- Source: Brunengeruz
The county of Brunengeruz (spelled in various ways such as Brugeron, Brunengeruuz, Brunengurt) existed in the 10th and 11th centuries in what is now eastern Belgium, between the town of Leuven on the river Dyle and Tienen on the river Gete. It was part of the larger region known as the Hesbaye. The name is sometimes interpreted with "corrected" forms such as Brunenrode, because the Latin spellings are believed to derive from Brūninga roþa, meaning a forest clearing (typically rode or rooi in modern Dutch placenames) belonging to the kinsfolk of Bruno.
August 27th 988, this county was granted by Otto III and became part of the secular lordship of the bishops of Liège, contributing to the creation of the "prince-bishopric" of Liège. There are indications that prior to this the county had been held by a countess named Alpeidis, who may have also originally have held Jodoigne in the 10th century as part of a larger version of this county.
In 1036 the place Wulmerson, near Grimde, was mentioned in a record as being in the county of "Brunengurt".
The county came to be claimed by the counts of Leuven and over several generations they achieved control of most of the area, excluding Hoegaarden, Beauvechain, Tourinnes-la-Grosse and Chaumont. By 1155, if not earlier, Hoegaarden came to be seen as the chief town of the leftover "county", which remained under the bishops.
The 13th-century writer Giles of Orval in his Gesta episcoporum Leodiensium (II.44) in the entry for 1099, defined the boundaries of the 11th-century version of the disputed county. He explained that this county, contested by the prince-bishops of Liège and the counts of Leuven, was granted by the prince-bishop to Albert III, Count of Namur. Albert's family did not maintain control though, and most of the county came increasingly under the control of Leuven.
Giles described a relatively large area covering much of eastern Flemish Brabant and Walloon Brabant, stretching from Louvain to Tienen. Among the places named was Brunengeruz itself, which was in or near modern Roux-Miroir (medieval Rode).
References
Bibliography
Baerten, Jean (1965), "In Hasbanio comitatus quatuor (Verdrag van Meersen, 870)", Koninklijke Zuinederlandse Maatschappij voor Taal- en Letterkunde en Geschiedenis, XIX
Buvé, Lodewijk-Clemens (1906), "Het graafschap Brunerode", Bijdragen tot de Geschiedenis Bijzonderlijk van het Aloude Hertogdom Brabant, 5: 100–120
Daris, Joseph (1880), "L'Ancienne Principauté de Liége IX. Origine et formation de la principauté de Liége", Bulletin de l'Institut archéologique liégeoise, 15
Grandgagnage, Charles (1854), "Limites du comté de Brunengeruz", Mémoire sur les anciens noms de lieux dans la Belgique orientale, pp. 106–108
Moulaert, P. B. C. B. (1858), "Essai sur le comté de Brunengeruz, appelé par les historiens modernes Comté de Brugeron" (PDF), Bulletin de la Commission royale d'Histoire, 10: 165–195
Nonn, Ulrich (1983), Pagus und Comitatus in Niederlothringen: Untersuchung zur politischen Raumgliederung im frühen Mittelalter, p. 140
Tarlier, Jules; Wauters, Alphonse, "Roux-Miroir", Géographie et Histoire des communes belges
Tarlier, Jules; Wauters, Alphonse (1882), "Tienen", Géographie et Histoire des communes belges, vol. 7
Vanderkindere, Léon (1902), La formation territoriale des principautés belges au Moyen Age (PDF), vol. 2, p. 143
Van der Velpen, J. (1953), "Alpeide stichteres de Collegiale kerk van Hoegaarden", Eigen Schoon en de Brabander, 36: 1–17
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Albert III dari Namur
- Brunengeruz
- Hoegaarden
- Godfrey I, Count of Louvain
- Pagus of Hasbania
- Albert III, Count of Namur
- County of Loon
- List of states in the Holy Roman Empire (N)
- Frederick of Liege
- Hesbaye
- Godefroi, Count of Durbuy