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Lordship of Eglofs
Herrschaft Eglofs
Arms-Eglofs
fl. 817 - 1806

Capital
Circle
Bench
Eglofs
Swabian
Counts of Swabia
Mentioned 817
Immediate 1282
To Windisch-Grätz 1804
Mediatised 1806

The Lordship of Eglofs was an estate of the Holy Roman Empire, located around Eglofs in southern Baden-Württemberg, Germany. From 1668 it was an Imperial Estate in the Holy Roman Empire with a seat in the Bench of Counts of Swabia. It was owned by Abensberg-Traun until 1804, when they sold it to Windisch-Grätz. Two years later, Eglofs was mediatised to the Kingdom of Württemberg.

Eglofs originates from the early 9th Century. After the defeat and conquest of the Alemanni in 496 by the Franks, Christian Frankish settlers colonised former Alemanni lands in the Allgäu. Over time, the pagan Alemanni returned to the Allgau and established themselves as farmers. One Alemannian lord, Egilolf, built a castle in modern Eglofs, which over time took his name. The first mention of Eglofs was in 817 in an account of St Martin, although the people of Eglofs were still at the time pagan. Owing to its isolation and its proximity to important mountain passes through Switzerland, Eglofs received many rights denied to other settlements; Eglofs had its own courts, it paid fewer taxes, all inhabitants were free citizens (a right denied even to the Swiss cantons) from 1282, and it had the right to elect local leaders. In 1300 King Albert I mentioned Eglofs as a free village.

In 1243 the Emperor promised that the immediate rights of Eglofs would never be sold but in later centuries the Emperors had need of money and they broke their promise, pawning the village to several different lords. The rights of the citizenry were slowly diminished, which invoked the farmers to ask for aid from the Free Cities of Wangen and Leutkirch. During the Peasant's War (1524 - 1525) the farmers and soldiers of Wangen burnt down the castle of the local lord and conquered the surrounding land, but with the ultimate victory of the gentry the farmers were brutally punished and the lordship restored. In 1668, the Counts of Abensberg-Traun were granted Eglofs with a seat in the Bench of Counts of Swabia in the Imperial Diet. They held the seat until 1804 when they sold it to the Counts of Windisch-Grätz. Two years later, it was mediatised to Württemberg.


Swabian Circle
Ecclesiastical Princes
Augsburg | Constance | Ellwangen | Kempten | Lindau

Secular Princes
Baden-Baden | Baden-Durlach | Buchau | Heiligenberg | Hochberg | Hohenzollern-Hechingen | Klettgau
Liechtenstein | Thengen | Württemberg

Prelates
Baindt | Elchingen | Gengenbach | Gutenzell | Heggbach | Irsee | Kaisersheim | Marchtal | Neresheim | Ochsenhausen | Petershausen
Roggenburg | Roth | Rottenmünster | St Gall | Salmannsweiler | Schussenried | Söfflingen | Teutonic Order | Ursberg | Weingarten
Weissenau | Wettenhausen | Zwiefalten

Counts and Lords
Aulendorf | Baar | Bonndorf | Eberstein | Eglingen | Eglofs | Fugger | Gundelfingen | Gutenstein | Hausen | Heiligenberg | Hohenems
Hohengeroldseck | Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen | Justingen | Königsegg | Messkirch | Mindelheim and Schwabegg | Öttingen-Baldern
Öttingen-Öttingen | Öttingen-Wallerstein | Rothenfels | Staufen | Stühlingen | Tettnang and Argen | Thannhausen
Waldburg-Wolfegg-Waldsee | Waldburg-Zeil-Wurzach | Wiesensteig

Imperial Cities and Villages
Aalen | Augsburg | |Biberach | Bopfingen | Buchau | Buchhorn | Constance | Dinkelsbühl | Esslingen | Gengenbach | Giengen | Heilbronn
Isny | Kaufbeuren | Kempten | Leutkirch | Lindau | Memmingen | Nördlingen | Offenburg | Pfullendorf | Ravensburg | Reutlingen
Rottweil | Schwäbisch Gmünd | Schwäbisch Hall | Überlingen | Ulm | |Wangen | Weil | Wimpfen | Zell


Earlier Members
Diessen | Disentis | Einsiedeln | Falkenstein | Geroldseck | Helffenstein | Kirchberg-Weissenhorn | Königsbronn | Kreuzlingen | Löwenstein
Lupfen | |Maulbronn | Pfäfers | Reichenau St Gall | St John | St Peter | Schaffhausen (abbey) | Schaffhausen (city) | Schuttern
Schwäbisch Wörth | Stein | Sulz | Tübingen | Werdenberg | Zimmern

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