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Engelbert I of Nassau
P1010765Praalgraf van Engelbrecht I van Nassau
Engelbert (in the front kneeling) depicted on his tomb in the Grote Kerk (Breda).
Personal details
Born c. 1370
Dillenburg
Died 3 May 1442(1442-05-03) (aged Error: Need valid year, month, day)
Breda
Spouse(s) Johanna van Polanen

Engelbert I of Nassau (c. 1370, in Dillenburg – 3 May 1442, in Breda) was a son of Count Johan I of Nassau and Countess Margaretha of the Marck, daughter of Count Adolph II of the Marck.[1]

Early years[]

Engelbert of Nassau was a student in Cologne, Germany in 1389 and a dean in Münster from 1399-1404.[2] He became counselor to the Duke of Brabant, first to Anton of Burgundy, and later for his son Jan IV of Brabant. He would later serve Philip the Good.

Marriage and issue[]

Engelbert's brothers were childless and he left the deanery so he could marry Johanna van Polanen in 1404.[3] They had six children:

  • Jan IV of Nassau (born 1 August 1410) married Maria of Loon-Heinsberg
  • Henry II, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg (born 7 January 1414) married 1) Genoveva of Virneburg 2) Irmgard of Schleiden-Junkerath
  • Margaretha (born 1415), married Diederik, Count of Sayn
  • Willem (born December 1416)
  • Maria (born 2 February 1418 - died 2 October 1472), married Count John II of Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein
  • Philip (born 13 October 1420 – died 1429)

Engelbert had an illegitimate daughter with an unknown mistress:

  • Margaretha of Nassau. She married Hugo Wijnrix.

He died May 3, 1442 in Breda. A mausoleum was built for Engelbert in the Church-of-Our-Lady (the Great Church) in Breda. The construction took thirty years, from 1460 to 1490.

References[]

  1. De Nederlandsche leeuw: Maandblad van het Koninklijk Nederlandsch Genootschap voor Geslacht- en Wapenkunde, Volume 8, 1890, pg 90-91
  2. Wilhelm Kohl, Helmut Müller, Klaus Scholz, Die Bistümer der Kirchenprovinz Köln: historisch-statistische Beschreibung der Kirche des alten Reiches. Das Domstift St. Paulus zu Münster ; 2, Volume 2; Volume 4, Walter de Gruyter, 1982, p 40
  3. J. ter Haar, Geschiedenis van de Lage Landen, Uitgeverij Kok, 2004, p 234
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