Simon VII, Count of Lippe


Count Simon VII of Lippe was a ruler of the Reformed county of Lippe-Detmold.

Life

He was the second-eldest son of Count Simon VI of Lippe and his wife Elizabeth of Schauenburg and Holstein.
In 1601, Simon and his older brother Bernard travelled to Kassel, where they studied at the court school. After Bernard's untimely death in 1602, Simon returned to Brake, where his father introduced him systematically to the business of government. When his father died in 1613, he took up government. In 1617, he managed to end a bitter dispute his late father had had with the city of Lemgo. Simon VI had tried to enforce Calvinism throughout the county, but the citizens of Lemgo preferred Lutheranism. The Treaty of Röhrentrup allowed Lutheranism in Lemgo and gave the city the right of High justice, which the city then used to organize witch trials.
Simon VII remained neutral during the Thirty Years' War, in an attempt to spare his small country as much as possible. The country suffered nevertheless, when foreign soldiers were billeted in the county.

Marriage and issue

Simon VII married Countess Anna Catherine of Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein in 1607. They had the following children:
After Anna Catherine's death, he married Countess Maria Magdalena of Waldeck-Wildungen, daughter of Christian, Count of Waldeck, in 1623 and had three more children: