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| conventional_long_name = The Landgraviate of Burgundy | | conventional_long_name = The Landgraviate of Burgundy | ||
| common_name = Little Burgundy, Transjurania | | common_name = Little Burgundy, Transjurania | ||
| image_flag = Banner of arms of the kingdom of Arles.png | |||
| image_coat = CoA Buchegg Family.svg | |||
| image_map = Landgrafschaft Burgund.png | |||
| demonym = Burgundian, Transjuran | |||
| today = {{plainlist| *] }} | |||
}} | }} | ||
From the 13th to 15th centuries, the '''Landgraviate of Burgundy''' Aare, from Thun to Aarwangen |
From the 13th to 15th centuries, the '''Landgraviate of Burgundy''' Aare, from Thun to Aarwangen. The holders of the office of Landgrave were first the Counts of ], the ] and other, minor nobles before the office was transferred to the city of ] after their extinction. In historical documents and reports on the state, the name Little Burgundy / Klein Burgund ( Latin ''Burgundia minor'' ) was also used for the Landgraviate of Burgundy, which had been invented in the 16th century by ], but which did not represent a contemporary medieval term. | ||
===Sources=== | ===Sources=== | ||
<references /> | <references /> |
Revision as of 16:50, 7 January 2025
The Landgraviate of Burgundy | |
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Flag Coat of arms | |
Demonym(s) | Burgundian, Transjuran |
Today part of |
From the 13th to 15th centuries, the Landgraviate of Burgundy Aare, from Thun to Aarwangen. The holders of the office of Landgrave were first the Counts of Buchegg, the Kyburg family and other, minor nobles before the office was transferred to the city of Bern after their extinction. In historical documents and reports on the state, the name Little Burgundy / Klein Burgund ( Latin Burgundia minor ) was also used for the Landgraviate of Burgundy, which had been invented in the 16th century by Aegidius Tschudi, but which did not represent a contemporary medieval term.
Sources
- Anne-Marie Dubler: The Oberaargau region. Origin, concept and extent over time . In: Yearbook of the Oberaargau . Volume 44 . Merkur Druck, Langenthal 2001, p. 74–114 ( digital copy at digibern.ch “The name of the Landgraviate is ‘Burgundy’; not a single documentary source gives a different name. The almost ineradicable term ‘Little Burgundy’, even if actively used by well-known historians such as Richard Feller, is incorrect.” Note 11, p. 111).
- Adolf Gasser : The territorial development of the Swiss Confederation 1291–1797. Sauerländer, Aarau 1932, pp. 62–64, 67.