The brothers quarreled over the division of this new land in Thuringia and on 16 July 1445 the Saxon estates tried to reconcile them in the Division of Altenburg: Frederick II should retain the
electoral dignity and the Margraviate of Meissen, while the younger William II should rule the –highly indebted– Landgrave of Thuringia up to the
Osterland region in the east. However, when Frederick chose the western part and not the Margraviate of Meissen on 26 September 1445 in
Leipzig, William furiously rejected the division. On December 11 of the same year the brothers again attempted to reconcile in the monastery of Neuwerk in
Halle in what was known as the
Hallescher Machtspruch (Halle Dictum). Archbishop Frederick III of
Magdeburg, Elector
Frederick II of Brandenburg and Landgrave
Louis II of Hesse actively participated as judges. The division was even confirmed by the
Habsburg king
Frederick III, however the two brothers ultimately failed to reach a peaceful resolution. In June 1446, one day after William's marriage with the Habsburg princess
Anne of Austria, the split led to a war between the two brothers known as the
Saxon Fratricidal War (
Sächsischer Bruderkrieg). The brothers continued fighting until peace was reached in a meeting at
Naumburg on 27 January 1451. Later, in the 1459
Treaty of Eger, Elector Frederick II, his brother Duke William III, and King
George of Poděbrady fixed the borders between the
Kingdom of Bohemia and the Saxon electorate. This border along the crest of the
Ore Mountains is still current and is one of the oldest existing borders in
Central Europe. ==Aftermath==