
- Eberhardus II, de Semta et Ebersberg, marchio Carniole († 1041/44)
- De domo comitum de Semta et Ebersberg
- filius Wodalrici I, de Sempt-Ebersberg, comites Marche Carniole
- filius Richarde, de Eppenstein
- frater Williburge II, comitisse
- frater Adalberonis II
- 1037_EM (Read more)
- Regestum: Eberhard II of Sempt-Ebersberg founds the monastery in Geisenfeld. Forgery from the late 15th or early 16th century.
- Date 1037 (15th or 16th century forgery)
- Place Geisenfeld
Notes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geisenfeld_Abbey
Geisenfeld Abbey (German: Kloster Geisenfeld) was a convent in Bavaria, Germany, in the town of Geisenfeld. It was founded in 1037 and dissolved in 1804. At one time it was one of the most prosperous convents in Bavaria.
Foundation
Count Eberhard II, the last male descendant of the Sempt und Ebersberg family, and his wife Adelheit founded Geisenfeld Abbey in 1030 after their three children had died leaving no descendants. It replaced a monastery in today's Engelbrechtsmünster that had been destroyed around 955 AD by the Hungarians.[1] The founders gave the abbey a lavish endowment.[2] Instead of monks, as before, the Abbey was for use by nuns of the Order of Saint Benedict from noble families.[2][a] It accommodated about 50 nuns.[1] The first abbess was the sister of Count Eberhard II, Gerbirgis.[3] [SIC: Williburga]
References
- Josip Banic (ed.), Fontes Istrie medievalis, vol. 2: A 804 ab 1077, doc. 970_SE, fontesistrie.eu/970_SE (retrieved 1 April 2022). < link > Regestum. Excerpts from the family chronicle of the counts of Sempt-Ebersberg regarding Ulrich I, the count of the march of Carniola; his heirs Adalbero II, Eberhard II and Williburga II; and Hademoud II, the daughter of Williburga II and the only surviving direct heir of House Sempt-Ebersberg. Hademoud II would marry Poppo II of Weimar-Orlamünde with whom she would have Ulrich I, the first margrave of Istria.
Eberhard ll von Ebersberg's Timeline
995 |
995
|
||
1041 |
July 24, 1041
Age 46
|
||
???? | |||
???? | |||
???? | |||
???? |