In 1047, Emperor
Heinrich III of the Holy Roman Empire established the
Duchy of Lorraine from the former
Duchy of Upper Lorraine. During the troubles that agitated the duchy, some lords rebelled and became more or less, independent of the Duke. Saarwerden branched from the
Bishopric of Metz, when lord Friedrich, son of Godfrey I of Blieskastel separated and formed the County of Saarwerden. Thus the county was created under the House of Saarwerden in 1111. Friedrich built a castle in Sarrwerden upon the ruins of an ancient Roman bath. He and his wife Gertrude also founded the Abbey Wörschweiler in 1130. The most famous representative of this family was Friedrich III. He was
Archbishop of Cologne from 1370 to 1414. On the death of his childless brother Heinrich II, the last Count of Saarwerden, in 1397, Friedrich temporarily directed the county before ceding the government to his stepbrother, Friedrich III, Count of Moers. Now the county was in personal union under Friedrich as the County of Moers-Saarwerden. In 1417, the County of Saarwerden branched off once more as the inheritance of his son, Johann. The House of Moers-Saarwerden died to the House of Nassau and County of Saarbrücken in 1527; through
jure uxoris, Johann Ludwig of Nassau-Saarbrücken inherited the lands of his wife, Countess Katharina I.
The Reformation The county was passed into the
House of Nassau. Count Johann Ludwig attempted to usurp the authority of the Bishopric of Metz in the county by dissolving the
Benedictine Abbey in 1554. After the Abbey was demolished in 1557, The Bishopric of Metz was annexed into France, and the land passed to Lorraine. Old property disputes with Lorraine were a subject of contention during this time. Count Adolf introduced the
Reformation into Saarwerden in 1556. He allowed Protestant refugees fleeing religious persecution in the Kingdom of France and the Duchy of Lorraine. He approved the settlement of what became known as 'Seven Gallic Villages':
Altwiller,
Burbach,
Diedendorf,
Eywiller,
Gœrlingen,
Kirrberg, and
Rauwiller. Thus, the county was populated with Calvinists who spoke French, while the rest of the county were Lutheran Germans. The County of Saarwerden become an experimental model of peace between
Lutherans and
Calvinists. Since Adolf died childless, the County fell back to his
Catholic brother, Johann V. Johann did not persecute the
Protestants, however. There was much contention between the Catholic Lorraine and the newly Protestant Saarwerden. When Protestant Philip II inherited the lands in 1574, Duke
Charles III of Lorraine demanded Saarwerden back as a completed fief (meaning Philip was without any heirs). The dispute went on for many years and threatened several times to escalate to military level. The Elector Palatine,
Frederick III also claimed parts of the inheritance. Here too, the
House of Nassau managed to prevail on the essential points. Several large treaties were closed, in which the exact rights and boundaries of the Nassau and
Palatinate territories were defined. In 1575 Philip introduced the Reformation in his territories. Catholic priests were converted to the new faith or removed from office; church property was confiscated; schools were established and patronage was acquired. His implementation of the Reformation intensified his disputes with the Duchy of Lorraine, which was still Catholic. The County grew and prospered under Philip's son Ludwig IV. The
Thirty Years' War also started in this time.
The war against Lorraine and the Empire In 1629, Emperor
Ferdinand II issued the
Edict of Restitution, by which church property that had been confiscated after 1552 under the
Peace of Passau, was returned to its previous owner. Based on this Edict, the
Prince Bishops of Mainz and
Trier claimed substantial parts of the possessions of the Nassau family. The
Court of Appeal ruled in 1629 in a dispute between Lorraine and Nassau, that the city and county of Saarwerden and Bockenheim and Wieberstweiler were fiefs of Metz and should therefore be returned to Lorraine, and the Nassau family could keep the rest of their county. The Duke of Lorraine, however, took possession of the whole of the County of Saarwerden and the Lordship of Herbitzheim. Count
Wilhelm Ludwig appealed and took the case to the Imperial
Council of Princes Because he had refused to join the Catholic League, or to provide troops, the Emperor ignored him. In 1631, King
Gustav Adolph II of
Sweden and his army arrived at the Rhine. Wilhelm Ludwig joined him, effectively declaring war on the Emperor. In 1633, the Swedish army attacked from the Alsace into the County of Saarwerden, which was still occupied by Lorraine. The county was conquered, but not given back to the House of Nassau. In 1635, Count Wilhelm Ludwig went to Frankfurt to attend a meeting of the Protestant states and their allies. At this meeting, it was decided that Sweden would return Saarwerden to the House of Nassau. The family went to Bockenheim, where the counties of Nassau-Saarbrücken and Saarwerden should have been handed over. However, on 30 May 1635, a number of imperial estates, including the Electorates of
Brandenburg and
Saxony, had concluded the
Peace of Prague and the Nassau Counts were expressly excluded from this agreement. They then went to
Saarbrücken. In November 1635, the imperial commissioner appeared in the Nassau lands and declared the Count had forfeited his counties and all their possessions; he was banned. The Emperor gave the Duke of Lorraine the counties of Saarbrücken and Saarwerden and the bailiwick of
Herbitzheim and the fortress of Homburg on the Blies as a reward for services rendered. In 1636, Wilhelm Ludwig attempted to petition the Emperor for an imperial pardon from
Metz, where he was in exile. This attempt failed, but it was not until 1637 that the counts were told the reasons for this imperial wrath. Only in 1639 did the Count receive a pass that enabled them to represent their cause in
Vienna in person.
Restoration of Saarwerden Wilhelm Ludwig died in 1640, and his wife, now Countess, and his son Johann Ludwig II returned to Saarbrücken. The
Peace of Westphalia restored the lands of the House of Nassau. Johann Ludwig II rose to Count at the death of his mother. Because of the dispute with Lorraine, The House of Nassau had to abandon their capital of Bouquenom (Bockenheim) and the city of Sarrewerden, which had belonged to the Bishopric of Metz, which was now owned by Lorraine. They built on the opposite side of the river Saar, a new city: Neu-Saarwerden. The county had suffered from the Thirty Years' War. Count Gustav Adolph set about rebuilding the war-ravaged county, bringing back refugees, and recruiting settlers for agriculture and skilled workers. Later, Gustav became a prisoner-of-war of France and France occupied Saarwerden. After the
Treaty of Ryswick in 1697, his lands were returned to Ludwig Crato I and he became Regent. He was considered a good ruler, as he could keep his country out of further wars. He organized the administration of justice and the state finances. He showed benevolence and reorganized the school system.
Neu-Saarwerden After the expansion of France into much of Alsace and the annexation of the Duchy of Lorraine in 1766, the County of Saarwerden was an enclave of the Holy Roman Empire in France. At the time, Nassau-Saarbrücken measured about 12 square miles and it had 22,000 inhabitants. This made it one of the smallest principalities in the Holy Roman Empire. Wilhelm Heinrich I reformed the administration and justice, separating these two branches of government. He took measures to standardize taxes and introduced a modern cadastre on the Austrian model. He also promoted modern agricultural methods, such as the potato cultivation and pest control. He was also involved in coal mining and iron smelting and he nationalized the mines . He laid the basis for a
proto-industrialized economy, which would later evolve into the highly industrialized
Saarland region. Despite the increase in revenues, his financial situation did not improve, due to the high spending on construction activities. After his father's death in 1768, Ludwig took up the business of government in Nassau-Saarbrücken. He largely continued his father's economic policies, but was increasingly subject to financial constraints. He issued new regulations for agriculture and forestry and reformed the school system. He also reformed the penal code and abolished torture. The County came to be divided into three districts in 1783: • Bouquenom (Bockenheim), went to France in 1766 with the possessions of the Duchy of Lorraine. • The Bailiwick of Neuf-Sarrewerden (German: Neu-Saarwerden), covered the northern part of the county, consisting of eleven localities:
Burbach,
Eywiller,
Herbitzheim,
Keskastel,
Neu-Saarwerden,
Bischtroff,
Rimsdorf,
Schopperten,
Siltzheim,
Vœllerdingen, and
Zollingen. These would belong to the princes of Nassau-Weilburg. • The Bailiwick of Harskirchen (German: Oberamt Harskirchen), covering the rest of the county, consisting of 29 localities, would belong to the princes of Nassau-Saarbrücken. When Ludwig V died in 1794, the county was occupied by French troops so his son, Heinrich Ludwig I never reigned. He was the last Count of Nassau-Saarbrücken. Heinrich Ludwig died in 1797, leaving the county to his cousin Karl Wilhelm of Nassau-Usingen. However, under the
Treaty of Lunéville, the territories on the left bank of the Rhine were lost to France. The
Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803 compensated Karl Wilhelm. The former County of Saarwerden passed into France as the Sarrewerden District of Bas-Rhin in 1793 (See
Alsace bossue). ==Counts of Saarwerden==