:''Not to be confused with King
Ludwig II of Bavaria ''.
'Duke Louis II' of Bavaria (
German: ''Ludwig II der Strenge, Herzog von Bayern, Pfalzgraf bei Rhein'';
13 April 1229 –
2 February 1294), was
Duke of Bavaria and
Count Palatine of the Rhine from
1253. Born in
Heidelberg, he was a son of duke
Otto II and Agnes of Palatinate. She was a daughter of the
Welf Henry V, Count Palatine of the Rhine, her grandfathers were
Henry XII the Lion and
Conrad of Hohenstaufen.
Biography
In
1246 Louis supported his brother-in-law king
Conrad IV of Germany against
Heinrich Raspe and in
1251 Louis was in war again against the bishop of
Regensburg. In
1253 Louis succeeded his father as duke of Bavaria.
When the
Wittelsbach country was divided in
1255 among Otto's sons, Louis received the
Palatinate and
Upper Bavaria, while his brother duke
Henry XIII of Bavaria received
Lower Bavaria. This partition was against the law and therefore caused the anger of the bishops in Bavaria who allied themselves with king
Otakar II of Bohemia in
1257. In August 1257 Ottokar invaded Bavaria, but Louis and Henry managed to repulse the attack. It was one of the rare harmonious actions of the two brothers, who often argued.
During the German
interregnum after king
William's death in
1256 Louis supported
Richard of Cornwall.
Together with his brother Louis also aided his young
Hohenstaufen nephew
Conradin in his duchy of
Swabia, but it was not possible to enforce Conradin's election as German king. As a result for his support Louis was banned by the pope in
1266. In
1267 Louis accompanied Conradin only to
Verona. After the young prince's execution in
Naples in
1268, Louis inherited some of Conradin's possessions in
Swabia and supported the election of the
Habsburg Rudolph I against Ottokar II in
1273. On
26 August 1278 the armies of Rudolph and Louis met Otakar's forces on the banks of the
River March in the
Battle of Dürnkrut and Jedenspeigen where Otakar was defeated and killed. In
1289 the
electoral dignity of Bavaria passed to Bohemia again, but Louis remained an elector as Count Palatine of the Rhine. After Rudolph's death in 1291 Louis could not enforce the election of his Habsburg brother-in-law
Albert I against
Adolf of Nassau.
Louis died at Heidelberg. His son
Rudolf succeded him, with Adolf of Nassau becoming his father-in-law a few months later. Louis was buried in the crypt of
Fürstenfeld Abbey.
Family and children
Louis II was married three times.
The execution of Marie of Brabant
He had his first wife Marie of Brabant —a daughter of duke
Heinrich II. (Henry II.) of Brabant and Lothringen (Lorraine), and Maria, daughter of king
Philipp of Schwaben (Swabia)— executed in
Donauwörth in
1256 due to mistaken suspicion of adultery; back in those days the punishment for an adulterous wife was beheading. Any actual guilt on her part could never be validated. As expiation Louis founded the Cistercian friary
Fürstenfeld Abbey (Fürstenfeldbruck) near Munich.
Different sources tell varying tales about how this terrible mistake could happen in the first place: In 1256 Louis had been away from home for an extended time, due to his responsibilities as a sovereign in the area of the Rhine. His wife wrote two letters, one to her husband, and another to the earl of Kyburg at Hunsrück, a vassal of Louis. Details about the actual content of the second letter vary, but according to the chroniclers the messenger who carried the letter to Louis had been given the wrong one, and Ludwig came to the conclusion that his wife had a secret love affair.
Over time a great many tales of folklore sprang up around Louis' bloody deed, most of them written long after Louis' death: Ballad-mongers embellished the tale into a murderous frenzy, during which Louis allegedly not only killed his wife after having ridden home for five days and nights, but also stabbed the messenger who brought him the wrong letter, then upon entering his castle stabbed his own castellan and a court lady and threw his wife's maid from the battlements, before he massacred his wife either by stabbing her (why change a winning formula?) or cutting off her head.
Several more restrained chronicles support the account of Mary's execution in January 18, 1256 in Donauwörth at castle Mangoldstein by ducal decree for alleged adultery, but nothing beyond that.
Later marriages
In
1260 Louis married his second wife
Anna of Glogau. They had the following children:
# Maria (b.
1261), a nun in
Marienburg abbey.
# Ludwig (
13 September 1267–
23 November 1290, killed at a tournament at
Nuremberg.
He married his third wife Mechthild, one of king
Rudolph's daughters, on
27 October 1273. Their children were:
# Agnes (ca. 1267/77–
1345), married to:
##
1290 in
Donauwörth Landgrave
Henry II of Hesse;
## 1298/1303
Heinrich I "Ohneland" ("Lackland"),
Margrave of Brandenburg.
#
Rudolf I (
4 October 1274,
Basle–
12 August 1319).
# Mechtild (
1275–
28 March 1319,
Lüneburg), married
1288 to Duke
Otto II of Braunschweig-Lüneburg.
#
Louis IV (
1 April 1282,
Munich–
11 October 1347,
Puch bei Fürstenfeldbruck).
Louis II was succeeded by his oldest son Rudolf.
Links
★
German wiki entry for Louis II. (''Ludwig der Strenge'')
★
Genealogy of Louis II. (compilation of various sources, in German)