In the 11th century the mark of Antwerp was one of the fiefs of the duke of
Lower Lorraine.
Godfrey of Bouillon received the mark in 1076 from emperor
Henry IV. After his death in the
Crusader state of Jerusalem in 1100,
Henry I of Limburg was appointed as margrave. In 1106 the duchy of Lower Lorraine and the margraviate were united. After the Diet of
Schwäbisch Hall by
Emperor Henry VI, in 1190, the duchy was abolished and its titles were given to the
duke of Brabant, who continued to use the title of "Margrave of the Holy Roman Empire". In the 1357
Peace of Ath the margraviate went to
Louis II, Count of Flanders and then his daughter
Margaret. In 1405 its guardianship fell to her son
Anthony, who reunited it with Brabant when he became
duke the following year. The margraviate was often listed separately as one of the
Seventeen Provinces in the 16th century. After the
Eighty Years' War the margraviate was part of the
Spanish Netherlands, where the title of margrave continued to exist as an honorary title for the representative of the governor. == Composition ==