County of Cilli

{{Short description|Constituent state of the Holy Roman Empire in present-day Slovenia (1341–1456)}}

{{Infobox country

|native_name = {{Lang|de|Grafschaft Cilli}}

|conventional_long_name = County of Cilli

|common_name = Cilli

|

|era = Late Middle Ages

|status = County

|empire = Holy Roman Empire

|

|year_start = 1341

|year_end = 1456

|life_span =

|

|event_start = Reichsfreiheit
{{spaces|4}}confirmed

|date_start =

|event1 = Acquired Ortenburg

|date_event1 = 1418

|event_end = Count Ulrich II killed

|date_end =

|event_post =

|date_post =

|

|p1 = Duchy of Styria

|image_p1 = 20px

|s1 = Duchy of Styria

|image_s1 = 20px

|

|image_flag =

|image_coat = Counts of Celje coat of arms (1-4).svg

|image_map = Celjski grofje ozemlje.PNG

|image_map_caption = Possessions in the 15th century{{legend|#fee8dc|Principality: Celje and Ortenburg (from 1418)}}{{legend|#ffffe6|Fiefs}}

|

|capital = Celje

|

|footnotes =

}}

The County of Cilli ({{langx|de|Cilli}}, {{langx|sl|Celje}}) was a medieval county in the territory of the present-day Slovenia. It was governed by the Counts of Cilli (also Counts of Celje).{{Cite book|last=Štih|first=P.|title=The Middle Ages between the Eastern Alps and the Northern Adriatic |chapter-url=https://brill.com/view/book/9789004187702/Bej.9789004185913.i-463_019.xml|chapter=XVII. The Counts Of Cilli, The Issue Of Their Princely Authority And The Land Of Cilli|date=2010-01-01|pages=338–379 |publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-18770-2|language=en|doi=10.1163/ej.9789004185913.i-463.60}} Following the death of Ulrich II of Celje, the county was subsumed by neighbouring Duchy of Styria.

History

= Creation =

County of Cilli was created after lords of Saneck inherited lands in Slovenia and surrounding areas. They continuously gained land via strategic marriages and their loyalty to their immediate liege, the Habsburgs of Austria. Hermann II, Count of Celje was also father-in-law to the Hungarian king Sigismund who eventually became the Holy Roman Emperor and granted multiple fiefs in Slavonia and Croatia to his father-in-law. After Sigismund, the Luxembourg line went extinct and the Habsburgs succeeded as Emperor, further strengthening the Count of Cilli. The last count, Ulrich II, Count of Celje was assassinated by a faction in Hungary without an heir. His possessions within the Empire were inherited by the Habsburgs of Austria, while his possessions outside of the Empire were inherited by the crown of Hungary, which would also come under Habsburg rule less than a century later under Ferdinand I.

References