Principality of Leyen

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Principality of Leyen
Fürstentum Leyen (German)
1806–1814
Flag of Leyen
Flag
Coat of arms of Leyen
Coat of arms
Mediatised to Austria by Congress of Vienna
1814
• Granted to Baden
1819
Preceded by
Succeeded by
County of Adendorf
Austrian Empire

The Principality of Leyen was a

mediatized, with the glaring exception of Leyen, which was spared because the ruling Count was nephew to Archchancellor Karl Theodor von Dalberg,[1]
a close collaborator of Napoleon's.

In 1806, Count Philip Francis of Adendorf was raised to a Prince, and his lands were renamed to the 'Principality of Leyen'. The territory formed an enclave surrounded by Baden. Prince Philip Francis, like many other members of the Confederation of the Rhine became largely a French puppet, so following Napoleon's defeat at the Battle of Leipzig in 1813, the Congress of Vienna opted to mediatize his realm and give it to Austria. In 1819, Austria traded it to Baden.

Prince of Leyen

  • count of Adendorf

Heads of the House after Mediatization

Map illustrating the growth of the Grand Duchy of Baden, with the Principality of Leyen in grey, mid-left
  • Philip Franz, 1st Prince 1806-1829 (1766-1829)
    • Erwein, 2nd Prince 1829-1879 (1798-1879)
      • Philip, 3rd Prince 1879-1882 (1819-1882)
        • Erwein, 4th Prince 1895-1938 (1863-1938)
          • Erwein, 5th Prince 1938-1970 (1894-1970)
            • Wolfram Erwein, Hereditary Prince of Leyen and zu Hohengeroldseck (1924-1945)
            • Princess Marie-Adelheid (1932-2015)
              • Philipp Erwein, 7th Prince 1971–present (b.1967)
                • Wolfram, Hereditary Prince of Leyen and zu Hohengeroldseck (b.1990)
                  • Prince Roch (b.2018)
                • Prince Georg (b.1992)
                  • Prince Leo (b.2016)
                  • Prince Antonius (b.2018)
          • Ferdinand, 6th Prince 1970-1971 (1898-1971)

References

  1. ^ Heinrich von Treitschke, History of Germany in the Nineteenth Century, Volume 1, page 270.