Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bligger_von_Steinach> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 50 of
50
with 100 triples per page.
- Bligger_von_Steinach abstract "Bligger von Steinach was the name of a series of feudal lords of Steinach, today Neckarsteinach in Hessen, Germany. Collectively the noble family was known as the Edelfreien von Steinach. The family was influential, having close connections to the Holy Roman Emperor and to the Bishopric of Worms. The family held Steinach in fief to Worms.The name Bligger is of Germanic origin, meaning lightning spear.Bligger I was first mentioned in a document from 1142 as bliggerus de steinahe. In 1150, Bligger's brother, was named Konrad I bishop of Worms. In 1171, Bligger was sent to Constantinople by Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor to seek a bride for Frederick's son, Henry VI. There are indications that Bligger's son, Bligger II, and his brother Konrad accompanied him.Bligger II (1152–1210) was a poet of the Minnesang and fief lord of Steinach. He was also a companion to two Staufer and contemporary of the Minnesinger Gottfried von Strassburg. Bligger's poems mention Damascus and Saladin and Bligger's homesickness, which some scholars take as an indication that Bligger either accompanied his father and uncle to Constantinople in 1171 or Bligger went on a crusade with Frederick I. Bligger was certainly a trustworthy companion to Henry IV and not just an entertainer. Bligger's signature appears on four imperial documents from 1193 to 1196 as Blikerus de Steinaha. A report of a Pentecostal festival from 1194 in Milano, in which the emperor Henry VI, Conrad II, Duke of Swabia, Philip of Swabia, Henry V, Count Palatine of the Rhine, and Bligger von Steinach. Bligger was also present when Henry VI was crowned king of Sicily in Palermo 1194. Two further imperial documents refer to the name Blikerus from the Toscana in 1194, but historians dispute whether this refers to Bligger II or his son Bligger III. Bligger appears from 1152 to 1208 in numerous documents of Schönau Abbey, Lorch Abbey, Eberbach Abbey, and in imperial documents.As a poet, Bligger II was mentioned by Gottfried von Strassburg in his work Tristan und Isolt. There he praised his \"sweet words and clever sensibilities musically entwined\". Gottfried also praised Bligger's work der umbehanc (The Tapestry), which remains lost to this day. Some scholars argue that this work refers to the Nibelungenlied, but this remains in dispute. Bligger's work appears in the Codex Manesse. The codex also displays the coat-of-arms that he created. It is a harp, which is used today by the city of Neckarsteinach.".
- Bligger_von_Steinach thumbnail Codex_Manesse_Bligger_von_Steinach.jpg?width=300.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageID "28911284".
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageLength "3771".
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageOutDegree "27".
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageRevisionID "703959046".
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Bishopric_of_Worms.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Category:12th-century_German_people.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Category:13th-century_German_people.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Category:Middle_High_German_literature.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Category:Minnesingers.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Codex_Manesse.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Conrad_II,_Duke_of_Swabia.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Constantinople.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Eberbach_Abbey.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Frederick_I,_Holy_Roman_Emperor.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Gottfried_von_Strassburg.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Henry_V,_Count_Palatine_of_the_Rhine.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Henry_VI,_Holy_Roman_Emperor.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Hesse.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Hohenstaufen.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Holy_Roman_Emperor.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Konrad_I_von_Steinach.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Minnesang.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Neckarsteinach.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Nibelungenlied.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Philip_of_Swabia.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Schönau_Abbey.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink Tristan_and_Iseult.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLink File:Codex_Manesse_Bligger_von_Steinach.jpg.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageWikiLinkText "Bligger von Steinach".
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Bligger_von_Steinach subject Category:12th-century_German_people.
- Bligger_von_Steinach subject Category:13th-century_German_people.
- Bligger_von_Steinach subject Category:Middle_High_German_literature.
- Bligger_von_Steinach subject Category:Minnesingers.
- Bligger_von_Steinach hypernym Series.
- Bligger_von_Steinach type TelevisionShow.
- Bligger_von_Steinach type Thing.
- Bligger_von_Steinach comment "Bligger von Steinach was the name of a series of feudal lords of Steinach, today Neckarsteinach in Hessen, Germany. Collectively the noble family was known as the Edelfreien von Steinach. The family was influential, having close connections to the Holy Roman Emperor and to the Bishopric of Worms. The family held Steinach in fief to Worms.The name Bligger is of Germanic origin, meaning lightning spear.Bligger I was first mentioned in a document from 1142 as bliggerus de steinahe.".
- Bligger_von_Steinach label "Bligger von Steinach".
- Bligger_von_Steinach sameAs Q884089.
- Bligger_von_Steinach sameAs Bligger_von_Steinach.
- Bligger_von_Steinach sameAs m.0dgpqpf.
- Bligger_von_Steinach sameAs Q884089.
- Bligger_von_Steinach wasDerivedFrom Bligger_von_Steinach?oldid=703959046.
- Bligger_von_Steinach depiction Codex_Manesse_Bligger_von_Steinach.jpg.
- Bligger_von_Steinach isPrimaryTopicOf Bligger_von_Steinach.