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Palatinate-Veldenz
Pfalz-Veldenz
Arms-Palatinate-Zweibrücken
1543 - 1694

Capital
Circle
Bench
Veldenz
Upper Rhenish
Council of Princes
Established 1543
Acquired Lützelstein 1553
Partitioned 1598
Extinct; to Palatinate-Sulzbach 1644

Palatinate-Veldenz was a state of the Holy Roman Empire based around Veldenz in modern Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany.

Palatinate-Veldenz was created in 1543 when Wolfgang of Palatinate-Zweibrücken gave the County of Veldenz to his uncle Rupert. Rupert died the following year and was succeeded by his son George John I. George John I obtained the County of Lützelstein in 1553 at the house contract of Heidelberg, and began the long-running connection between the Palatinate and Sweden when he married Anne, daughter of King Gustavus II Adolphus in 1563. His attempts establish the centre of his state in Alsace and the construction of the new city of Phalsbourg (Pfalzburg) proved so grand and unaffordable that he was forced to sell half of Lützelstein in 1583. In 1598 George John I's sons George Gustavus, John Augustus, Louis Philip and George John II partitioned Palatinate-Veldenz between them, with Palatinate-Veldenz going to George Gustavus. During the Thirty Years' War the state was occupied by French, Imperial and later Swedish soldiers. After the death of Count Palatine Leopold Louis in 1694 without heirs, Palatinate-Veldenz passed to the Kings of Sweden.

Name

Date

Notes
Rupert 1543 - 1544
George John I 1544 - 1892
George Gustavus 1592 - 1634
John Augustus 1592 - 1598 Count Palatine of Lützelstein
Louis Philip 1592 - 1598 Count Palatine of Guttenberg
George John II 1592 - 1598 Count Palatine of Lützelstein-Guttenberg
Leopold Louis 1634 - 1694
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