:''This article refers to the King of the Romans Henry (VII) of the House of
Hohenstaufen. For the Emperor from the House of Luxembourg, see
Henry VII, Holy Roman Emperor.''
'Henry (VII)' (
1211 –
February 12 (?),
1242), was
King of the Romans,
King of Sicily, and Duke of
Swabia. He was the son and co-king of
Emperor Frederick II and elder brother of King
Conrad IV of Germany.
Biography
Henry was the only son of
Frederick II and his first wife
Constance of Aragon. His maternal grandparents were
Alfonso II of Aragon and
Sancha of Castile.
He was born in 1211 in
Sicily. When Frederick sought the crown of Germany, he had his son crowned King of Sicily in February
1212 by
Pope Innocent III, since an agreement between Frederick and the Pope stated that the kingdoms of Germany and Sicily should not be united under one ruler. However, after the death of the Pope in
1216, Frederick called his son Henry to Germany and entrusted him with the Duchy of
Swabia. After the end of the Zähringen line in
1219 Henry also received the title of ''
Rector of Burgundy'', though that title disappeared again when Henry was elected king.
In April
1220, the German princes assembled at
Frankfurt-am-Main elected him King, for which the Emperor issued ''
Confoederatio cum principibus ecclesiasticis'', favoring the lords spiritual. He transferred to Germany: Henry did not use the title of "King of Sicily" after
1217.
After Frederick II returned to
Italy in 1220, Henry was placed under the tutelage of
Archbishop Engelbert I of
Cologne, who crowned him as King on
May 8,
1222, in
Aachen. After Engelbert's death in
1225,
Louis I, Duke of
Bavaria, took over the guardianship. In 1225, Henry married
Margaret, daughter of Duke
Leopold VI of Austria, a woman seven years older than him, in
Nürnberg.
Henry seems to have been a lively, cultured ruler and kept many ''
Minnesänger'' at his court. It is possible he wrote some ''Minnelieder'' (courtly love poetry) himself. He was physically robust, although lame, and about 1.66 m (5' 4 1/2") in height.
In
1228, he had a falling-out with Duke Louis of Bavaria, who was suspected of plotting with the Pope against Emperor Frederick II. Henry took over the rule for himself, forced Louis to submit, and then turned against the
Bishop of Strassburg. The nobles, angered by his city-friendly policies, forced him however to issue in
Worms on
May 1,
1231 the ''
Statutum in favorem principum'', in favour of the princes and directed against the cities, and by their complaints turned Frederick II against his son — the Emperor was dependent on the support of the princes for his Italian policies.
In
1232, Henry swore obedience to his father in Cividale. In the same year, Henry renewed the league between the Hohenstaufen and the French royal house of
Capet, and in the following year, subdued
Otto II of the
Palatinate, the son of Duke Louis of Bavaria. In 1233/34, however, he made his father angry again, when he intervened against the
inquisitor Conrad of Marburg, while his father was trying to bring
Pope Gregory IX into an alliance against the
Lombards.
Frederick II reacted strongly and outlawed his son on
July 5,
1234. Henry revolted and formed an alliance with the Lombards in December. However, he was forced to submit to his father on
July 2,
1235 in
Wimpfen, forsaken by most of his followers. Frederick II and the nobles tried Henry on
July 4,
1235 in Worms and dethroned him. His younger brother
Conrad was appointed Duke of Swabia and also elected King.
Henry was kept prisoner in various places in
Apulia. His seclusion may have been dictated as much by his health as by his rebelliousness: analysis of his skeleton in
1998-
1999 has shown that he was suffering from advanced
leprosy in his last years. He died on February 12, 1242 in Martirano, after a fall, possibly an attempted suicide. His father had him buried with royal honours in the cathedral of
Cosenza, in an antique Roman
sarcophagus.
Among the rulers of the Holy Roman Empire, Henry is mentioned only in parentheses, as he did not exercise the sole kingship. He is not to be confused with the later
Emperor Henry VII of the House of Luxembourg.
See also
★
Dukes of Swabia family tree
★
Gino Fornaciari, ''The Leprosy of Henry VII (1211-1242), son of Frederick II and King of Germany'' (external link)