The Brunonids (or Brunonians, German: Brunonen, Latin: Brunones, i.e. "Brunos") were a Saxon noble family in the 10th and 11th centuries, who owned property in Eastphalia (around Brunswick) and Frisia.

The Brunonids are assumed to be descendants of Brun, Duke of Saxony (d. 880). This would make them the senior branch of the Liudolfing house, to which the Ottonian emperors also belonged. This relationship is considered likely because the names Brun and Liudolf are both common among the Brunonids, and their properties are located in the same areas as the properties of the early Liudolfings. In addition, contemporaries seemed to regard the Brunonids as male-line relatives of the Ottonian kings, as shown by the candidacy for king of Brun I, Count of Brunswick. However, there is no evidence that the Brunonids are related to the Liudolfings, and nothing is known about the existence of any children of Duke Brun.

The oldest properties of the Brunonids were located in the Derlingau, from which they spread their influence to adjacent areas. The town of Brunswick, located at the western edge of the Derlingau, became their comital seat in the 9th or 10th century; according to legends, Brunswick (the name literally means "Brun's town") was founded by one of the Brunonids named Brun — it is unclear by which one. Their county came to be known as the County of Brunswick.

The next assumed member of the Brunonid (Brunoner) house was a Count Liudolf, who was mentioned in 942. The first certain member of the house was Brun I, Count of Brunswick, who is attested since 991. Count Bruno I sought without success to succeed Otto III in 1002 as King of the Romans. In 1067, Bruno's grandson Egbert was granted the Margraviate of Meissen by Emperor Henry IV. His son, Egbert II, opposed that same ruler and lost his rights to both Meissen and Frisia.

Egbert II's death marked the end of the Brunonid line. Egbert II's sister, Gertrude of Brunswick, had a daughter with her second husband, Henry the Fat, Margrave of Frisia of Northeim. This daughter, Richenza (d. 1141) married Lothar of Süpplingenburg, who was Duke of Saxony and later became Holy Roman Emperor. Their daughter Gertrude (d. 1143) married Duke Henry the Proud of Saxony and Bavaria, a member of the House of Welf. In this way, the Welf dynasty gained the Brunonid properties around Brunswick, which they would hold until the 20th century.

Family tree

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  1. Brun I of Brunswick (d. 1015/1016), married Gisela of Swabia (b. c. 990; d. 15 February 1043 in Goslar) (married 1016/1017 Emperor Conrad II (d. 1039))
    1. Liudolf (d. 23 April 1038), married Gertrud of Frisia (d. 1077)
      1. Bruno II (b. c. 1024; d. 26. Juni 1057), Margrave of Frisia
      2. Egbert I (d. 1068), married Irmgard of Susa
        1. Egbert II (d. 1090), married Oda of Orlamünde
        2. Gertrude of Brunswick (d. 1117), married I. Dietrich of Katlenburg (d. 1085); II. Henry the Fat, Margrave of Northeim (d. 1101); III. Henry I, Margrave of Meissen (d. 1103)

References

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  • Freytag, Hans-Joachim (1955). "Brunonen". Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German). Vol. 2. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot. pp. 684–685.
  • Brüsch, Tania (2000). Die Brunonen, ihre Grafschaften und die sächsische Geschichte: Herrschaftsbildung und Adelsbewußtsein im 11. Jahrhundert [The Brunonids, their Counties and the History of Saxony: Development of Power and the Consciousness of Nobility during the 11th Century] (in German). Husum: Matthiesen. ISBN 3-7868-1459-7.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Bruno, Duke of Saxony

Saxony from 866 until his death in 880. He is rated as an ancestor of the Brunonids, a cadet branch of the Ottonians, though an affiliation is uncertain.

Lothair III, Holy Roman Emperor

of Count Henry of Northeim and Gertrude of Brunswick, heiress of the Brunonids. Lothair's land purchases, inheritance and marriage alliances among the

Liudolf, Margrave of Frisia

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Liudolf, Margrave of Frisia. Liudolf of Brunswick (c. 1003 – 23 April 1038) was Margrave of Frisia, Count of Brunswick

Henry the Proud

the properties of three Saxon dynasties: the House of Supplinburg, the Brunonids, and the counts of Northeim. The marriage marked the expansion of power

Liudolf of Saxony

880), succeeded his father as a Saxon leader, supposed progenitor of the Brunonids Oda of Saxony (c. 845 – 874), married to Lothar I, Count of Stade Otto

Brunonian

rival newspaper of The Brown Daily Herald Brunonian system of medicine Brunonids, a Saxon noble family in the 10th and 11th centuries This disambiguation

Braunschweig

the 12th century, Brunswick was ruled by the Saxon noble family of the Brunonids; then, through marriage, the town fell to the House of Welf. In 1142,

House of Welf

left his territory around Brunswick, inherited from his mother of the Brunonids, to his daughter Gertrud. Her husband Henry the Proud became then the