- Source: Heilwig of Lippe
Heilwig of Lippe, also known as Heilwig of Schaumburg (c. 1200 – c. 1248/1250) was a German noblewoman. She was countess of Holstein by marriage to Adolf IV of Holstein.
Life
She was a daughter of Lord Herman II of Lippe and his wife, Oda of Tecklenburg.
On 14 February 1246, she founded the Cistercian monastery in Herwardeshude, a village at the mouth of the Pepermölenbek, between the later St. Pauli and Altona. The monastery was confirmed by Pope Innocent IV in 1247. This monastery later founded the monasteries In Valle Virgum, also in Herwardeshude, and in 1530, after the reformation, the Monastery of St. John, which still exists as a Protestant nunnery.
Legacy
In 1870, the Heilwigstraße in Hamburg-Eppendorf was named after her.
Marriage and issue
She was married to Count Adolf IV of Holstein-Kiel and Schauenburg. They had at least three children:
John I
Gerhard I
Matilda
Ancestors
References
Silke Urbanski: Geschichte des Klosters Harvestehude „In valle virginum“. Wirtschaftliche, soziale und politische Entwicklung eines Nonnenklosters bei Hamburg 1245-1530 (Dissertationsschrift), Münster 1996, ISBN 3-8258-2758-5
External links
Homepage of the St. John's monastery, viewed on 1 October 2010
Genealogy of Bernard IV of Lippe, viewed on 1 October 2010
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Heilwig dari Lippe
- Mechtilde dari Holstein
- Adolf IV dari Holstein
- Heilwig of Lippe
- Heilwig
- House of Lippe
- Herman II, Lord of Lippe
- Adolf IV of Holstein
- Gerhard I, Count of Holstein-Itzehoe
- Bernard II, Lord of Lippe
- John I, Count of Holstein-Kiel
- Counts of Schauenburg and Holstein
- Mechtilde of Holstein