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Former territories in modern Germany and the Netherlands From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The United Duchies of Jülich-Cleves-Berg was a territory in the Holy Roman Empire between 1521 and 1614, formed from the personal union of the duchies of Jülich, Cleves and Berg.
United Duchies of Jülich-Cleves-Berg | |||||||||||||||||||
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1521–1614 | |||||||||||||||||||
Status | Duchy (State of Holy Roman Empire) | ||||||||||||||||||
Capital | Düsseldorf | ||||||||||||||||||
Common languages | various closely related West Germanic varieties, e.g. Kleverlandish, Ripuarian, Westphalian, Limburgish | ||||||||||||||||||
Historical era | Middle Ages | ||||||||||||||||||
1521 | |||||||||||||||||||
• Partitioned at Xanten | 12 November 1614 | ||||||||||||||||||
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Today part of | Germany Netherlands |
The name was resurrected after the Congress of Vienna for the province of Jülich-Cleves-Berg of the Kingdom of Prussia between 1815 and 1822. Its territory is today split between the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia and the Dutch province of Gelderland.
The United Duchies of Jülich-Cleves-Berg was a combination of states of the Holy Roman Empire. The duchies of Jülich and Berg united in 1423. Nearly a century later, in 1521, these two duchies, along with the county of Ravensberg, fell extinct, with only the last duke's daughter Maria von Geldern left to inherit; under Salic law, women could only hold property through a husband or guardian, so the territories passed to her husband—and distant relative—John III, Duke of Cleves and Mark as a result of their strategic marriage in 1509. These united duchies controlled most of the present-day North Rhine-Westphalia that was not within the ecclesiastical territories of Electoral Cologne and Münster.
During the reign of Duke William the Rich, the United Duchies challenged Emperor Charles V for control of the Duchy of Guelders. Controlling Guelders would allow for the disconnected lands of the duchies to be connected by land. To counter the Habsburg Emperor, William attempted to form several alliances. For example, his sister, Anne of Cleves, married King Henry VIII of England to create an alliance between England and Jülich-Cleves-Berg. Nonetheless, Charles V defeated William in the Guelders War, and William was forced to accept the Treaty of Venlo. William also spent a lot of his reign developing his lands by constructing fortresses and residencies.
William also set two major laws, the Privilegium Unionis and Priviligium Successionis. The Privilegium Unionis had declared that the Duchies of Jülich, Cleves, and Berg would remain united rather than divided during succession. The Priviligium Successionis declared that in the case of the extinction of the male line, the duchies would pass to a female line.
Only a century after John III's marriage, however, the male line of the House of La Marck, which ruled the duchies, fell extinct, prompting the War of the Jülich Succession over the right to inherit the united duchies. William's son — Duke John William — died without issue in 1609. His inheritance was claimed by the heirs of his two eldest sisters. Whilst the dukes, inspired by the humanism of Desiderius Erasmus, had managed to bear a "via media" between the confessional disputes ensuing from the Protestant Reformation, the heirs of the last duke's two eldest sisters were on opposite sides of the divide. The situation was further complicated by acquisitive desires of Emperor Rudolph II and the Wettin dukes of Saxony—the former particularly worrying to Henry IV of France and the Dutch Republic, who feared any strengthening of the Habsburg Netherlands.
The Lutheran Anna of Prussia was married to John Sigismund, Elector of Brandenburg, whereas Roman Catholic Anna of Cleves was married to Philip Louis, Count Palatine of Neuburg. As a result, after the War of the Jülich Succession (one of the precursors to the Thirty Years' War) was settled at Xanten, the Protestant territories (Cleves, Mark and Ravensburg) passed to Brandenburg-Prussia with the Catholic lands (Jülich and Berg) being awarded to the Palatinate-Neuburg. Years of being trampled by armies had destroyed much of the lands' wealth that had been so renowned under William the Rich.
Philip Louis' grandson Philip William became Elector Palatine in 1685, with the Bergish capital becoming the seat of the Electorate of the Palatinate, until the line inherited Bavaria in 1777. In 1701, the Margrave-Electors of Brandenburg became Kings in Prussia; with Cleves-Mark as their first possession in western Germany, it was the seed of the future Prussian Rhineland.
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