On Eberhard IV's death in 1535, Gedern and its associated
County of Königstein passed to the
Counts of Stolberg. Louis took them both over and founded the short-lived County of Stolberg-Königstein. After the male line went extinct, it passed to the
Stolberg-Wernigerode line. In 1677, the house of Stolberg-Gedern was created by the division of the lands of the house of Stolberg-Wernigerode. The second count of Stolberg-Gedern,
Frederick Charles, bought promotion to the status of an
Imperial Prince from
Charles VII, Holy Roman Emperor on 18 February 1742. The Princes of Stolberg-Gedern became extinct in the male line in 1804 and so the lordship of Gedern was passed back to the main Stolberg-Wernigerode line. However, with the adoption of the sovereignty rights outlined in the
Treaty of the Confederation of the Rhine, that line had to cede it to
Hesse-Darmstadt. In 1816, Gedern and the Stolberg-Wernigerode line also briefly fell under
Isenburg. In 1945, the area became part of Großhessen, then the following year part of
Hesse. ==Stolberg Regents==