The
Saxon count
Esico of Ballenstedt (c. 1000–1059/60) was mentioned in a 1030 entry in the medieval chronicles of the
Annalista Saxo and in a 1036 deed issued by Emperor
Conrad II. He was a son of one Count Adalbert, who held the office of a
Vogt of
Nienburg Abbey, and Hidda, a daughter of
Margrave Odo I of the Saxon Ostmark. Esico, whose sister
Uta married
Margrave Eckard II of Meissen is considered the progenitor of the
House of Ascania. He had a
collegiate church erected in Ballenstedt, dedicated to Saints
Pancras and
Abundius, in the presence of Emperor
Henry III in 1046. Ballenstedt church was mentioned in a charter of 1073 by
Henry IV in which the emperor confirmed to the church the possession of 21
mansi previously granted by his father
Henry III. In 1123
Otto the Rich together with his son
Albert the Bear, who would become the first ruler of
Brandenburg, established a
Benedictine monastery at the site. Albert and was buried at the crypt of the abbey church in 1070; a monument for him is located in the town's park. Albert's grandson
Henry I became the first
Prince of Anhalt in 1218. In 1512 the citizens of Ballenstedt were vested with
brewing rights by the Ascanian prince
Wolfgang of Anhalt-Köthen. After Wolfgang met with
Martin Luther at the 1521
Diet of Worms, he became one of the first
Protestant rulers in the
Holy Roman Empire. Ballenstedt Abbey was stormed and plundered during the
German Peasants' War, whereafter Prince Wolfgang had the monastery
secularised in 1525. He chose Ballenstedt as a residence and granted it
town privileges in 1543. It received city walls in 1551; a town hall was first mentioned in 1582. As the Anhalt princes supported King
Christian IV of Denmark during the
Thirty Years' War, Ballenstedt was raided and plundered by Imperial troops under
Albrecht von Wallenstein in 1626. After the war, the town and the former monastery were rebuilt as a
Baroque summer residence by the Ascanian princes of
Anhalt-Bernburg. In 1765 the
enlightened prince
Frederick Albert completely moved his residence from
Bernburg to Ballenstedt Castle and induced a time of prosperity, including the erection of a castle theatre in 1788, the oldest theatre in Saxony-Anhalt and the domain of composers like
Albert Lortzing and
Franz Liszt. A part of the re-unified
Duchy of Anhalt from 1863 on, Ballenstedt became known as a residential town for the well-to-do retired like
Princess Friederike of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, who died at Ballenstedt Castle in 1902, or the painter and author
Wilhelm von Kügelgen, whose house is now a museum. ==Politics==