This is an old revision of this page, as edited by CRBradley8051 (talk | contribs) at 00:01, 10 January 2025 (Added the page for the House of Formbach aka Vornbach and Fornbach). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 00:01, 10 January 2025 by CRBradley8051 (talk | contribs) (Added the page for the House of Formbach aka Vornbach and Fornbach)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The County of Formbach, known in recent scholarship as Vornbach, was a medieval county with the capital Vornbach (today part of Neuhaus am Inn) near Passau.
History
Since at least the 10th century, the county had been in the hands of a family that exercised lordship rights in Traungau. Around 1050, the seat of the county was moved from Vornbach Castle a few kilometres down to Neuburg. In the following years, the county was therefore called Neuburg.
In addition to Vornbach Castle, the family of the Counts of Formbach also owned the nearby fortifications of Schärding, Neuburg, Wernstein and Wimberg. The Counts of Formbach founded Vornbach Abbey in 1094 and died out in 1158 with Ekbert III of Neuburg. The estates were mainly inherited by the Counts of Andechs and the Otakare.
The Counts of Formbach were related and related to the Luitpoldings, the Brunons and the Wettins; In addition to Traungau, they ruled for a time in the Schweinachgau and the Künziggau, and they were also bailiffs of the diocese of Regensburg, the monasteries of Göttweig and Sankt Nikola near Passau.
Counts of Formbach/Wels-Lambach/Pitten
Early Genealogy:
Meginhard I, c. 930, Count of Traungau
Meginhard II, Count, Vogt of Niederaltaich, 944–955/963
Arnold I, Count of the Traun (zu Lambach), Count of Rotagau, 8 February 1018, † c. 1020
Aribo of Ennsburg, 1030
Arnold II, Count of Wels-Lambach, 1035 Margrave in the Carinthian Mark, † 1050 ⚭ Regininde of Verdun, † 1050
Arnold III of Wels-Lambach, † 1050 ⚭ Hazacha (Haziga)
Adalbero, Bishop of Würzburg 1045–1088, * c. 1010, † 1090
Mathilde ⚭ Ratpoto IV, Count of Cham
Gottfried, von Pitten, † 1050, Count of Lambach, 1041 Co-Margrave in the Carinthian Mark
Mathilde, † 1100
N.N., daughter ⚭ of Margrave Ottokar II of Styria, † 1022
Udalrich I, count 947–970
Bertold, Count of Lurngau 1000–1005
Meginhard III, Count (in Traungau) 1030
Pilgrim, monk in St. Emmeran Monastery
Tiemo I, † after 1025 in Reichenhall, Count of Quinzingau
Heinrich (Hesso) I., † probably 1030 ⚭ Himiltrud
Tuta von Formbach, * 1037, † around 1100 ⚭ King Bélas I of Hungary, ⚭ Engelbrecht III, Count of the Puster Valley and Count Palatine in Carinthia
Himiltrud, founder of Vornbach Abbey, † after 1070
Hermann III, † 1030
Tiemo II (Dietmar) II, † 1040, Count of Quinzingau
Meginhard IV, Count, Vogt of Niederaltaich, † 1066
Ulrich III (Udalrich III), † 1097, 1074 Count of Ratelnberg, 1095–1097 Count of Windberg, Vogt of Göttweig ⚭ Matilde
Conrad (1122-1128)
Luitgard, ⚭ Frederick II, Cathedral Vogt of Regensburg, † 1134
Konrad, † 1084
Dietrich I, canon in Bamberg
Hermann I of Winzenburg, † 1137/1138, Vogt of Göttweig, 1097 Count of Windberg, 1107 Count of Ratelnberg, 1108 Founder of Reinhausen (near Göttingen), 1109 Count of Winzenburg, 1112 Margrave of Meissen, 1114 Count Palatine of Saxony, Vogt of Göttweig ⚭ Hedwig von Assel
Beatrix II (Quedlinburg), † 1160, abbess of Quedlinburg
Conrad (1122-1128)
Matilde, † c. 1155 ⚭ Udo von Freckleben, Margrave of the Nordmark, † 1130
Sophie, † 1160 ⚭ Albrecht the Bear, Duke of Saxony, † 18 November 1170
Heinrich von Winzenburg, † 1146, count of Asle ⚭ Eufemia von Vohburg, ⚭ 1144 Richenza von Immenhausen
Sofie, † before 1171 ⚭ Rottmann I, Count of Himstedt
Otto von Winzenburg, † 1171/74, count of Assel ⚭ Salome von Heinsberg, † after 1185
Adelheid, † 1185 ⚭ Adolf III, Count of Schauenburg-Holstein, † 1225
Hermann II of Winzenburg, † 1152, 1125 Count of Winzenburg, 1129 Margrave of Meissen, deposed in 1130, 1139 of Plesse and Margrave, 1147 Vogt of Corvey ⚭ Elisabeth of Austria, † 1143; ⚭ 1148, Luitgard von Stade, † 1152
N.N., daughter, * 1149, † 1204 ⚭ 1170, Count Henry III of Schwarzenburg, † 1184 ⚭ Count Ulrich of Wettin
N.N., daughter, born 1150 ⚭ Duke Magnus Boris in Denmark
Hedwig, * 1151, supposedly provost of Gandersheim
Bruno, 1064–1066 Count of Künziggau,
Ekbert I, † 1109, around 1070 Count of Formbach, 1067 Count of Künziggau, 1094 founder of Vornbach ⚭ Abbey N.N. ⚭ Mathilde von Lambach, † 1090
Eberhard, 1095–1100, † c. 1100
Dietmar, Abbot of Ossiach
Ekbert II, 1113 Count of Formbach, 1120 of Pitten, 1142 Count of Pitten, † 1144 ⚭ Willibirg (daughter of Margrave Ottokar II of Styria), † 1145
Ekbert III, † 1158, 1148 Count of Pitten, 1151 Count of Neuburg am Inn
Kunigunde, † 1152 ⚭ 1135, Bertold II, Count of Andechs, † 1151 ⚭ Ulrich III of Deggendorf and Pernegg
Mathilde, † 1160 ⚭ Count Bertold II of Bogen, † 1167
Ekbert von Deggendorf
Benedikta (?) ⚭ Wernhard von Julbach
Henry II, Count, 1070, Vogt of St. Nikola ⚭ Adelheid of Perg and Machland
Gebhard, count of Formbach
Benedikta ⚭ Gebhard von Ollersbach
Benedikta ⚭ Wernhard I of Julbach
Dietrich von Ollersbach
Dietrich II, † 1145, 1115 Count of Viechtenstein, Count of Formbach, Count of Kreuzenstein ⚭ Adelheid, daughter of Margrave Leopold II of Austria
Hedwig, † 1170 ⚭ Count Engelbert von Wasserburg, Hallgraf in Reichenhall, † 1161
Gottfried, monk
Ulrich II (Udalrich) von Formbach, 1040/c. 1055
Pilgrim, † 1066,
Frederick, † 1060 ⚭ 1056 Gertrude, daughter of Count Konrad von Haldensleben, † 1116
Hedwig ⚭ Graf Gebhard von Supplinburg, † 1075, ⚭ Duke Dietrich of Upper Lorraine, † 1115
Emperor Lothar (1125-1137)
Ida, † 1138 ⚭ Count Sieghard X of Burghausen, † 1104
Simon, Duke of Lorraine from this house are the descendants of the House of Fornbacher.