Theodoric I (Full Name Theodoric I von Wettin) (10th century; German: Dietrich, also known as Thierry) was a nobleman in the Duchy of Saxony, and the oldest traceable member of the House of Wettin.[1]

Theodoric I
Bornc. 916
Died976 (age 56)
SpouseJutta of Magdeburg
IssueDedo I, Count of Wettin
Frederick I of Wettin
Names
Theodoric I von Wettin
HouseHouse of Wettin
FatherVon Harzgau
Mother?

Biography

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Theodoric was born in the early 10th century to Von Harzgau and an unknown mother. He married Jutta of Magdeburg. They had at least two sons, Dedo and Frederick. He is mentioned as Dedo's father by bishop Thietmar of Merseburg. Dedo is the first known count of Wettin, and Dedo's son, Theodoric II, Margrave of Lower Lusatia, is considered as the first member of the Wettin dynasty, taken as established by his father. He inherited or acquired Wettin Castle during his career, perhaps from his father. As his son Dedo held the rank of Count, Theodoric may also have been a Count of Wettin. Little is known about his political career, other than that he was a supporter of the Dukes of Saxony. He died in 975 in a feud against his son. Von Harzgau (Father) was the son of Count Frederick II von Harzgau (Died 945 CE) who was the son of Friedrich I Graf im Harzgau (Died 880 CE) who was the son of Rikdag (805-861).

Issue

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Theodoric had two sons:

Ancestral theories

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Thietmar names Theodoric as a member of the tribe of the Buzici (de tribu, quae Buzici dicitur) and as a relative on his father's side of Rikdag, Margrave of Meissen (r. 979–985). Several possible fathers have been identified for him, but there is no conclusive evidence for any of them:

  • Dedi, count in the Hassegau (count in 940, died 957), one of the retainers of Otto I, a descendant of Burchard, Duke of Thuringia. Proposed by Friedrich Kurze (1886), based on the name Buzici (Buzo as short form Burchard, i.e. the Buzici would be the Burchardings).
  • Burchard III, Duke of Swabia (born 906 or 915, died 973), proposed by Reinhard Wenskus (1976) and later Stefan Pätzold (1997), also based on the interpretation of Buzici as a derived from the name Burchard.
  • Burchard II, Duke of Swabia (died 926): the association with Liesgau is connected to this hypothesis, as a Swabian count named Burchard is attested for Liesgau in 965 (known as Burchard IV. im Hassegau, brother of Dedi I of Hassegau). This Burchard is suggested as the son of Burchard II and an older brother of Theodoric.[2]
  • Folcmar (Volkmar) count in the Harzgau (died before 961) (suggestion mentioned in Lexikon des Mittelalters.[year needed])

Depending on who is assumed to be Theodoric's father, it is reasonable to assume a date of birth for Theodoric in the 910s, 920s or 930s. The year of his death has been proposed as 975/6, because it is known that his son Dedo in this year took his own mother hostage in the context of a feud (presumably against his father). Theodoric's wife is named as one Jutta or Judith of Merseburg in early modern historiography.

References

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  1. ^ Goff, Jacques le; Schmitt, Jean-Claude (April 1980). "Lexikon des Mittelalters, Volume I: « Aachen-Ägypten ». Zurich, Munich: Artemis Verlag, 1977, column 224". Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales. 35 (2): 311–313. doi:10.1017/s0395264900142738. ISSN 0395-2649. S2CID 100631691.
  2. ^ Jörg Rogge, Die Wettiner: Aufstieg einer Dynastie im Mittelalter (2005), p. 15.

Sources

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  • Albert, Duke of Saxony, Die Wettiner in Lebensbildern, Graz, Wien, Köln (1995).
  • Flathe, Heinrich Theodor (1894), "Dietrich de tribu Buzizi", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 37, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, p. 746
  • Kaemmel, Otto, Festschrift zur 800 jährigen Jubelfeier des Hauses Wettin. Dresden Hoffmann (1889).
  • Pätzold, Stefan, Die frühen Wettiner. Adelsfamilie und Hausüberlieferung bis 1221 (1997).
  • Posse, Otto, Die Markgrafen von Meissen und das Haus Wettin bis zu Konrad dem Grossen, Leipzig (1881).
  • Posse, Otto, Die Wettiner. Genealogie des Gesammthauses Wettin, Leipzig (1897).
  • Schwarz, Hilmar, Die Wettiner des Mittelalters und ihre Bedeutung für Thüringen, Leipzig (1994).
  • Wenskus, Reinhard, Sächsischer Stammesadel und fränkischer Reichsadel, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen (1976).