Emperor Henry's ruthless extension of his power …

Years: 1115 - 1115

Emperor Henry's ruthless extension of his power in Germany has produced opposition and revolt, led from 1114 by Adalbert of Mainz and Lothair, duke of Saxony, his former ally.

Lothair had risen in arms against Henry in 1112, but had been easily quelled.

A quarrel in 1113 over the succession to the counties of Weimar and Orlamünde, however, had given occasion for a fresh outbreak on the part of Lothair, whose troops had been defeated at the Battle of Warnstadt, though the duke was soon pardoned.

Having been married at Mainz on January 7, 1114 to the twelve-year-old Matilda, daughter of Henry I of England, to whom he has been betrothed for four years, the twenty-seven-year-old emperor is confronted with a further rising, initiated by the citizens of Cologne, who are soon joined by the Saxons and others.

Henry fails to take Cologne, and his forces had been defeated on February 11, 1115, at the Battle of Welfesholz, denying Henry the power to rule Saxony.

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