Siegfried I, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst


Siegfried I, a member of the House of Ascania, ruled as the first Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst from 1252 until his death.

Life

Siegfried was the youngest son of Prince Henry I of Anhalt by his wife Irmgard, daughter of the Ludovingian landgrave Hermann I of Thuringia. His father had received the Anhalt territory upon the death of Duke Bernhard III of Saxony in 1212 and was raised to the rank of a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire six years later.
In 1247, after the death of the Thuringian landgrave Henry Raspe, younger brother of his mother Irmgard and last male heir of the Ludovinger dynasty, Siegfried interfered in the succeeding War of the Thuringen Succession. During the conflict, the young prince occupied the County palatine, by right of his mother. Later he renounced the county in favor of the Wettin margrave Henry III of Meissen in exchange for a monetary compensation.
After the death of his father in 1252, in accordance with the family law of the Ascanian dynasty, Siefgried and his elder brothers Henry II and Bernhard divided the Anhalt lands. Siegfried received the eastern estates around Köthen. His style Count of Köthen-Dessau likewise derived from the territories he received as his inheritance. In 1273 he even stood as a candidate in the Imperial election, though the princes eventually elected Count Rudolf of Habsburg king.
In 1290 Siegfried renounced his rule to become a preaching monk. As a result, his eldest son Prince Albert I of Anhalt became the actual ruler in the Köthen and Zerbst estates, although the former prince retained his rank until his death. Siegfried died at Köthen Castle in 1298.

Marriage and issue

On 17 October 1259, Siegfried married Catherine, daughter of Birger Magnusson, later known as Birger jarl, Regent of Sweden, by his wife Princess Ingeborg Eriksdotter of Sweden, sister of King Eric XI of Sweden. At the time of the wedding, the bride's older brother was King Waldemar of Sweden by right of their mother. They had ten children:
  1. Albert I, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst.
  2. Henry, Provost of Halberstadt.
  3. Siegfried, a canon in Magdeburg.
  4. Hermann, a Teutonic knight, Comtur at Dessau in 1327.
  5. Agnes, Abbess of Coswig.
  6. Hedwig, Abbess of Coswig.
  7. Elisabeth, a nun in Coswig.
  8. Judith, a nun in Coswig.
  9. Konstanze, a nun in Coswig.
  10. Sophie, married Ludwig of Hakeborn.