Karl I, Count of Hohenzollern

Count of Hohenzollern and Count of Haigerloch
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroCount of Hohenzollern and Count of Haigerloch
PlacesBelgium
wasCount
Work fieldRoyals
Gender
Male
Religion:Catholicism
Birth1 January 1516, Brussels, Arrondissement of Brussels-Capital, Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium
Death18 March 1576Sigmaringen, Sigmaringen, Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg (aged 60 years)
Family
Mother:Johanna van Witthem
Father:Eitel Frederick III, Count of Hohenzollern
Children:Eitel Frederick IV Count of Hohenzollern Charles II Count of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen Christopher Count of Hohenzollern-Haigerloch Joachim of Zollern
The details

Biography

Karl I of Hohenzollern (1516 in Brussels – 18 March 1576 at Sigmaringen Castle) was Count of County of Hohenzollern from 1525 to 1575. He was Imperial Archchamberlain and chairman of the Aulic Council.

Life

Karl was the eldest son of the Count Eitel Friedrich III of Hohenzollern (1494–1525) from his marriage to Johanna van Witthem (d. 1544), daughter of Philip, Lord of Beersel and Boutersem. Karl was Imperial Archchamberlain and later chairman of the Aulic Council. In 1534, he received the Counties of Sigmaringen and Veringen as imperial fiefs from Emperor Karl V.

Karl married in 1537 with Anna (1512–1579), a daughter of Margrave Ernst of Baden-Durlach, with whom he had several children, among them:

  • Ferfried (1538–1556),
  • Marie (1544–1611),
  • Eitel Friedrich IV (1545–1605), later the first Count of Hohenzollern-Hechingen
  • Karl II (1547–1606), later the first Count of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
  • Johanna (1548–1604),
  • Jacobea Marie (1549–1578) wife of Leonard V of Harrach (1542–1597),
  • Eleanor (1551–1598),
  • Christoph (1552–1592), later the first Count of Hohenzollern-Haigerloch
  • Magdalena (1553–1571), a nun in Holz,
  • Joachim (1554–1587), titular Count of Hohenzollern
  • Kunigunde (1558–1595), a nun at Inzigkofen Abbey

He had held the family possessions in a single hand since the Counts of Haigerloch had died out with the death of his cousin Jobst Nicholas II in 1558. After his death in 1576, however, they were divided. His eldest son, Eitel Friedrich IV became the founder of the Hohenzollern-Hechingen line. His second son, Karl II, founded the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen. The third son, Christoph, founded the Hohenzollern-Haigerloch line, which died out in 1634, with Christoph's share falling to Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen. The youngest son, Joachim, received the county of Zollern. This line was the first to die out, when Joachim's son Joachim Georg died in 1602.

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