Carinthia (duchy)

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Herzogtum Kärnten (de)
Vojvodina Koroška (sl)
Duchy of Carinthia
State of the Holy Roman Empire, then
Kronland of Cisleithanian Austria
Bavaria
976 – 1919
 

 

Coat of arms of the Dukes of Carinthia of Carinthia

Coat of arms of the Dukes of Carinthia

Location of Carinthia
Carinthia within Austria-Hungary (number 3)
Capital Sankt Veit an der Glan (Šentvid ob Glini) until 1518, then Klagenfurt (Celovec)
Government Principality
Historical era Middle Ages
 - Created Duchy 976
 - Bequeathed to House of Habsburg 1335
 - Joined Austrian Circle 1512
 - Upper Carinthia
    ceded to Illyrian Provinces
 
1809
 - Restored to Austria 1815
 - Partitioned by
    Treaty of St Germain
 
1919

The Duchy of Carinthia (German: Herzogtum Kärnten; Slovene: Vojvodina Koroška) was a duchy located in southern Austria and parts of northern Slovenia. It was part of the Holy Roman Empire from 976 until the dissolution of the Empire in 1806, and a crownland of Austria-Hungary until its dissolution in 1918. By the 1919 Treaty of Saint-Germain the main area of the duchy formed the Austrian state of Carinthia, a smaller south-eastern part (Slovene Carinthia and the commune of Jezersko) was included into the newly created Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, while the Val canale with the municipality of Tarvisio was ceded to the Kingdom of Italy.

Contents

[edit] Carantania and medieval dynasties

In the 7th century it was part of the Principality of Carantania and the empire of Charlemagne from 788 to 843, when it became part of the eastern Frankish kingdom of King Louis the German. From 889 to 976 it was the March of Carinthia, while Count Berthold already received the title of a duke by King Henry I of Germany. After Berthold became Duke of Bavaria in 938 both principalities were reigned by one duke.

In 976 Emperor Otto II again named Henry the Younger separated duke for the Duchy of Karantanija and Otto I of Swabia for the Duchy of Bavaria. In 995, Adalbero I of Eppenstein became margrave, in 1012 Duke of Carinthia. He was removed from office in 1035. In 1077, the country was given to Luitpold, another member of the Eppensteiner family, which, however, ended with the death of Henry II of Carinthia in 1122. At that time, a lot of territory in what is today Upper Styria passed to Ottokar II of Styria. The remainder of Carinthia passed to Henry III of the Spanheimer family. The last Spanheimer duke was Ulrich III, who chose Ottokar II of Bohemia as his heir. The last Spanheimer, Philipp, who was Archbishop of Salzburg, attempted to become duke but did not prevail against Ottokar in spite of being supported by Rudolf of Habsburg. He died in 1279.

The Prince's Stone (Slovene: Knežji kamen) played an important part in the installation of Carinthia's dukes
The Prince's Stone (Slovene: Knežji kamen) played an important part in the installation of Carinthia's dukes

[edit] Habsburgs

Rudolf, after defeating Ottokar and becoming King of Germany, gave Carinthia to Meinhard II of Gorizia-Tyrol. In 1335, after the death of Henry, the last male of this line, Emperor Louis the Bavarian gave Carinthia and the southern part of the Tyrol as an imperial fief on May 2, 1335 in Linz to the Habsburg family who ruled it until 1918. As the other component parts of the Habsburg monarchy, Carinthia remained a semi-autonomous state with its own constitutional structure for a long time. The Habsburgs divided up their territories within the family twice, in the 1379 Treaty of Neuberg and again in 1564. Each time, the Duchy of Carinthia became part of Inner Austria and was ruled jointly with Styria and Carniola.

Maria Theresa of Austria and Joseph II attempted to create a more unitary Habsburg state, and in 1804, Carinthia was integrated into the Austrian Empire. In 1867, it became a Kronland of Cisleithania, the western part of Austria-Hungary. See History of Austria.

Over the centuries, German, which carried more prestige, expanded at the expense of Slovenian.

[edit] 20th century

Following the end of the First World War and the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, the Carinthian Plebiscite was held on October 10, 1920 to determine the fate of Carinthia. The province was subsequently divided into a larger part that became part of Austria, while a smaller part became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, today in Slovenia.

The Austrian part of Carinthia (German: Kärnten) is now a federal state of Austria, and most of the Slovenian part of Carinthia (Slovene: Koroška) is an informal province in Slovenia. The Canal Valley around Tarvisio, part of Carinthia until 1918, became part of Italy.

[edit] Dukes of Carinthia

[edit] Various dynasties

Luitpolding House

Salian House

Luitpolding House

Liudolfing House

Salian House

  • Otto I (1002-1004), again
  • Conrad I (1004-1011)

House of Eppenstein

Salian House

Elder House of Welf

House of Ezzonen

House of Zähringen

House of Eppenstein

[edit] House of Spanheim

  • Henry III (1122-1124)
  • Engelbert (1124-1134)
  • Ulrich I (1134-1144)
  • Henry IV (1144-1161)
  • Herman II (1161-1181)
  • Ulrich II (1181-1201)
  • Bernhard (1201-1256)
  • Ulrich III (1256-1269)

[edit] Various dynasties

Přemyslids

House of Habsburg

[edit] Gorizia-Tyrol

[edit] House of Habsburg

[edit] Leopoldinian Line

[edit] Habsburg territories reunified in 1458

[edit] Inner Austrian Habsburgs

Carinthia was unified with the rest of the Habsburg territories again in 1619. See List of rulers of Austria

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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