Heba of East Frisia | |
|---|---|
| Born | 18 November 1456 or 1457 |
| Died | after 1492 |
| Noble family | Cirksena |
| Father | Ulrich I |
| Mother | Theda Ukena |
Heba of East Frisia (* 18 November 1456 or 1457[1] - after 1492) was, as the wife of Count Erich, Countess of Holstein-Pinneberg.
Life
Heba was the eldest daughter of the chieftain and later the first Count of East Frisia, Ulrich I, Count of East Frisia, and Theda Ukena. She had five siblings.
On 13 September 1475, Count Erich of Holstein-Pinneberg concluded an agreement with her mother, Countess Theda of East Frisia, concerning his marriage to Heba.[2] In this contract, he granted Heba, as her dower, Pinneberg Castle as well as estates and toll revenues in Hamburg.[3] As her dowry, Heba's mother paid the comparatively high sum of 8,000 Rhenish guilders.[4]
The couple married in 1476. The marriage remained childless. After being widowed, Heba returned to East Frisia, where she died sometime after 1492. The year of death is frequently given in the literature as 1476.[5][6] however, this cannot be correct, since she must have died after Erich of Schaumburg (1492). Furthermore, on 15 November 1478, he declared that his wife Heba could choose the estate at Stadthagen instead of the castle at Pinneberg that had originally been promised to her as her dower.[7]
She was initially buried in the Cirksena family burial vault at Marienthal Monastery in Norden. Before 1558, Countess Anna had the princely burial vault of the Counts of East Frisia established in the Great Church of Emden, and in 1558 Heba's remains were transferred there.[6]
See also
References
- Hajo van Lengen: Ulrich I. <Graf zu Ostfriesland>. In: Ostfriesische Landschaft (Hrsg.): Biographisches Lexikon für Ostfriesland. Band II.. Aurich 1997, S. 376–383.
- NLA AU Rep. 1 Nr. 257 - Graf Erich von Schaumburg s... - Arcinsys Detailseite. Abgerufen am 11. Februar 2021.
- NLA AU Rep. 1 Nr. 262 - Graf Erich von Schaumburg v... - Arcinsys Detailseite. Abgerufen am 11. Februar 2021.
- Köller, André R., 1975-: Agonalität und Kooperation : Führungsgruppen im Nordwesten des Reiches 1250-1550. Wallstein, Göttingen 2015, ISBN 978-3-8353-1587-7, S. 185.
- Tileman Dothias Wiarda: Ostfriesische Geschichte: 1441 – 1540, Band 2. 1792.
- Helmut Eichhorn: Enno II und das Mausoleum in der Großen Kirche zu Emden. In: Kollegium der Ostfriesischen Landschaft (Hrsg.): Res Frisicae. Harm Wiemann zum 75. Geburtstag (= Abhandlungen und Vorträge zur Geschichte Ostfrieslands, Band 59). Verlag Ostfriesische Landschaft, Aurich 1978, ohne ISBN, S. 1521.
- NLA AU Rep. 1 Nr. 266 - Graf Erich von Schaumburg e... - Arcinsys Detailseite. Abgerufen am 11. Februar 2021.