- The
Nahegau was a
county in the
Middle Ages,
which covered the
environs of the Nahe and
large parts of present-day
Rhenish Hesse,
after a
successful expansion...
-
descended from a
division of the
House of the
Counts of
Nahegau in the year 1113. When the
Nahegau (a
countship named after the
river Nahe)
split into two...
-
named for King
Conrad I of Germany.
Count Werner, who held
estates in the
Nahegau,
Speyergau and
Wormsgau early in the 10th century, is the
Salian monarchs'...
- the left bank of the
Upper Rhine river.
Together with the
neighbouring Nahegau and Speyergau, it
belonged to the
central Rhenish Franconian possessions...
- 1156
started from
those held by the
Hohenstaufens in the Donnersberg,
Nahegau, Haardt, Bergstraße and
Kraichgau regions (other
branches of the Hohenstaufens...
-
region in a
territorially belligerent area.
Their neighbors at the time,
Nahegau and Speyergau,
wanted tributes and v****alage. Wormsgau,
being a poor region...
- of Salm, they
called themselves Wild-and-Rhinegraves of Salm. When the
Nahegau (a
countship named after the
river Nahe)
split into two
parts in 1113,...
-
which had its
center of
influence in the
former Nahegau. They
descended from the
Emichones (Counts of
Nahegau). The
family of the
Raugraves (the "Rough Counts")...
- Trechirgau, the
southern part to the
Nahegau. The
Trechirgau was
managed by the so-called Bertholds, the
Nahegau by the Emichones. The
capital of the...
- He was the son of
Werner V (died
about 935), a
Franconian count in the
Nahegau, Speyergau, and
Wormsgau territories on the
Upper Rhine. His
mother presumably...