Originating in
Alsace during the
Carolingian and
Ottonian periods, the Geroldsecks were first mentioned in a witness list dating from the 1080s, and were definitely proven to reside in the
Black Forest region from 1139. They were heavily involved in mining of ores, especially
silver. The Hohengeroldseck family supported and rebuilt many monasteries within the
Zähringen domains, notably
Schuttern and Ettenheimmünster, each located about 25 kilometers from castle Hohengeroldseck. All together, the Geroldsecks founded between 16 and 20 monasteries within the southern half of modern Baden. They were closely aligned with the
Bishop of Strassburg, being Vogt protectors for nearly 371 years, and twice Bishops of Strassburg, 1262–1273. Their family seat was Castle Hohengeroldseck near
Biberach. Walter of Geroldseck built the Castle upon the Schönberg between 1240 and 1250. Around 1252, the family inherited the most important portions of the County of
Sulz on the Neckar as well as the dominions of
Schenkenzell and
Lossburg and perhaps Romberg, and these formed the basis of their Lordship. In 1260, Walter of Geroldseck became Bishop of Strassburg. His brother Hermann obtained a bailiwick lying between
Seltz and the
Bishopric of Basel, and incurred the wrath of the latter when he seized the monastery of St. Gregory in the Alsatian
Münstertal. Walter lent aid to his brother, which irritated the townspeople of Strassburg. Further attempts to assert his authority over the townspeople caused a revolt, and he was driven from the city. Walter found many allies to assist him in attempting to reclaim the city, including the
Bishop of Trier, but he was defeated in the
Battle of Hausbergen in 1262, and henceforth Strassburg was a
free Imperial City. In 1270, Baron Heinrich of Geroldseck married Agnes the heiress of the last
Count of Veldenz and so founded the second dynasty of that territory. In 1277, the house of Geroldseck divided into Upper (Hohen-) and Lower lines, sharing some common properties such as the bailiwicks of Friesenheim and Oberschopfheim, the village
Ottenheim, as well as Castle Schwanau on the Alsatian side of the Rhine. A further division of the Hohen-Geroldseck line in the beginning of the fourteenth century caused the independence of the Veldenz Counts as well as the loss of old territories in Alsace. A different Castle Geroldseck was built in the thirteenth century on lands of the Lower Line in what is today the commune of
Niederstinzel in the
Wasgau region of Alsace. Hans of Geroldseck ruled from the castle as a fief of the
Bishop of Metz from 1355 until his death in 1391, after which time his rights devolved to the Lords of
Ochsenstein and the counts of
Zweibrücken-Bitsch. Castle Geroldseck itself was destroyed by fire in 1381. Old German folktales regarded the ruins as the meeting place of great heroes, such as
Ariovistus,
Herman,
Widukind, and
Siegfried. Legends claimed that, when the Germans would be in the greatest need, these heroes would come out from the castle to help them. The Lower Line ruled its Swabian territory situated upon the city of Lahr until 1426, when the family went extinct. Baron Diebold of Hohen-Geroldseck therefore challenged the legitimate heirs, the
Counts of Moers-Saarwerden, for the inheritance in 1428, but could not prevail and suffered grave economic woes. Baron Dietrich of Hohen-Geroldseck played an ambitious role in the quarrel between Austria and the
Electoral Palatinate in the 1480s, but this led to the outright conquest of Castle Geroldseck by the Palatinate in 1486. The defeat of the Elector in the
Landshut Succession War in 1504 saw the return of the family to their seat. According to the Imperial Matriculation of 1521, the Lordship of Hohengeroldseck contributed 1 cavalryman and 3 infantrymen to the
Imperial Army. In 1545 and 1551 it contributed 1 cavalryman, 2 infantrymen, and 20 Florins in money. In case of emergency, a further 16 Florins was to be paid to the Army. In addition, Hohengeroldseck had to pay to the Imperial Court Chamber annually 10 Reichsthalers and 12 1/2 Kreutzer. These contribution rates remained unchanged until the Holy Roman Empire was dissolved in 1806. Elisabeth of Hohen-Geroldseck was elected to rule the
Imperial Abbey of Buchau on May 28, 1523. The Abbey was a member of the
Swabian League. Elisabeth had to flee in 1525 when the
Peasant's War saw the League's enemies attack the Abbey. She returned shortly thereafter and completed fortifications and many building extensions. Elisabeth died in 1540. The last of the House of Geroldseck was Baron Jacob, who began his reign in 1584. In that year, Jacob began construction of a three-storey residence in the middle of the walled enclosure of the
water castle of Dautenstein in
Seelbach. He moved out of Castle Hohengeroldseck in 1599 and took up residence in the Dautenstein in that same year. Baron Jacob died in the year 1634. His daughter and heiress, Anna Maria, first married
Count Frederick of Solms-Rödelheim, founder of the
Solms-Rödelheim branch of the family. After his death, reported in places as 1649 but likely much earlier, his widow Anna Maria wed
Margrave Frederick V of Baden-Durlach on 13 February 1644. ==The Kronberg Family==