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Sovereignempire

County of Brabant

1085 CE – 1183 CE

Quick Facts

Type
Sovereign · empire
Period
1085 CE – 1183 CE
Duration
98 years
Known Periods
10
Data Confidence
ai_generated

Overview

The Landgraviate of Brabant was a small imperial fiefdom and landgraviate of the Holy Roman Empire, located west of Brussels between the Dender and Zenne rivers in the Low Countries. Founded in 1085 CE, it was assigned by Emperor Henry IV to Henry III, Count of Louvain and Brussels, following the death of Hermann II, Count Palatine of Lotharingia. This marked the earliest known use of the term "landgrave." In 1183 CE, Emperor Frederick Barbarossa formally merged the landgraviate with the counties of Louvain and Brussels, elevating them into the Duchy of Brabant, with Henry I becoming its first duke.

Historical Periods

County of Brabant (1260–1271)

1260 CE – 1271 CE

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Area: 11,927 km²

County of Brabant (1272–1293)

1272 CE – 1293 CE

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Area: 11,905 km²

County of Brabant (1294–1304)

1294 CE – 1304 CE

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Area: 13,141 km²

County of Brabant (1305–1343)

1305 CE – 1343 CE

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Area: 13,098 km²

County of Brabant (1344–1362)

1344 CE – 1362 CE

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Area: 13,032 km²

County of Brabant (1363–1384)

1363 CE – 1384 CE

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Area: 13,053 km²

County of Brabant (1385–1394)

1385 CE – 1394 CE

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Area: 13,075 km²

County of Brabant (1395–1401)

1395 CE – 1401 CE

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Area: 13,120 km²

County of Brabant (1402–1414)

1402 CE – 1414 CE

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Area: 14,144 km²

County of Brabant (1415–1421)

1415 CE – 1421 CE

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Area: 23,307 km²

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Explore County of Brabant on the Interactive Map

Watch territories shift, borders change, and history unfold across centuries

County of Brabant (1085 CE – 1183 CE) — Map, Timeline & History | Sholu