{{short description|European royal dynasty}} {{About||its maternal parent house|Elder House of Welf|its paternal parent house|House of Este|the faction supporting the pope in medieval Italy|Guelphs and Ghibellines}} {{Royal house | surname = House of Welf (Guelf, Guelph) | estate = Brunswick & Hanover | coat of arms = Coat of Arms of Brunswick-Lüneburg.svg | parent house = Este (agnatic)<br />Elder Welf (cognatic) | country = Germany, Italy, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | titles = {{Collapsible list| *Holy Roman Emperor *Emperor of Russia *Empress of India *King of the Romans *King of Great Britain *King of Ireland *King of Italy *King of Burgundy *King of Hanover *King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland *Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg *Duke of Brunswick *Duke of Bavaria *Duke of Saxony *Duke of Spoleto *Prince of Lüneburg *Prince of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel *Count Palatine of the Rhine *Margrave of Tuscany *Elector of Hanover *Lord of Mann *Count of Paris }} | founder = Welf I, Duke of Bavaria | final ruler = Ernest Augustus, Duke of Brunswick | founding year = 8th century | deposition = 1918 <small>(in Germany)</small> | cadet branches = House of Hanover }}

The '''House of Welf''' (also '''Guelf''' or '''Guelph''')<ref>{{cite book|title=Dictionary of World Biography|pages=356|last=Jones|first=B.|author-link=Barry Jones (Australian politician)|location=Canberra, Australia|publisher=Australian National University Press|year=2013|isbn=9781922144492}}</ref> is a European dynasty that has included many German and British monarchs from the 11th century to 20th century and Emperor Ivan VI of Russia in the 18th century. The originally Franconian family from the Meuse-Moselle area was closely related to the imperial family of the Carolingians.

==Origins== The (Younger) House of Welf is the older branch of the House of Este, a dynasty whose earliest known members lived in Veneto and Lombardy in the late 9th/early 10th century, sometimes called Welf-Este. The first member was Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, also known as Welf IV. He inherited the property of the Elder House of Welf when his maternal uncle Welf III, Duke of Carinthia and Verona, the last male Welf of the Elder House, died in 1055.

Welf IV was the son of Welf III's sister Kunigunde of Altdorf and her husband Albert Azzo II, Margrave of Milan. In 1070, Welf IV became Duke of Bavaria.

Welf II, Duke of Bavaria married Countess Matilda of Tuscany, who died childless and left him her possessions, including Tuscany, Ferrara, Modena, Mantua, and Reggio, which played a role in the Investiture Controversy. Since the Welf dynasty sided with the Pope in this controversy, partisans of the Pope came to be known in Italy as Guelphs (''Guelfi'').

The first genealogy of the Welfs is the ''Genealogia Welforum'', composed shortly before 1126. A much more detailed history of the dynasty, the ''Historia Welforum'', was composed around 1170. It is the earliest history of a noble house in Germany.

<gallery> File:Kunigunda Azzo.jpg|Kunigunde of Altdorf, sister of Welf III, wife of Albert Azzo II of Este, Margrave of Milan, parents of Welf IV File:Wgt Stifterbüchlein 25v.jpg|Welf I, Duke of Bavaria ({{circa}} 1030/1040 – 1101) File:WElf.jpg|Welf II, Duke of Bavaria (1073–1120) </gallery>

==Bavaria and Saxony== Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria, from 1120 to 1126, was the first of the three dukes of the Welf dynasty called Henry. His wife Wulfhild was the heiress of the house of Billung, possessing the territory around Lüneburg in Lower Saxony. Their son, Henry the Proud, was the son-in-law and heir of Lothair II, Holy Roman Emperor and became also Duke of Saxony on Lothair's death.

Lothair left his territory around Brunswick, inherited from his mother of the Brunonids, to his daughter Gertrud. Her husband Henry the Proud became then the favoured candidate in the imperial election against Conrad III of the Hohenstaufen. Henry lost the election, as the other princes feared his power and temperament, and was dispossessed of his duchies by Conrad III.

Henry's brother Welf VI (1115–1191), Margrave of Tuscany, later left his Swabian territories around Ravensburg, the original possessions of the Elder House of Welf, to his nephew Emperor Frederick I, and thus to the House of Hohenstaufen. <gallery> File:Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria.jpg|Henry the Black, duke of Bavaria (1075–1126) and his wife Wulfhild of Billung File:Lev rodice dvojice.jpg|Henry the Proud (1102–1139), Duke of Bavaria and Saxony, and his wife Gertrud of Saxony, daughter of Lothair II, Holy Roman Emperor, Duke of Saxony File:Vad-0321 125 Welf VI.jpg|Welf VI (1115–1191), Margrave of Tuscany File:Steingaden GO-1.jpg|Steingaden Abbey, Swabia, place of burial of its founder Welf VI (d. 1191) </gallery> thumb|200px|The possessions of the Welfs in the days of Henry the Lion|alt=Black-and-white map showing the territorial possessions of the Guelf dynasty during the reign of Henry the Lion. The next duke of the Welf dynasty Henry the Lion (1129/1131–1195) recovered his father's two duchies, Saxony in 1142, Bavaria in 1156 and thus ruled vast parts of Germany. In 1168 he married Matilda (1156–1189), the daughter of Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine, and sister of Richard I of England, gaining ever more influence. His first cousin, Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, tried to get along with him, but when Henry refused to assist him once more in an Italian war campaign, conflict became inevitable.

Dispossessed of his duchies after the Battle of Legnano in 1176 by Emperor Frederick I and the other princes of the German Empire eager to claim parts of his vast territories, he was exiled to the court of his father-in-law Henry II in Normandy in 1180. He returned to Germany three years later.

Henry made his peace with the Hohenstaufen Emperor in 1185 and returned to his much diminished lands around Brunswick without recovering his two duchies. Bavaria had been given to Otto I, Duke of Bavaria, and the Duchy of Saxony was divided between the Archbishop of Cologne, the House of Ascania and others. Henry died at Brunswick in 1195. <gallery> File:Lev Jindrich.jpg|Henry the Lion (1130–1195), Duke of Bavaria and Saxony File:Matylda.jpg|Matilda Plantagenet (1156–1189), wife of Henry the Lion, sister of Richard I of England File:Burg Dankwarderode am Burgplatz in Braunschweig IMG 2756.jpg|Henry's Dankwarderode Castle in Brunswick File:Braunschweiger Loewe Original Brunswick Lion.jpg|Henry's Brunswick Lion File:Ottta4Brunsvicky.jpg|Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor, son of Henry the Lion and Matilda of England </gallery>

==Brunswick and Hanover== Henry the Lion's son, Otto of Brunswick, was elected King of the Romans and crowned Holy Roman Emperor Otto IV after years of further conflicts with the Hohenstaufen emperors. He incurred the wrath of Pope Innocent III and was excommunicated in 1215. Otto was forced to abdicate the imperial throne by the Hohenstaufen Frederick II.<ref name="Canduci, pg. 294">Canduci, pg. 294</ref> He was the only Welf to become Holy Roman Emperor.

[[File:Brunswijk wapen.svg|thumb|upright=0.7|Coat-of-arms of the Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg|alt=Shield divided per pale: a red field with two gold lions on the left, and a gold field with a blue lion surrounded by red hearts on the right.]] Henry the Lion's grandson Otto the Child became duke of a part of Saxony in 1235, the new Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg, and died there in 1252. The duchy was divided several times during the High Middle Ages amongst various lines of the House of Welf. The subordinate states had the legal status of principalities within the duchy, which remained as an undivided imperial fief. Each state was generally named after the ruler's residence, e.g., the rulers of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel originally lived in Wolfenbüttel.

Whenever a branch of the family died out in the male line, the territory was given to another line, as the duchy remained enfeoffed to the family as a whole rather than its individual members. All members of the House of Welf, male or female, bore the title ''Duke/Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg'' in addition to the style of the subordinate principality.<ref name="riedesel_1868">{{cite book|last1=Riedesel|first1=Friedrich Adolf|translator-last=Stone|translator-first=William L.|editor-last=von Eelking|editor-first=Max|title=Memoirs, and Letters and Journals, of Major General Riedesel During His Residence in America|volume=1|page=29|publisher=J. Munsell|location=Albany|year=1868|quote=I remain ever, Your affectionate Charles, Duke of Brunswick and Lüneburg. Brunswick, February 14, 1776. To Colonel Riedesel.}}</ref> By 1705, the subordinate principalities had taken their final form as the Electorate of Hanover and the Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, and these would become the Kingdom of Hanover and the Duchy of Brunswick after the Congress of Vienna in 1815.

===Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel=== In 1269 the Principality of Brunswick was formed following the first division of the Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg. In 1432, as a result of increasing tensions with the townsfolk of Brunswick, the Brunswick Line moved their residence to Wolfenbüttel Castle, thus the name ''Wolfenbüttel'' became the unofficial name of this principality. With Ivan VI of Russia the Brunswick line even had a short intermezzo on the Russian imperial throne in 1740. Not until 1754 was the residence moved back to Brunswick, into the new Brunswick Palace. In 1814 the principality became the Duchy of Brunswick, ruled by the senior branch of the House of Welf.

=== Principality of Calenberg – later Electorate of Brunswick-Lüneburg === {{main|Principality of Calenberg|Electorate of Hanover}}

[[File:Coat of Arms of George I Louis, Elector of Hanover (1708-1714).svg|thumb|110px|Coat of Arms of the Electorate of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1708)|alt=Ornate heraldic coat of arms surmounted by a crown and cross, featuring a quartered shield with multiple panels showing lions, a white horse, an eagle, a stag, hearts, stripes, and checkered patterns, representing the territories of the Electorate of Brunswick-Lüneburg.]] In 1432 the estates gained by the ''Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel'' between the Deister and Leine split away as the ''Principality of Calenberg''. In 1495 it was expanded around Göttingen and in 1584 went back to the Wolfenbüttel Line. In 1634, as a result of inheritance distributions, it went to the House of Luneburg residing at Celle Castle. In 1635 it was given to George, younger brother of Prince Ernest II of Lüneburg, who chose Hanover as his residence.

New territory was added in 1665, and in 1705 the Principality of Luneburg was taken over by the Hanoverians. In 1692 Duke Ernest Augustus from the Calenberg-Hanover Line acquired the right to be a prince-elector of the Holy Roman Empire as the Prince-Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg. Colloquially the Electorate was known as the Electorate of Hanover. In 1814 it was succeeded by the Kingdom of Hanover.

===British succession=== Religion-driven politics placed Ernest Augustus's wife Sophia of the Palatinate in the line of succession to the British crown by the Act of Settlement 1701, written to ensure a Protestant succession to the thrones of Scotland and England at a time when anti-Catholic sentiment ran high in much of Northern Europe and Great Britain. Sophia died shortly before her first cousin once removed, Anne, Queen of Great Britain, the last sovereign of the House of Stuart.

Sophia's son George I succeeded Queen Anne and formed a personal union from 1714 between the British crown and the Electorate of Hanover, which lasted until well after the end of the Napoleonic Wars more than a century later, through the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire and the rise of a new successor kingdom. The British royal family became known as the House of Hanover. <gallery> File:Coat of arms of Great Britain (1714–1801).svg|Coat of arms of the Hanoverian Kings of Great Britain (1714–1801) File:Bernard Lens King George I 1718 VA.jpg|George I (1714–1727) File:George II 1755-1767.jpg|George II (1727–1760) File:Frederick, Prince of Wales 1754 by Liotard.jpg|Frederick, Prince of Wales (b. 1707 d. 1751) File:George III (by Sir William Beechey).jpg|George III (1760–1820) File:King George IV when Prince Regent (1762-1830), by Henry Bone.jpg|George IV (1820–1830) File:WilliamIVbyLonsdale.jpg|William IV (1830–1837) File:Dronning victoria.jpg|Victoria (1837–1901) </gallery>

===Kingdom of Hanover=== The "Electorate of Hanover" (the core duchy) was enlarged with the addition of other lands and became the Kingdom of Hanover in 1814 at the Congress of Vienna. During the first half of the nineteenth century, the Kingdom was ruled as personal union by the British crown from its creation under George III of the United Kingdom, the last elector of Hanover until the death of William IV in 1837.

At that point, the crown of Hanover went to William's younger brother, Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale under the Salic law requiring the next male heir to inherit, whereas the British throne was inherited by an elder brother's only daughter, Queen Victoria. Her offspring belong to the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha: in 1917 the name was changed to the House of Windsor.

The Kingdom of Hanover was lost in 1866 by Ernest Augustus's son George V of Hanover, Austria's ally during the Austro-Prussian War, when it was annexed by Prussia after Austria's defeat and became the Prussian province of Hanover. The Welfs went into exile at Gmunden, Austria, where they built ''Cumberland Castle''. <gallery> File:Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Hanover.svg|Coat of arms of the kingdom of Hanover 1837 File:Ernest Augustus I of Hanover.PNG|Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover File:GeorgeVHannover.jpg|King George V of Hanover File:Ernst August, Crown Prince of Hannover.png|Ernst August, Crown Prince of Hannover </gallery>

===Brunswick succession=== [[File:Coat of Arms of the Duchy of Brunswick.svg|thumb|upright=0.7|Coat-of-arms of the Duchy of Brunswick|alt=Highly ornate coat of arms of the Duchy of Brunswick with a crowned, multi-quartered shield and two human supporters.]]

[[File:Ernstbrunswick1887-2.jpeg|thumb|Ernest Augustus, Duke of Brunswick and Wolfenbüttel, 1913-1918|alt=Black-and-white portrait of Ernest Augustus, Duke of Brunswick and Lüneburg, wearing an ornate military uniform with decorations and holding a plumed hat, photographed during his reign between 1913 and 1918.]]

The senior line of the dynasty had ruled the much smaller principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, created the sovereign Duchy of Brunswick in 1814. This line became extinct in 1884. Although the Duchy should have been inherited by the Duke of Cumberland, son of the last king of Hanover, Prussian suspicions of his loyalty led the duchy's throne to remain vacant until 1913, when the Duke of Cumberland's son, Ernst August, married the daughter of Kaiser Wilhelm II and was allowed to inherit it. His rule there was short-lived, as the monarchy came to an end following the First World War in 1918.

===Welf Dynasty Today===

The Welf dynasty continues to exist. The last member sitting on a European throne was Frederica of Hanover, daughter of Ernest Augustus, the last Duke of Brunswick, was the Queen of Greece († 1981), mother of Queen Sofia of Spain and King Constantine II of Greece. Frederica's brother Prince George William of Hanover married Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark, sister of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. The House's head is Queen Frederica's nephew Ernst August, the third and present husband of Princess Caroline of Monaco. <gallery> File:Leineschloss Leine.jpg|The Leine Palace in Hanover File:Unbekannt, Maison de Plaisir d'Herrenhausen, c1708..jpg|Herrenhausen Palace and Herrenhausen Gardens in Hanover File:Das Schloss in Celle.jpg|Celle Castle File:Braunschweiger Schloss.jpg|Brunswick Palace File:Wolfenbuettel Schloss (2006).jpg|Wolfenbüttel Castle File:Pattensen Marienburg Castle.jpg|Marienburg Castle (Hanover) </gallery>

==Rulers==

===House of Welf=== {{hidden begin |title = Partitions under Welf rule |titlestyle = background: #ccf; text-align:center; }}

{|align="center" style="border-spacing: 0px; border: 1px solid black; text-align: center;" |+ |- | colspan=12 style="background: #fff;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Altdorf---> |- | colspan=1 style="background: #fedf;" |'''County of Auxerre'''<br>(866–888)<br><small>Raised to:</small><br>'''Kingdom of<br>Upper Burgundy'''<br>(888–1032) | colspan=11 style="background: #fff;" |'''County of Altdorf'''<br>(820–1191) |- | colspan=1 rowspan="2" style="background: #eee;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Burgundy---> | colspan=11 style="background: #fff;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Altdorf---> |- | colspan=1 style="background: #fff;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Altdorf---> | colspan=10 style="background: #def;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Luneburg---> |- | colspan=2 rowspan="25" style="background: #eee;" |<small>''Annexed to the<br>Holy Roman<br>Empire''</small> | colspan=1 style="background: #afd;" |'''County<br>Palatine<br>of the Rhine'''<br>(1195–1267) | colspan=9 rowspan="2" style="background: #def;" |'''Lordship of Lüneburg'''<br>(1126–1235)<br><small>Raised to:<br></small>'''Duchy of<br>Brunswick-Lüneburg'''<br>(1235–1269) |- | colspan=1 style="background: #afd;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Rhine---> |- | colspan=1 rowspan="23" style="background: #eee;" |<small>''Annexed to <br>House of<br>Wittelsbach''</small> | colspan=6 style="background: #ffdead;" |'''Principality of Brunswick'''<br />(1269–1291) | colspan=4 rowspan="4" style="background: #ffc;" |'''Principality<br>of Lüneburg'''<br /><small>(1st creation)</small><br />(1269–1369) |- | colspan=2 rowspan="13" style="background: #dce;" |'''Principality of<br>Grubenhagen'''<br />(1291–1596)<ref>Grubenhagen was firstly annexed to Wolfenbüttel, but in 1617 was a part of Lüneburg.</ref> | colspan=2 style="background: #ade;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Göttingen---> | colspan=2 style="background: #ceb;" |'''Principality of<br>Wolfenbüttel'''<br /><small>(1st creation)</small><br />(1291–1292) |- | colspan=4 style="background: #ade;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Göttingen---> |- | colspan=2 rowspan="7" style="background: #ade;" |'''Principality of<br>Göttingen'''<br />(1291–1463) | colspan=2 style="background: #ceb;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Wolfenbüttel---> |- | colspan=6 style="background: #ceb;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Wolfenbüttel---> |- | colspan=2 rowspan="2" style="background: #ceb;" |'''Principality of<br>Wolfenbüttel'''<br /><small>(2nd creation)</small><br />(1344–1400) | colspan=4 style="background: #eee;" |<small>''Lüneburg under<br />'''Ascanian rule''' ''<br />(1373–1388)</small> |- | colspan=4 style="background: #ffc;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Lüneburg---> |- | colspan=6 style="background: #ffc;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Lüneburg---> |- | colspan=2 style="background: #ceb;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Wolfenbüttel---> | colspan=4 rowspan="7" style="background: #ffc;" |'''Principality<br>of Lüneburg'''<br /><small>(2nd creation)</small><br />(1388–1705) |- | colspan=1 style="background: #ffdaed;" |'''Principality<br>of Calenberg'''<br /><small>(1st creation)</small><br />(1432–1584) | colspan=1 style="background: #ceb;" |'''Principality of<br>Wolfenbüttel'''<br /><small>(3rd creation)</small><br />(1409–1485) |- | colspan=3 style="background: #ffdaed;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Calenberg---> | colspan=1 style="background: #ceb;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Wolfenbüttel---> |- | colspan=4 style="background: #ffdaed;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Calenberg---> |- | colspan=3 style="background: #ffdaed;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Calenberg---> | colspan=1 style="background: #ceb;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Wolfenbüttel---> |- | colspan=4 style="background: #ceb;" |'''Principality of<br>Wolfenbüttel'''<br /><small>(4th creation)</small><br />(1494–1807) |- | colspan=6 style="background: #ceb;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Wolfenbüttel---> |- | colspan=4 style="background: #ceb;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Wolfenbüttel---> | colspan=6 rowspan="3" style="background: #ffc;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Lüneburg---> |- | colspan=2 rowspan="3" style="background: #ceb;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Wolfenbüttel---> | colspan=2 style="background: #ffdaed;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Calenberg---> |- | colspan=2 style="background: #ffdaed;" |&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<!---Calenberg---> |- | colspan=8 rowspan="3" style="background: #ffdaed;" |'''Principality of Calenberg'''<br /><small>(2nd creation)</small><br />(1634–1692)<br><small>Raised to</small><br>'''Electorate of Hanover'''<br />(1692–1866) |- | colspan=2 style="background: #eee;" |<small>''Annexed by<br />France''</small> |- | colspan=2 rowspan="2" style="background: #ceb;" |'''Duchy of Brunswick'''<br />(1813–1918) |- | colspan=8 style="background: #eee;" |<small>''Annexed by Prussia''</small> |- |}

{{hidden end}}

{{collapse top|title=Table of rulers}}

{{Sticky header}} {| class="wikitable sticky-header" ! colspan=2 | Ruler!!Born!!Reign!!Ruling part!!Consort!!Death!!Notes |- style="background:#eee" |colspan="8" align="center"| '''Elder''' House of Welf |- style="background:#fff" |Welf I (a)|| |align="center"|{{circa|775}}<br><small>Son of Rothard of the Argengau</small> |align="center"|{{circa|800}} – 3 October 825||County of Altdorf||Hedwig of Bavaria<br>four children |align="center"|3 October 825<br><small>aged 49–50</small>||Eponymous founder of the family. |- style="background:#fff" |Conrad I ''the Elder''|| |align="center"|{{circa|800}}<br><small>Son of Welf I (a) and Hedwig of Bavaria</small> |align="center"|3 October 825 – 864||County of Altdorf||Adelaide of Tours<br>three children |align="center"|864<br><small>aged 63–64</small>|| |- style="background:#fff" |Welf I (b)||100px |align="center"|{{circa|835}}<br><small>First son of Conrad I and Adelaide of Tours</small> |align="center"|864 – 876||County of Altdorf||''Unknown''<br>at least one child |align="center"|876<br><small>aged 40–41</small>||Also Count at Linzgau, Alpgau and possibly Argengau. |- style="background:#fedf" |Conrad II ''the Younger''|| |align="center"|{{circa|835}}<br><small>Second son of Conrad I and Adelaide of Tours</small> |align="center"|864 – 876||County of Auxerre||Waldrada of Worms<br>one child |align="center"|876<br><small>aged 40–41</small>|| |- style="background:#fff" |Eticho||100px |align="center"|{{circa|850}}<br><small>Son of Welf I (b)</small> |align="center"|876 – 911||County of Altdorf||''Egila''<br>three children |align="center"|{{circa|911}}|| |- style="background:#fedf" |Rudolf I|| |align="center"|859<br><small>Son of Conrad II and Waldrada of Worms</small> |align="center"|876 – 25 October 911||County of Auxerre<br><small>(until 888)</small><br><br>Kingdom of Upper Burgundy<br><small>(from 888)</small>||Guilla of Provence<br>{{circa|880}}<br>four children |align="center"|25 October 911<br><small>aged 51–52</small>|| First King of Burgundy, from 888. |- style="background:#fff" |{{ill|Henry I, Count of Altdorf|nl|Hendrik van Altdorf|lt=Henry I ''of the<br>Golden Plough''}}<ref name=numb>The numbering of the first Henrys and Welfs follows the one established in the Historia Welforum. See ''Historia Welforum Weingartensis'', MGH SS XXI.</ref>||100px |align="center"|{{circa|880}}<br><small>Son of Eticho and ''Egila''</small> |align="center"|911 – 935||County of Altdorf||Atha of Hohenwart<br>three children |align="center"|{{circa|935}}<br><small>aged 54–55</small>|| |- style="background:#fedf" |Rudolf II|| |align="center"|{{circa|880}}<br><small>Son of Rudolf I and Guilla of Provence</small> |align="center"|25 October 911 – 11 July 937||Kingdom of Upper Burgundy||Bertha of Swabia<br>922<br>two children |align="center"|11 July 937<br><small>aged 56–57</small>|| Also King of Italy (922–926). |- style="background:#fff" |Rudolf I|| |align="center"|{{circa|910}}<br><small>Son of {{ill|Henry I, Count of Altdorf|nl|Hendrik van Altdorf|lt=Henry I}} and Atha of Hohenwart</small> |align="center"|935 – 950||County of Altdorf||Siburgis/{{ill|Richlind|de}}<br>at least one child |align="center"|{{circa|950}}<br><small>aged 39–40</small>|| |- style="background:#fedf" |Conrad III ''the Peaceful''|| |align="center"|925<br><small>Son of Rudolf II and Bertha of Swabia</small> |align="center"|11 July 937 – 19 October 993||Kingdom of Upper Burgundy||Adelaide of Bellay<br>one child<br><br>Matilda of France<br>866<br>four children |align="center"|19 October 993<br><small>aged 67–68</small>|| |- style="background:#fff" |Rudolf II||100px |align="center"|{{circa|940}}<br><small>Son of Rudolf I and Siburgis/{{ill|Richlind|de}}</small> |align="center"|950 – 10 March 990||County of Altdorf||Ita of Öhningen<br>three children |align="center"|10 March {{circa|990}}<br><small>aged 49–50</small>|| |- style="background:#fff" |Henry II<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|{{circa|960}}<br><small>First son of Rudolf II and Ita of Öhningen</small> |align="center"|990 – 15 November 1000||County of Altdorf||''Unmarried'' |align="center"|15 November 1000|| Left no descendants. He was succeeded by his brother. |- style="background:#fedf" |Rudolf III ''the Pious''||100px |align="center"|970<br><small>Son of Conrad III and Matilda of France</small> |align="center"|19 October 993 – 6 September 1032||Kingdom of Upper Burgundy||Agiltrude<br><small>(d.1011)</small><br>no children<br><br>Ermengarde of Burgundy<br>28 June 1011<br>no children |align="center"|6 September 1032<br><small>aged 61–62</smalL>|| After his childless death, the Kingdom was inherited by his niece. |- style="background:#fff" |Welf II<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|{{circa|960}}<br><small>Second son of Rudolf II and Ita of Öhningen</small> |align="center"|15 November 1000 – 10 March 1030||County of Altdorf||Imiza of Luxembourg<br>1017<br>two children |align="center"|10 March 1030<br>Bodman-Ludwigshafen<br><small>aged 69–70</small>|| |- style="background:#fff" |Welf III<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|1007<br><small>Son of Welf II and Imiza of Luxembourg</small> |align="center"|10 March 1030 – 13 November 1055||County of Altdorf||''Unmarried'' |align="center"|13 November 1055<br>Bodman-Ludwigshafen<br><small>aged 47–48</small>|| Also Duke of Carinthia. By intercession of his aunt Richlind of Altdorf, he inherited the property of her late husband, Adalbert II, count of Ebersberg. Left no descendants, and his inheritance passed to his nephews, sons of his sister Kunigunde. |- style="background:#fff" |align=center colspan=8|The Altdorf property, which had been donated by Welf III to the Weingarten Abbey, was transferred, by widow Imiza of Luxembourg, then its Abbess and also mother of the late count, to Welf IV, son of her daughter Kunigunda.<ref>Schneidmüller, ''Die Welfen'', p. 127; Störmer, ''Die Welfen in der Reichspolitik'', p. 261.</ref> |- style="background:#fedf" |Gisela||100px |align="center"|11 November 990<br><small>Daughter of Herman II, Duke of Swabia and Gerberga of Burgundy</small> |align="center"|6 September 1032 – 15 February 1043||Kingdom of Upper Burgundy<br><small>(Conradine dynasty)</small>||Brun I, Count of Brunswick<br>1002<br>three children<br><br>Ernest I, Duke of Swabia<br>1012<br>two children<br><br/>Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor<br>1016<br>three children |align="center"|15 February 1043<br>Goslar<br><small>aged 52</small>|| Gisela was heiress of her maternal uncle, which lead to the annexation of the kingdom to the Holy Roman Empire. |- style="background:#fedf" |colspan=8 align="center"|''Upper Burgundy annexed to the Holy Roman Empire'' |- style="background:#eee" |colspan="8" align="center"| '''Younger''' House of Welf |- style="background:#fff" |Welf IV<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|{{circa|1035}}<br>Solesino (?)<br><small>Son of Albert Azzo II, Margrave of Milan and Kunigunde of Altdorf</small> |align="center"|13 November 1055 – 6 November 1101||County of Altdorf||Ethelinde of Northeim<br>1062<br>no children<br><br>Judith of Flanders<br>1071<br>three children |align="center"|6 November 1101<br>Paphos<br><small>aged 65–66</small>|| Son of Kunigunde of Altdorf and Albert Azzo II, Margrave of Milan, inherited his maternal family's possessions. Also Duke of Bavaria (1070–1077 and 1096–1101). |- style="background:#fff" |Welf V ''the Fat''<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|1072<br><small>First son of Welf IV and Judith of Flanders</small> |align="center"|6 November 1101 – 4 September 1120||County of Altdorf||Matilda of Tuscany<br>1088/89<br>no children |align="center"|24 September 1120<br><small>aged 47–48</small>|| Left no children, and the county went to his brother. Also Duke of Bavaria. |- style="background:#fff" |Henry III ''the Black''<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|1075<br><small>Second son of Welf IV and Judith of Flanders</small> |align="center"|4 September 1120 – 13 December 1126||County of Altdorf||Wulfhilde of Saxony<br>1095<br>eight children |align="center"|13 December 1126<br>Ravensburg<br><small>aged 50–51</small>|| Inherited by marriage possessions in the Luneburg, to the north. |- style="background:#def" |Henry IV ''the Proud''<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|1108<br><small>Second son of Henry (III) and Wulfhilde of Saxony</small> |align="center"|13 December 1126 – 20 October 1139||Lordship of Lüneburg||Gertrude of Süpplingenburg<br>1202<br>one child |align="center"|20 October 1139<br>Quedlinburg<br><small>aged 30–31</small> |rowspan="4"| Children of Henry the Black, Welf VI and Henry the Proud divided their inheritance: Welf VI kept the original possessions to the south, and Henry the northern ones, besides inheriting his father's title of Duke of Bavaria (1136–38), and conquering also the title of Duke of Saxony (1137–1139) inherited from their mother. Welf VI would also go on to become Margrave of Tuscany and Duke of Spoleto (1152–1160 and 1167–1173). In 1129, after Henry the Proud's defeat against Lothair III, Holy Roman Emperor, his sister Sophia was given a seat at Regensburg.<ref>{{cite web|access-date=2016-04-27|title=Sophia von Bayern. In: Genealogie Mittelalter: Mittelalterliche Genealogie im Deutschen Reich bis zum Ende der Staufer.|url=http://www.manfred-hiebl.de/genealogie-mittelalter/welfen/welfen_juengere_schwaebische_linie/sophia_von_bayern_herzogin_von_kaernten_um_1145/sophia_von_bayern_herzogin_von_kaernten_+_um_1145.html}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref> From {{circa|1150}} until his death in 1167, Welf VI's son, Welf VII, was associated to his father, but predeceased him. After Welf VI's death, Altdorf was annexed to the Holy Roman Empire. |- style="background:#fff" |Welf VI ''the Mild''<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|1115<br><small>Third son of Henry (III) and Wulfhilde of Saxony</small> |align="center"|13 December 1126 – 15 December 1191 |rowspan="2"|County of Altdorf||Uta of Schauenburg<br>{{circa|1130}}<br>two children |align="center"|15 December 1191<br>Memmingen<br><small>aged 75–76</small> |- style="background:#fff" |Welf VII<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|1135<br><small>Son of Welf VI and Uta of Schauenburg</small> |align="center"|{{circa|1150}} – 12 September 1167||''Unmarried'' |align="center"|12 September 1167<br>Siena<br><small>aged 31–32</small> |- style="background:#fff" |Sophia||100px |align="center"|1105<br><small>Daughter of Henry (III) and Wulfhilde of Saxony</small> |align="center"|1129 – 10 July 1145||County of Altdorf<br><small>(at Regensburg)</small>||Berthold III, Duke of Zähringen<br>{{circa|1120}}<br>no children<br><br>Leopold, Margrave of Styria<br>{{circa|1122}}<br>four children |align="center"|10 July 1145<br><small>aged 39–40</small> |- style="background:#def" |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Gertrude of Süpplingenburg (1139–1142)''</small> |rowspan="2"|Inherited Brunswick from his mother after her death in 1143. Also Duke of Saxony (1142–1180) and Duke of Bavaria (1156–1180). When Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor, became king of Germany, he restored Bavaria to the Welf line. |- style="background:#def" |Henry V ''the Lion''<ref name=numb/>||100px |align="center"|1129<br>Ravensburg<br><small>Son of Henry (I) and Gertrude of Süpplingenburg</small> |align="center"|20 October 1139 – 6 August 1195||Lordship of Lüneburg||Clementia of Zähringen<br>1147<br>three children<br><br>Matilda of England<br>1168<br>five children |align="center"|6 August 1195<br>Braunschweig<br><small>aged 65–66</small> |- style="background:#afd" |Henry (V) ''the Elder''<ref>Numbered ''V'' as Count Palatine of the Rhine</ref>||100px |align="center"|1173<br><small>First son of Henry (II) and Matilda of England</small> |align="center"|6 August 1195 – 1212||County Palatine of the Rhine<br><small>(also at Stade and Altencelle, in Lüneburg)</small>||Agnes of Hohenstaufen<br>1193<br>three children<br><br>Agnes of Landsberg<br>1209<br>no children |align="center"|28 April 1227<br>Braunschweig<br><small>aged 53–54</small> |rowspan="3"| Inherited the land jointly until 1213, when after William's death, they resigned this possessions in favor that William's son, the inheritor of the Luneburg property. Henry was Count Palatine of the Rhine (1195–1213), and Otto was Holy Roman Emperor (1212–1218). Henry also inherited, after William's death, extensive properties near the Elbe and the Weser. |- style="background:#def" |Otto||100px |align="center"|1175<br><small>Third son of Henry (II) and Matilda of England</small> |align="center"|6 August 1195 – 19 May 1218||Lordship of Lüneburg<br><small>(at Haldensleben)</small>||Beatrice of Swabia<br>1212<br>no children<br><br>Maria of Brabant<br>19 May 1214<br>Maastricht<br>no children |align="center"|19 May 1218<br>Harzburg<br><small>aged 42–43</small> |- style="background:#def" |William ''Longsword''||100px |align="center"|11 April 1184<br>Winchester<br><small>Fourth son of Henry (II) and Matilda of England</small> |align="center"|6 August 1195 – 12 December 1213||Lordship of Lüneburg||Helena of Denmark<br>1202<br>Hamburg<br>one child |align="center"|12 December 1213<br>Lüneburg<br><small>aged 29</small> |- style="background:#def" |align=center colspan=8|''Haldensleben re-merged in Lüneburg'' |- style="background:#afd" |Henry (VI) ''the Younger''<ref>Numbered ''VI'' as Count Palatine of the Rhine</ref>|| |align="center"|1196<br><small>Son of Henry (III) and Agnes of Hohenstaufen</small> |align="center"|1212 – 26 April 1214||County Palatine of the Rhine||''Unmarried'' |align="center"|26 April 1214<br><small>aged 17–18</small>|| After his death the Palatinate was inherited by his sister. |- style="background:#def" |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor (1213–1218)''</small> |rowspan="2"|He was raised to Duke and recognised as such in 1235, by Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor |-bgcolor=#def | Otto I ''the Child''<ref>As the first Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg, the numbering restarts from here.</ref> ||100px|center |align="center"|1204<br><small>Son of William and Helena of Denmark</small> |align="center"|12 December 1213 – 9 June 1252||Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg|| Matilda of Brandenburg<br />1228<br />ten children |align="center"|9 June 1252<br>Lüneburg<br><small>aged 47–48</small> |- style="background:#afd" |Agnes||100px |align="center"|1201<br><small>Daughter of Henry (III) and Agnes of Hohenstaufen</small> |align="center"|26 April 1214 – 1267||County Palatine of the Rhine||Otto IV, Duke of Bavaria<br>1222<br>Worms<br>five children |align="center"|1267<br><small>aged 65–66</small>|| Her marriage with Otto, Duke of Bavaria determined the annexation of the county to the patrimony of the House of Wittelsbach. |- style="background:#afd" |align=center colspan=8|''County Palatine of the Rhine was inherited by the House of Wittelsbach'' |-style="background:#ffdead" ||Albert I ''the Tall'' ||100px |align="center"|1236<br><small>First son of Otto I and Matilda of Brandenburg</small> |align="center"|9 June 1252 – 15 August 1279||Principality of Brunswick<br><small>(until 1269 co-ruling in Brunswick-Lüneburg)</small>|| Elisabeth of Brabant<br />1254<br />no children<br /><br />{{ill|Alexia of Montferrat|bg|Аделаида Монфератска}}<br />1263<br />seven children |align="center"|15 August 1279<br>Braunschweig<br><small>aged 42–43</small> |rowspan="2" bgcolor=#def| Children of Otto I, they shared rule of the land until 1269. Albert became Prince of Brunswick and John a Prince of Luneburg. |-style="background:#ffc ||John || |align="center"|1242<br><small>Second son of Otto I and Matilda of Brandenburg</small> |align="center"|9 June 1252 – 13 December 1277||Principality of Lüneburg<br><small>(until 1269 co-ruling in Brunswick-Lüneburg)</small>||Liutgard of Holstein-Itzehoe<br />1265<br />five children |align="center"|13 December 1277<br>Braunschweig<br><small>aged 34–35</small> |-style="background:#def |colspan=8 align="center"|All Welf lines continued to bear the title "Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg" between the division of 1269 and the end of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806. This was an additional title to the representation of their actual territorial lordship. However, as this is a list of rulers, the list goes beyond the use of the title, going through all generations until the end of the noble family representation in the land, in 1918. |-style="background:#ffc |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Albert I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1277–1279)<br>Regency of Conrad of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Prince-Bishop of Verden (1277–1282)''</small> |rowspan="2"|His rule was marked by several feuds, financed by pledges (Verpfändungen), involving border and property disputes with his neighbours. Otto restricted the rights of the knights and safeguarded public order. |-style="background:#ffc" |Otto II ''the Strict'' ||100px|center |align="center"|1266<br><small>Son of John and Liutgard of Holstein-Itzehoe</small> |align="center"|13 December 1277 – 10 April 1330||Principality of Lüneburg || {{ill|Matilda of Bavaria, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|fr|Mathilde de Bavière (1275-1319)|lt=Matilda of Bavaria}}<br />1288<br />five children |align="center"|10 April 1330<br><small>aged 63–64</small> |-style="background:#dce ||Henry I ''the Admirable''|| |align="center"|August 1267<br><small>First son of Albert I and {{ill|Alexia of Montferrat|bg|Аделаида Монфератска}}</small> |align="center"|15 August 1279 – 7 September 1322||Principality of Grubenhagen<br><small>(until 1291 co-ruling at Brunswick)</small>|| Agnes of Meissen<br>1282<br>sixteen children |align="center"|7 September 1322<br>Einbeck<br><small>aged 55</small> |rowspan="3" style="background:#ffdead| Children of Albert I, ruled jointly. In 1291 divided the land: Henry received Grubenhagen, William Wolfenbüttel and Albert Göttingen. William died without descendants, and Albert reunited his land with his brother's. Wolfenbüttel became part of Göttingen. |-style="background:#ade ||Albert II ''the Fat'' || |align="center"|1268<br><small>Second son of Albert I and {{ill|Alexia of Montferrat|bg|Аделаида М��нфератска}}</small> |align="center"|15 August 1279 – 22 September 1318||Principality of Göttingen<br><small>(until 1291 co-ruling at Brunswick)</small>||Rixa of Werle<br />1284<br>ten children |align="center"|22 September 1318<br><small>aged 49–50</small> |-style="background:#ceb ||William I || |align="center"|1270<br><small>Third son of Albert I and {{ill|Alexia of Montferrat|bg|Аделаида Монфератска}}</small> |align="center"|15 August 1279 – 30 September 1292||Principality of Wolfenbüttel<br><small>(until 1291 co-ruling at Brunswick)</small>||{{ill|Elisabeth of Hesse, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|de|Elisabeth von Hessen († 1306)|lt=Elisabeth of Hesse}}<br />1290<br />no children |align="center"|30 September 1292<br>Braunschweig<br><small>aged 21–22</small> |-style="background:#ceb |align=center colspan=8|''Wolfenbüttel briefly annexed to Göttingen'' |-style="background:#ade |Otto (I) ''the Mild'' || 100px |align="center"|24 June 1292<br><small>First son of Albert II and Rixa of Werle</small> |align="center"|22 September 1318 – 30 August 1344||Principality of Göttingen||{{ill|Judith of Hesse|de|Jutta von Hessen}}<br>1311<br>no children<br><br>{{ill|Agnes of Brandenburg-Salzwedel|de|Agnes von Brandenburg (1298–1334)}}<br>1319<br>no children |align="center"|30 August 1344<br>Göttingen<br><small>aged 52</small>|| By marriage inherited the Altmark region, which he sold c.1340. Left no descendants. His inheritance went to his brothers. |-style="background:#dce |Henry II ''of Greece'' || |align="center"|c.1295<br><small>First son of Henry I and Agnes of Meissen</small> |align="center"|7 September 1322 – 1351 |rowspan="4"|Principality of Grubenhagen|| Jutta of Brandenburg-Stendal<br />1318<br />four children<br /><br />Helvis of Ibelin<br />1324<br />six children |align="center"|c.1355<br>Grubenhagen<br><small>aged 59–60</small> |rowspan="4"| Sons of Henry I, ruled jointly. |-style="background:#dce |John I || |align="center"|c.1295<br><small>Second son of Henry I and Agnes of Meissen</small> |align="center"|7 September 1322 – 1325|| ''Unmarried'' |align="center"|c.1370<br>Einbeck<br><small>aged 59–60</small> |-style="background:#dce |Ernest I || |align="center"|1297<br><small>Third son of Henry I and Agnes of Meissen</small> |align="center"|7 September 1322 – 9 March 1361|| Adelheid of Everstein-Polle<br />June 1335<br />nine children |align="center"|9 March 1361<br><small>aged 63–64</small> |-style="background:#dce |William || |align="center"|1298<br><small>Fourth son of Henry I and Agnes of Meissen</small> |align="center"|7 September 1322 – 1360||''Unmarried'' |align="center"|1360<br><small>aged 61–62</small> |-style="background:#ffc |Otto III || |align="center"|1296<br><small>Second son of Otto II and {{ill|Matilda of Bavaria, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|fr|Mathilde de Bavière (1275-1319)|lt=Matilda of Bavaria}}</small> |align="center"|10 April 1330 – 19 August 1352 |rowspan="2"|Principality of Lüneburg|| Matilda of Mecklenburg<br />1311<br />three children |align="center"|19 August 1352<br><small>aged 55–56</small> |rowspan="2"| Sons of Otto II, ruled jointly. After Otto's death in 1352, William ruled alone. His death without descendants precipitated the Lüneburg War of Succession in 1370. |-style="background:#ffc |William II ''the Elder'' ||100px |align="center"|{{circa|1300}}<br><small>Fourth son of Otto II and {{ill|Matilda of Bavaria, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|fr|Mathilde de Bavière (1275-1319)|lt=Matilda of Bavaria}}</small> |align="center"|10 April 1330 – 23 November 1369|| Hedwig of Ravensberg<br>7 April 1328<br>one child<br><br>Maria<br>After 1387<br>one child<br /><br />{{ill|Sophia of Anhalt-Bernburg, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|bg|София фон Анхалт-Бернбург-Люнебург|lt=Sophia of Anhalt-Bernburg}}<br />12 March 1346<br />no children<br /><br />Agnes of Saxe-Lauenburg<br />1363<br />no children |align="center"|23 November 1369<br>Lüneburg<br><small>aged 68–69</small> |-style="background:#ceb ||Magnus I ''the Pious'' || |align="center"|1304<br><small>Seventh son of Albert II and Rixa of Werle</small> |align="center"|30 August 1344 – 1369|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Sophia of Brandenburg-Stendal<br />1327<br />eight children |align="center"|1369<br><small>aged 64–65</small> |rowspan="2"| Younger brothers of Otto, divided the inheritance. |-style="background:#ade ||Ernest I|| |align="center"|1305<br><small>Eighth son of Albert II and Rixa of Werle</small> |align="center"|30 August 1344 – 24 April 1367||Principality of Göttingen||{{ill|Elisabeth of Hesse, Duchess of Brunswick-Göttingen|bg|Елизабет фон Хесен|lt=Elisabeth of Hesse}}<br>1337<br>three children |align="center"|24 April 1367<br><small>aged 61–62</small> |-style="background:#dce |Albert I || |align="center"|{{circa|1339}}<br><small>First son of Ernest I and Adelaide of Eberstein-Polle</small> |align="center"|9 March 1361 – 1383 |rowspan="2"|Principality of Grubenhagen || {{ill|Agnes of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Duchess of Brunswick-Grubenhagen|bg|Агнес I фон Брауншвайг-Люнебург|lt=Agnes of Brunswick-Lüneburg}}<br>1371<br>one child |align="center"|1383<br><small>aged 43–44</small> |rowspan="3"| Children of Ernest I, divided their inheritance. John II abdicated 1364 to join the clergy and Albert became sole ruler. |-style="background:#dce |John II || |align="center"|{{circa|1339}}<br><small>Second son of Ernest I and Adelaide of Eberstein-Polle</small> |align="center"|9 March 1361 – 1364||''Unmarried'' |align="center"|18 January 1401<br><small>aged 61–62</small> |-style="background:#dce |Frederick I || |align="center"|1350<br><small>Third son of Ernest I and Adelaide of Eberstein-Polle</small> |align="center"|9 March 1361 – 4 May 1421||Principality of Grubenhagen<br><small>(at Osterode)</small>|| {{ill|Adelaide of Anhalt-Bernburg|bg|Аделхайд фон Анхалт-Бернбург}}<br>one child |align="center"|4 May 1421<br><small>aged 70–71</small> |-style="background:#ade |Otto (II) ''the Evil'' ||100px |align="center"|1330<br><small>Son of Ernest I and {{ill|Elisabeth of Hesse, Duchess of Brunswick-Göttingen|bg|Елизабет фон Хесен|lt=Elisabeth of Hesse}}</small> |align="center"|24 April 1367 – 13 November 1394||Principality of Göttingen ||Mirolawa of Holstein-Plön<br><small>(d.1376)</small><br>19 November 1357<br>no children<br><br>{{ill|Margarethe of Jülich-Berg|bg|Маргарета фон Берг}}<br />1379<br />two children |align="center"|13 November 1394<br>Hardegsen<br><small>aged 63–64</small>|| |-style="background:#ceb |Magnus II ''of the Necklace'' ''(Torquatus)''||100px |align="center"|1328<br><small>Son of Magnus I and Sophia of Brandenburg-Stendal</small> |align="center"|1369 – 25 July 1373|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel<br><small>(with Principality of Lüneburg)</small> ||Katherine of Anhalt-Bernburg<br />1327<br />eight children |align="center"|25 July 1373<br>{{ill|Leveste|de}}<br><small>aged 44–45</small>|| Inherited Wolfenbüttel from his father. However, the Lüneburg War of Succession allowed his succession also in this duchy. However, the War of Succession brought, after his death, the dukes of Saxe-Wittenberg to the government. |-style="background:#ffc |colspan=8| After the death of Magnus II with the Necklace, a treaty (the Reconciliation of Hanover) was agreed between the widow of Magnus II and her sons and the claimers, Albert of Saxe-Wittenberg and his uncle Duke Wenceslaus I of Saxe-Wittenberg: the estates of the Principality were to pay homage both to the Welfs and to the Ascanians, and the two noble houses would govern the state alternately. Initially, the land would be given to the two Ascanians from Wittenberg, and after their death it would go to the sons of the fallen Duke Magnus II.

After their death, rule of the Principality was to revert to the Ascanians. In order to underpin the agreement, in 1374 Albert of Saxe-Lüneburg married Catharina, the widow of Magnus II. The treaty also envisaged the creation of a statutory body representing the estates, which was to supervise the treaty. However, 1373–1388 would be the only period in which a Brunswick-Luneburg land was not ruled by a Welf:

* Albert of Saxe-Wittenberg (1373–1385), son of Elisabeth, daughter of William II. * Wenceslaus I, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg (1385–1388), uncle of the previous

In the wake of his death, Elector Wenceslas appointed Bernard, his brother-in-law, as co-regent involved him in the government. But his younger brother Henry did not agree with this ruling, and after vain attempts to reach an agreement, the fight flared up again in the spring of 1388. Elector Wenceslas had to assemble an army without the help of Bernard, supported by the town of Lüneburg. From Winsen an der Aller, he wanted to attack Celle, which was held by Henry and his mother. During the preparations Elector Wenceslas fell seriously ill and died shortly thereafter. According to legend, he was poisoned.

Lüneburg continued the preparations, formed an alliance with the Bishop of Minden and Count of Schaumburg and set up his own army. On 28 May 1388, battle was joined at Winsen an der Aller; it ended in victory for Henry. According to the provisions of the Treaty of Hanover from the year 1373, after the death of Wensceslas, the Principality passed to the House of Welf. In 1389, an inheritance agreement between the Welfs and the Ascanians was concluded, the treaty of 1374 was abolished, and the Principality was secured for the Welfs.

|-style="background:#ceb" |Frederick I || |align=center|1357<br><small>First son of Magnus II nad {{ill|Catherine of Anhalt-Bernburg|bg|Катарина фон Анхалт-Бернбург}}</small> |align=center|25 July 1373 – 5 June 1400|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Anna of Saxe-Wittenberg<br />1386<br />two children |align=center|5 June 1400<br>Kleinenglis<br><small>aged 42–43</small> |rowspan="5"| Children of Magnus II. As the eldest, Frederick inherited Wolfenbuttel alone, while his younger brothers held Luneburg sinceits recovery in 1388. After Frederick I's childless death in 1400, the remaining brothers exchanged feuds until 1428. |-style="background:#ffc" |rowspan="2"|Henry (I) ''the Mild'' |rowspan="2"|100px |rowspan="2" align=center|1355<br><small>Second son of Magnus II and {{ill|Catherine of Anhalt-Bernburg|bg|Катарина фон Анхалт-Бернбург}}</small> |align=center|15 May 1388 – 14 October 1416|| Principality of Lüneburg |rowspan="2"|Sophia of Pomerania<br />11 November 1388<br />two children<br /><br />{{ill|Margaret of Hesse, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|bg|Маргарета фон Хесен|lt=Margaret of Hesse}}<br />30 January 1409<br>Kassel<br>one child |rowspan="2" align=center|14 October 1416<br><small>aged 60–61</small> |-style="background:#ceb" |align=center|5 June 1400 – 1409|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel |-style="background:#ffc" |rowspan="2"|Bernard I |rowspan="2"|100px |rowspan="2" align=center|1358<br><small>Third son of Magnus II and {{ill|Catherine of Anhalt-Bernburg|bg|Катарина фон Анхалт-Бернбург}}</small> |align=center|15 May 1388 – 1409<br><br>1428 – 11 June 1434|| Principality of Lüneburg |rowspan="2"|{{ill|Margaret of Saxe-Wittenberg, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|bg|Маргарета фон Саксония-Витенберг|lt=Margaret of Saxe-Wittenberg}}<br />1386<br />three children<br /> |align=center rowspan="2"|11 June 1434<br>Celle<br><small>aged 75–76</small> |-style="background:#ceb" |align=center|1409 – 1428|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel |-style="background:#dce" |align="center" colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Frederick I, Duke of Brunswick-Osterode (1383–1401)''</small> |rowspan="2"| |-style="background:#dce" |Eric I ''the Winner'' || |align="center"|{{circa|1380}}<br><small>Son of Albert I and {{ill|Agnes of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Duchess of Brunswick-Grubenhagen|bg|Агнес I фон Брауншвайг-Люнебург|lt=Agnes of Brunswick-Lüneburg}}</small> |align="center"|1383 – 28 May 1427||Principality of Grubenhagen || {{ill|Elisabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen, Duchess of Brunswick-Grubenhagen|bg|Елизабет фон Брауншвайг-Гьотинген|lt=Elisabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen}}<br>six children |align="center"|28 May 1427<br><small>aged 46–47</small> |-style="background:#ade" |Otto (III) ''the One-Eyed'' || |align="center"|1380<br><small>Son of Otto (II) and {{ill|Margarethe of Jülich-Berg|bg|Маргарета фон Берг}}</small> |align="center"|13 November 1394 – 6 February 1463||Principality of Göttingen ||Agnes of Hesse<br>1408<br>one child |align="center"|6 February 1463<br>Uslar<br><small>aged 82–83</small>|| With no male heirs, after his death Göttingen is absorbed by Calenberg. |-style="background:#ade" |align=center colspan=8|''Göttingen annexed to Calenberg'' |-style="background:#ffdaed" |rowspan="3"|William (III & I) ''the Victorious'' |rowspan="3"|100px |rowspan="3" align=center|1392<br><small>Son of Henry (I) and Sophia of Pomerania</small> |style="background:#ffc" align=center|14 October 1416 – 1428 |style="background:#ffc"| Principality of Lüneburg |rowspan="3"|Cecilia of Brandenburg<br>30 May/6 June 1423<br>Berlin<br>two children<br><br>Matilda of Holstein-Pinneberg<br>1466<br>one child |rowspan="3" align=center|25 July 1482<br><small>aged 89–90</small> |rowspan="5"| Sons of Henry the Mild, ruled jointly. In 1428 they exchanged, with their uncle Bernard I, Lüneburg for Wolfenbüttel. In 1432 founded the Principality of Calenberg, a split-off from Lüneburg, and left the remaining Wolfenbüttel to his brother Henry IV. After the latter's death William took his lands. In 1463, attached the Principality of Göttingen to Calenberg. In 1473, William also annexed Wolfenbüttel. |-style="background:#ceb" |align=center|1428 – 1432|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel |-style="background:#ffdaed" |align=center|1432 – 25 July 1482|| Principality of Calenberg<br><small>(with Principalities of Göttingen from 1463<br>and Wolfenbüttel from 1473)</small> |-style="background:#ceb" |rowspan="2"|Henry (II) ''the Peaceful'' |rowspan="2"| |rowspan="2" align=center|1411<br><small>Son of Henry (I) and {{ill|Margaret of Hesse, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|bg|Маргарета фон Хесен|lt=Margaret of Hesse}}</small> |style="background:#ffc" align=center|14 October 1416 – 1428 |style="background:#ffc"| Principality of Lüneburg |rowspan="2"|{{ill|Helena of Clèves|it|Elena di Kleve}}<br>1436<br>one child |rowspan="2" align=center|7 December 1473<br><small>aged 61–62</small> |-style="background:#ceb" |align=center|1428 – 7 December 1473|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel |-style="background:#ceb" |align=center colspan=8| ''Wolfenbüttel briefly annexed to Calenberg'' |-style="background:#dce" |Otto II || |align=center|1396<br><small>Son of Frederick I and {{ill|Adelaide of Anhalt-Bernburg|bg|Аделхайд фон Анхалт-Бернбург}}</small> |align=center|4 May 1421 – 1452||Principality of Grubenhagen<br><small>(at Osterode)</small>|| Schonetta of Nassau-Weilburg<br><small>(d.1436)</small><br>1414<br>one child |align=center|1452||After his death, Osterode returned to Grubenhagen. |-style="background:#dce" |align=center colspan=8| ''Osterode re-merged in Grubenhagen'' |-style="background:#dce" |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Otto II, Duke of Brunswick-Osterode (1427–1440)''</small> |rowspan="4"|Sons of Eric I, were under regency until 1440, when they divided Grubenhagen. Henry kept Heldenburg Castle, and Albert Herzberg Castle, but kept the joint rule at Osterode am Harz and Einbeck. Ernest didn't participate in the division, and abdicated in 1464, to become a canon in Halberstadt. |-style="background:#dce" |Henry III || |align=center|1416<br>Grubenhagen<br><small>First son of Eric I and {{ill|Elisabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen, Duchess of Brunswick-Grubenhagen|bg|Елизабет фон Брауншвайг-Гьотинген|lt=Elisabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen}}</small> |align=center|28 May 1427 – 20 December 1464||Principality of Grubenhagen<br /><small>(at Heldenburg from 1440)</small> || Margaret of Żagań<br />before 27 June 1457<br />two children |align=center|20 December 1464<br><small>aged 47–48</small> |-style="background:#dce" |Ernest II || |align=center|1418<br><small>Second son of Eric I and {{ill|Elisabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen, Duchess of Brunswick-Grubenhagen|bg|Елизабет фон Брауншвайг-Гьотинген|lt=Elisabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen}}</small> |align=center|28 May 1427 – 1466||Principality of Grubenhagen || ''Unmarried'' |align=center|1466<br><small>aged 47–48</small> |-style="background:#dce" |Albert II || |align=center|1 November 1419<br><small>Third son of Eric I and {{ill|Elisabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen, Duchess of Brunswick-Grubenhagen|bg|Елизабет фон Брауншвайг-Гьотинген|lt=Elisabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen}}</small> |align=center|28 May 1427 – 15 August 1485||Principality of Grubenhagen<br><small>(at Herzberg)</small> || Elisabeth of Waldeck<br />15 October 1471<br />two children |align=center|15 August 1485<br><small>aged 65</small> |-style="background:#ffc" |Otto IV ''the Lame''||100px |align=center|c.1400<br><small>First son of Bernard I and {{ill|Margaret of Saxe-Wittenberg, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|bg|Маргарета фон Саксония-Витенберг|lt=Margaret of Saxe-Wittenberg}}</small> |align=center|11 June 1434 – 1 June 1446 |rowspan="2"| Principality of Lüneburg ||Elisabeth of Eberstein<br />1425<br />one child<br /> |align=center|1 June 1446<br><small>aged 45–46</small> |rowspan="2"| Ruled jointly. Their rule was marked by major building work to Celle Castle and also by numerous reforms which improved the legal situation of farmers vis-a-vis their local lords. Frederick abdicated to his sons and went to a monastery, but after the death of his son Otto, he left the monastery and resumed his rule. |-style="background:#ffc" |Frederick II ''the Pious''||100px |align=center|1418<br><small>Second son of Bernard I and {{ill|Margaret of Saxe-Wittenberg, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg|bg|Маргарета фон Саксония-Витенберг|lt=Margaret of Saxe-Wittenberg}}</small> |align=center|11 June 1434 – 1457<br><br>9 January 1471 – 19 March 1478||Magdalene of Brandenburg<br />3 July 1429<br />Tangermünde<br />three children |align=center|19 March 1478<br>Celle<br><small>aged 59–60</small> |-style="background:#ffc" |Bernard II||100px |align=center|1437<br><small>First son of Frederick II and Magdalene of Brandenburg</small> |align=center|1457 – 9 February 1464 |rowspan="2"| Principality of Lüneburg||Matilda of Holstein-Pinneberg<br>1463<br>no children |align=center|9 February 1464<br>Celle<br><small>aged 26–27</small> |rowspan="2"|Children of Frederick II, ruled jointly. Bernard was also Prince-Bishop of Hildesheim. |-style="background:#ffc" |Otto V ''the Magnanimous''||100px |align=center|1439<br><small>First son of Frederick II and Magdalene of Brandenburg</small> |align=center|1457 – 9 January 1471||Anne of Nassau-Siegen<br>25 September 1467<br>Celle<br>two children |align=center|9 January 1471<br>Celle<br><small>aged 31–32</small> |- style="background:#dce" |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen (1464–1479)''</small> |rowspan="2"|With his uncle Albert, officialized the division of Grubenhagen. However, his death without descendants allowed his cousins (sons of Albert) to reunite Grubenhagen. |- style="background:#dce" |Henry IV|| |align="center"|1460<br><small>Son of Henry III and Margaret of Żagań</small> |align="center"|20 December 1464 – 6 December 1526||Principality of Grubenhagen<br /><small>(at Heldenburg)</small>|| {{ill|Elisabeth of Saxe-Lauenburg, Duchess of Brunswick-Grubenhagen|bg|Елизабет фон Саксония-Лауенбург|lt=Elisabeth of Saxe-Lauenburg}}<br />26 August 1494<br />Einbeck<br />no children |align="center"|6 December 1526<br>Einbeck<br><small>aged 65–66</small> |- style="background:#ffc" |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Anne of Nassau-Siegen (1478–1486)''</small> |rowspan="2"|Son of Otto V. As he opposed to the newly elected Emperor Charles V, the latter deposed him from the duchy and gave it to his sons. |-style="background:#ffc" |Henry (III) ''the Middle''||100px |align="center"|15 September 1468<br>Lüneburg<br><small>Son of Otto V and Anne of Nassau-Siegen</small> |align="center"|19 March 1478 – 1520|| Principality of Lüneburg ||Margaret of Saxony<br />27 February 1487<br />Celle<br />seven children<br /><br />''Anna von Campe''<br />{{circa|1528}}?<br><small>(morganatic)</small><br>no children |align="center"|19 February 1532<br>Wienhausen<br><small>aged 63</small> |-style="background:#ffdaed" |Frederick III ''the Turbulent''|| |align=center|1424<br><small>First son of William (III & I) and Cecilia of Brandenburg</small> |align=center|25 July 1482 – 1485|| Principality of Calenberg<br><small>(at Calenberg proper)</small>||Anna of Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Einbeck<br />After 1460<br />no children<br /><br />Margaret of Rietberg<br />10 May 1483<br />no children |align=center|5 March 1495<br>Hann. Münden<br><small>aged 70–71</small> |rowspan="2"| Children of William III/I, divided their inheritance. Wiliam IV/II imprisoned by his brother Frederick, and took his place in Calenberg, reuniting the inheritance once again. William eventually abdicated of all his property to his sons. |-style="background:#ffdaed" ||William (IV & II) ''the Younger''||100px |align=center|1425<br><small>Second son of William (III & I) and Cecilia of Brandenburg</small> |align=center|25 July 1482 – 1495||Principality of Calenberg<br><small>(at Wolfenbüttel until 1485; at Principality of Göttingen only since 1491)</small>||Elizabeth of Stolberg-Wernigerode<br />1444<br />three children |align=center|7 July 1503<br>Hardegsen<br><small>aged 77–78</small> |-style="background:#dce" |align=center colspan=7|<small>''Regency of Henry IV, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen and Elisabeth of Waldeck (1485-1490)''</small> |rowspan=2|In 1526 reunited Grubenhagen under his hands. |-style="background:#dce" |Philip I ||100px |align=center|1476<br><small>Son of Albert II and Elisabeth of Waldeck</small> |align=center|15 August 1485 – 4 September 1551||Grubenhagen<br /><small>(at Herzberg; from 1526 in all Grubenhagen)</small> || ''Unknown''<br />before 1509<br />one child<br /><br />Catherine of Outer Mansfeld<br />{{circa|1510}}?<br />nine children |align=center|4 September 1551<br>Herzberg am Harz<br><small>aged 74–75</small> |-style="background:#ceb" ||Henry (IV) ''the Elder''|| |align=center|14 June 1463<br><small>First son of William (IV & II) and Elisabeth of Stolberg-Wernigerode</small> |align=center|1495 – 23 June 1514|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||{{ill|Catherine of Pomerania-Wolgast, Duchess of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel|pt|Catarina da Pomerânia|lt=Catherine of Pomerania-Wolgast}}<br>1486<br>nine children |align=center|23 June 1514<br>Leer<br><small>aged 51</small> |rowspan="2" style="background:#ffdaed"| Children of William IV/II, initially ruled jointly, but in 1494, they officially divided their inheritance. |-style="background:#ffdaed" ||Eric I ''the Elder''||100px<br> |align=center|16 February 1470<br>Neustadt am Rübenberge<br><small>Second son of William (IV & II) and Elisabeth of Stolberg-Wernigerode</small> |align=center|1495 – 30 July 1540|| Principality of Calenberg ||Katharina of Saxony<br />1496/97<br />no children<br /><br />Elisabeth of Brandenburg<br />7 July 1525<br />Stettin<br />four children |align=center|30 July 1540<br>Haguenau<br><small>aged 70</small> |-style="background:#ceb" |Henry (V) ''the Younger''||100px |align=center|10 November 1489<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>Son of Henry (IV) and {{ill|Catherine of Pomerania-Wolgast, Duchess of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel|pt|Catarina da Pomerânia|lt=Catherine of Pomerania-Wolgast}}</small> |align=center|23 June 1514 – 11 June 1568|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Maria of Württemberg<br />1515<br />eight children<br /><br />Sophia of Poland<br />22/25 February 1556<br />no children |align=center|11 June 1568<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>aged 78</small>|| He was the last Catholic of his family. Under him the medieval fortress (''Burg'') was rebuilt into a castle (''Schloss''); he was a passionate opponent of the Lutherans, and driving force behind the Catholic alliance established against the Schmalkaldic League; the disinheritance of a third son could not be carried out. |-style="background:#ffc" |Otto (VI & I)||100px |align=center|24 August 1495<br>Celle<br><small>First son of Henry (III) and Margaret of Saxony</small> |align=center|1520 – 11 August 1549|| Principality of Lüneburg<br /><small>(at Harburg from 1527)</small> ||''Meta von Campe''<br />1527<br /><br><small>(morganatic)</small>no children |align=center|11 August 1549<br>Harburg<br><small>aged 53</small> |rowspan="3"|Sons of Henry VII, ruled jointly. Otto abdicated in 1527 and founded his own estate, the Lordship of Harburg, which passed to his own descendants. Ernest was a champion of the Protestant cause during the early years of the Protestant Reformation. Francis started his co-rulership in 1536, and abdicated three years later to rule in his own estate, the Principality of Gifhorn, which was reannexed to Lüneburg after his death as he left no descendants. |-style="background:#ffc" |Ernest I ''the Confessor''||100px |align=center|27 June 1497<br>Uelzen<br><small>Second son of Henry (III) and Margaret of Saxony</small> |align=center|1520 – 11 January 1546|| Principality of Lüneburg ||Sophia of Mecklenburg-Schwerin<br />2 June 1528<br />Schwerin<br />seven children |align=center|11 January 1546<br>Celle<br><small>aged 48</small> |-style="background:#ffc" |Francis||100px |align=center|23 November 1508<br>Uelzen<br><small>Third son of Henry (III) and Margaret of Saxony</small> |align=center|1520 – 23 November 1549|| Principality of Lüneburg<br><small>(at Duchy of Gifhorn from 1539)</small> ||Clara of Saxe-Lauenburg<br />29 September 1547<br />Amt Neuhaus<br />seven children |align=center|23 November 1549<br>Gifhorn<br><small>aged 41</small> |-style="background:#ffc" |align=center colspan=8|''Gifhorn re-merged in Lüneburg'' |- style="background:#ffdaed" |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regencies of Elisabeth of Brandenburg and Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse (1540–1545)''</small> |rowspan="2"|During his regency, his mother implemented the Reformation in Calenberg. She also wrote a "government manual" for Eric, with important advice that should serve him as a guide. Left no descendants, and Calenberg was annexed to Wolfenbüttel. |-style="background:#ffdaed" |Eric II ''the Younger''||100px |align=center|10 August 1528<br>Dassel<br><small>Son of Eric I and Elisabeth of Brandenburg</small> |align=center|30 July 1540 – 17 November 1584|| Principality of Calenberg ||Sidonie of Saxony<br />17 May 1545<br />Hann. Münden<br />no children<br /><br />Dorothea of Lorraine<br />26 November 1575<br />Nancy<br />no children |align=center|17 November 1584<br>Pavia<br><small>aged 56</small> |-style="background:#ffdaed" |colspan=8 align="center"|''Calenberg annexed to Wolfenbüttel'' |-style="background:#ffc" |colspan=7 align="center"|<small>''Council of Regency (1546–1555)''</small> |rowspan="2"|Left no descendants. The land passed to his brothers. |-style="background:#ffc" |Francis Otto||100px |align=center|20 June 1530<br>Celle<br><small>First son of Ernest I and Sophia of Mecklenburg-Schwerin</small> |align=center|11 January 1546 – 29 April 1559|| Principality of Lüneburg ||{{ill|Elisabeth Magdalena of Brandenburg|de|Elisabeth Magdalene von Brandenburg}}<br />5 February 1559<br />no children |align=center|29 April 1559<br>Celle<br><small>aged 28</small> |-style="background:#ffc" |Otto II ''the Famous''|| |align=center|25 September 1528<br>Celle<br><small>Son of Otto (VI & I) and Meta von Campe</small> |align=center|11 August 1549 – 26 October 1603|| Principality of Lüneburg<br /><small>(at Harburg)</small> ||Margaret of Schwarzburg-Leutenberg<br />8 September 1551<br />four children<br /><br />Hedwig of East Frisia<br />8 October 1562<br />twelve children |align=center|26 October 1603<br>Harburg<br><small>aged 75</small>|| |-style="background:#ffdaed" |Ernest III ||100px |align=center|17 December 1518<br>Osterode am Harz<br><small>First son of Philip I and Catherine of Outer Mansfeld</small> |align=center|4 September 1551 – 2 April 1567||Grubenhagen|| Margaret of Pomerania-Wolgast<br />9 October 1547<br />Wolgast<br />one child |align=center|2 April 1567<br>Herzberg am Harz<br><small>aged 48</small>|| Left no male descendants. The land passed to his brother Wolfgang. |-style="background:#ffc" |Henry (VI)|| |align=center|4 June 1533<br>Lüchow-Dannenberg<br><small>Third son of Ernest I and Sophia of Mecklenburg-Schwerin</small> |align=center|29 April 1559 – 19 January 1598|| Principality of Lüneburg<br /><small>(from 1569 in Dannenberg)</small> ||Ursula of Saxe-Lauenburg<br />1569<br />seven children |align=center|19 January 1598<br>Dannenberg<br><small>aged 64</small> |rowspan="2"|Brothers of Francis Otto, initially ruled jointly. In 1569, Henry founded the duchy of Dannenberg, which left to his own descendants. William ruled alone from 1569. |-style="background:#ffc" |William V ''the Young''||100px |align=center|4 July 1535<br><small>Fourth son of Ernest I and Sophia of Mecklenburg-Schwerin</small> |align=center|29 April 1559 – 20 August 1592|| Principality of Lüneburg ||Dorothea of Denmark<br />12 October 1561<br />fifteen children |align=center|20 August 1592<br><small>aged 57</small> |-style="background:#dce" |Wolfgang || |align=center|6 April 1531<br>Herzberg am Harz<br><small>Fifth son of Philip I and Catherine of Outer Mansfeld</small> |align=center|2 April 1567 – 14 May 1595||Principality of Grubenhagen|| Dorothea of Saxe-Lauenburg<br />10 December 1570<br />Osterode am Harz<br />no children |align=center|14 May 1595<br>Herzberg am Harz<br><small>aged 64</small>|| Like most of his predecessors, he had financial problems, so he was often forced to sell or pledge major parts of his possession and he had to demand high taxes. As he left no male descendants, the land passed to his brother Philip. |-style="background:#ceb" ||Julius||100px |align=center|29 June 1528<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>Son of Henry (V) and Maria of Württemberg</small> |align=center|11 June 1568 – 3 May 1589|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Hedwig of Brandenburg<br />25 February 1560<br />Cölln<br />eleven children |align=center|3 May 1589<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>aged </small>|| In 1584 Julius absorbed the Principality of Calenberg. By embracing the Protestant Reformation, establishing the University of Helmstedt, and introducing a series of administrative reforms, Julius was one of the most important Brunswick dukes in the early modern era. |-style="background:#ffc" |Ernest II||100px |align=center|31 December 1564<br>Celle<small>First son of William V and Dorothea of Denmark</small> |align=center|20 August 1592 – 2 March 1611|| Principality of Lüneburg ||''Unmarried'' |align=center|2 March 1611<br>Celle<br><small>aged 46</small>||Left no descendants. The land passed to his brother, Christian. |-style="background:#ceb" |Henry Julius||100px |align=center|15 October 1564<br>Hessen<br><small>Son of Julius and Hedwig of Brandenburg</small> |align=center|3 May 1589 – 30 July 1613|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel ||Dorothea of Saxony<br />26 September 1585<br />Wolfenbüttel<br />one child<br /><br />Elizabeth of Denmark<br />19 April 1590<br />Cölln<br />ten children |align=center|30 July 1613<br>Prague<br><small>aged 48</small>|| In 1596 occupied Grubenhagen. |-style="background:#dce" |Philip II || |align=center|2 May 1533<br><small>Sixth son of Philip I and Catherine of Outer Mansfeld</small> |align=center|14 May 1595 – 4 April 1596||Principality of Grubenhagen|| Clara of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel<br>1 July 1560<br>Wolfenbüttel<br />no children |align=center|4 April 1596<br><small>aged 62</small>|| As he left no male descendants, the land had no heir and was occupied by the Principality of Wolfenbüttel. |-style="background:#dce" |colspan="8" align="center"|''Grubenhagen annexed to Wolfenbüttel, and then definitely to Lüneburg'' |-style="background:#ffc" |Julius Ernest|| |align=center|11 March 1571<br>Lüchow-Dannenberg<br><small>Son of Henry (VI) and Ursula of Saxe-Lauenburg</small> |align=center|19 January 1598 – 26 October 1636|| Principality of Lüneburg<br /><small>(at Dannenberg)</small> ||Maria of East Frisia<br />1 September 1614<br />two children<br /><br />Sybille of Brunswick-Lüneburg<br />1616<br />two children |align=center|26 October 1636<br><small>aged 65</small>||Left no descendants. The short-lived Dannenberg principality reverted to Lüneburg. |-style="background:#ffc" |colspan="8" align="center"|''Dannenberg annexed to Lüneburg'' |-style="background:#ffc |William Augustus||100px |align=center|15 March 1564<br>Harburg<br><small>First son of Otto II and Hedwig of East Frisia</small> |align=center|26 October 1603 – 30 March 1642 |rowspan=3| Principality of Lüneburg<br /><small>(in Harburg)</small> ||''Unmarried'' |align=center|30 March 1642<br>Harburg<br><small>aged 78</small> |rowspan="3"| Sons of Otto II, ruled together in Harburg. After William Augustus' death, the lordship reunited with Lüneburg. |-style="background:#ffc |Christopher|| |align=center|21 August 1570<br>Harburg<br><small>Fourth son of Otto II and Hedwig of East Frisia</small> |align=center|26 October 1603 – 7 July 1606||Elisabeth of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel<br />28 October 1604<br />Harburg<br />no children |align=center|7 July 1606<br>Harburg<br><small>aged 35</small> |-style="background:#ffc |Otto III||100px |align=center|20 March 1572<br>Harburg<br><small>Fifth son of Otto II and Hedwig of East Frisia</small> |align=center|26 October 1603 – 4 August 1641||Hedwig of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel<br />14 April 1621<br />Wolfenbüttel<br />no children |align=center|4 August 1641<br>Harburg<br><small>aged 69</small> |-style="background:#ffc |align=center colspan=8|''Harburg re-merged in Lüneburg'' |-style="background:#ffc ||Christian ''the Elder''||100px |align=center|9 November 1566<br>Celle<br><small>Second son of William V and Dorothea of Denmark</small> |align=center|2 March 1611 – 8 November 1633|| Principality of Lüneburg<br /><small>(with Grubenhagen from 1617)</small>||''Unmarried'' |align=center|8 November 1633<br>Celle<br><small>aged 66</small>|| Absorbed Grubenhagen from Wolfenbüttel. As he left no descendants, the land passed to his brother, Augustus. Grubenhagen is definitively annexed to Lüneburg. |- style="background:#ceb |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Elizabeth of Denmark (1616–1622)''</small> |rowspan="3"|Children of Henry Julius. Frederick Ulirch inheriteed the major duchy, and Sophie Hedwig a seat at Spiegelberg. Because of his alcoholism, Frederick Ulrich was deposed by his own mother, with the help of her brother, Christian IV of Denmark. She took the regency in his name. During her regency, Elizabeth lost in 1617 the Principality of Grubenhagen and left the government business for Anton von Streithorst, who nearly ruined the state by minting coins from cheap metals and thus causing inflation. Because of the bad situation of the state, the king of Denmark had Frederick take control of the government again. Frederick didn't leave descendants, and his lands passed to collateral lines of the Lüneburg Welfs. |-style="background:#ceb |Frederick Ulrich ''the Lasting''<ref name="Fruit"/>||100px |align=center|5 April 1591<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>Son of Henry Julius and Elizabeth of Denmark</small> |align=center|1613 – 11 August 1634|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Anna Sophia of Brandenburg<br>4 September 1614<br>Wolfenbüttel<br>no children |align=center|11 August 1634<br>Braunschweig<br><small>aged 43</small> |-style="background:#ceb |Sophia Hedwig||100px |align=center|13 June 1592<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>Daughter of Henry Julius and Elizabeth of Denmark</small> |align=center|1613 – 13 January 1642|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel<br><small>(at Spiegelberg)</small>||Ernest Casimir I, Count of Nassau-Dietz<br />8 June 1607<br>Dillenburg<br>two children |align=center|13 January 1642<br>Arnhem<br><small>aged 49</small> |-style="background:#ffc |Augustus ''the Elder''||100px |align=center|18 November 1568<br>Celle<br><small>Third son of William V and Dorothea of Denmark</small> |align=center|8 November 1633 – 1 October 1636|| Principality of Lüneburg||''Unmarried'' |align=center|1 October 1636<br>Celle<br><small>aged 67</small>||No legitimate issue. The land passed to his brother, Frederick IV. |-style="background:#ceb |Augustus ''the Younger''<ref name="Fruit1">Known in the Fruitbearing Society as ''the Liberator''</ref>||100px |align=center|10 April 1579<br>Dannenberg |align=center|11 August 1634 – 17 September 1666|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Clara Maria of Pomerania-Barth<br>13 December 1607<br>Strelitz<br>two children<br><br>Dorothea of Anhalt-Zerbst<br>26 October 1623<br>Zerbst<br>five children<br><br>Elisabeth Sophie of Mecklenburg<br>1635<br>two children |align=center|17 September 1666<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>aged 87</small>||Younger son of Henry (VI). Inherited Wolfenbüttel from his cousin Frederick Ulrich, who had left no descendants. In 1643 he moved into the Residence at Wolfenbüttel, was the founder of a barock theatre and the Bibliotheca Augusta. |-style="background:#ffdaed |George ''the Catcher''<ref name="Fruit">Nickname given to him by the Fruitbearing Society.</ref>||100px |align=center|17 February 1582<br>Celle<br><small>Sixth son of William V and Dorothea of Denmark</small> |align=center|11 August 1634 – 2 April 1641|| Principality of Calenberg||Anne Eleonore of Hesse-Darmstadt<br />14 December 1617<br />Darmstadt<br />eight children |align=center|2 April 1641<br>Hildesheim<br><small>aged 59</small>||Inherited Calenberg from his cousin Frederick Ulrich, who had left no descendants. Abdicated to his son in 1641. |-style="background:#ffc |Frederick IV||100px |align=center|28 August 1574<br>Celle<br><small>Fourth son of William V and Dorothea of Denmark</small> |align=center|1 October 1636 – 10 December 1648|| Principality of Lüneburg ||''Unmarried'' |align=center|10 December 1648<br>Celle<br><small>aged 74</small>||As he left no descendants, the land passed to a nephew, Christian Louis, son of Frederick's brother George. |-style="background:#ffc |rowspan="2"|Christian Louis ''the Pure-Hearted''<ref name="Fruit"/> |rowspan="2"|100px |rowspan="2" align=center|25 February 1622<br>Herzberg Castle<br><small>First son of George and Anne Eleonore of Hesse-Darmstadt</small> |align=center style="background:#ffdaed|1641 – 10 December 1648 |style="background:#ffdaed| Principality of Calenberg |rowspan="2"|Sophia Dorothea of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg<br />9 October 1653<br />no children |rowspan="2" align=center|15 March 1665<br>Celle<br><small>aged 43</small> |rowspan="2"| In 1648 inherited the Principality of Lüneburg from his uncle Frederick IV, he gave Calenberg to his younger brother George William, and instead ruled the larger territory of Lüneburg. |-style="background:#ffc |align=center|10 December 1648 – 15 March 1665|| Principality of Lüneburg |-style="background:#ffc |rowspan="2"|George William |rowspan="2"|100px |rowspan="2" align=center|26 January 1624<br>Herzberg Castle<br><small>Second son of George and Anne Eleonore of Hesse-Darmstadt</small> |align=center style="background:#ffdaed|10 December 1648 – 15 March 1665 |style="background:#ffdaed| Principality of Calenberg |rowspan="2"|Éléonore Desmier d'Olbreuse<br />1676<br />one child |rowspan="2" align=center|28 August 1705<br>Wienhausen<br><small>aged 81</small> |rowspan="2"| When his brother, Christian Louis died childless in 1665, George William inherited Luneburg. He then gave Calenberg to his next brother, John Frederick. At his death without male descendants, the land passed to his son-in-law, the Elector of Hanover. Lüneburg is annexed to Hanover. |-style="background:#ffc |align=center|15 March 1665 – 28 August 1705|| Principality of Lüneburg |-style="background:#ffc |colspan="8" align="center"|''Lüneburg definitely annexed to Hanôver'' |-style="background:#ceb |Rudolf Augustus||100px |align=center|16 May 1627<br>Hitzacker<br><small>Second son of Augustus and Dorothea of Anhalt-Zerbst</small> |align=center|17 September 1666 – 26 January 1704 |rowspan="2"| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Christiane Elizabeth of Barby-Mühlingen<br />1650<br />three children<br /><br />Rosine Elisabeth Menthe<br />1681<br />''(morganatic)''<br />no children |align=center|26 January 1704<br>Kissenbrück<br><small>aged 76</small> |rowspan="3"| Sons of Augustus ''the Younger'', the eldest two ruled jointly from 1685 to 1702. The youngest, Ferdinand Albert, ruled from the town of Bevern. According to reports dating to 1677, Rudolf Augustus slashed a way through the Lechlum Forest, the ''Alten Weg'' ("Old Way"), later the "Barock Road" between the ''Lustschloss'' of ''Antoinettenruh'' via the little barock castle [later the ''Sternhaus''] to the Großes Weghaus at Stöckheim; in 1671 captured the town and fortress of Brunswick. After the death of Rudolf Augustus, Anthony Ulrich returned to the throne and ruled alone. A politician, art lover and poet, he founded a museum named after him in Brunswick; he had also Salzdahlum Castle built. |-style="background:#ceb |Anthony Ulrich ''the Victorious''||100px |align=center|4 October 1633<br><small>Third son of Augustus and Dorothea of Anhalt-Zerbst</small> |align=center|18 April 1685 – 27 March 1714||Elizabeth Juliana of Schleswig-Holstein-Sønderburg-Nordborg<br />17 August 1656<br />thirteen children |align=center|27 March 1714<br>Salzdahlum<br><small>aged 80</small> |-style="background:#ceb |Ferdinand Albert I ''the Wonderful''<ref name="Fruit"/>||100px |align=center|22 May 1636<br>Braunschweig<br><small>Son of Augustus and Elisabeth Sophie of Mecklenburg</small> |align=center|17 September 1666 – 23 April 1687|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel<br><small>(at Bevern)</small>||Christine of Hesse-Eschwege<br />25 November 1667<br />Eschwege<br />six children |align=center|23 April 1687<br>Bevern<br><small>aged 50</small> |-style="background:#ffdaed |John Frederick||100px |align=center|25 April 1625<br>Herzberg Castle<br><small>Third son of George and Anne Eleonore of Hesse-Darmstadt</small> |align=center|1665 – 18 December 1679|| Principality of Calenberg ||Benedicta Henrietta of the Palatinate<br>30 November 1668<br>Hanover<br />three children |align=center|18 December 1679<br>Augsburg<br><small>aged 54</small>|| As he left no male heirs, the land passed to his younger brother, Ernest Augustus. |-style="background:#ffdaed ||Ernest Augustus I||100px |align=center|20 November 1629<br>Herzberg Castle<br><small>Fourth son of George and Anne Eleonore of Hesse-Darmstadt</small> |align=center|18 December 1679 – 23 January 1698|| Principality of Calenberg<br><small>(until 1692)</small><br><br>Electorate of Hanover<br><small>(from 1692)</small>||Sophia of the Palatinate<br />30 September 1658<br />Heidelberg<br />seven children |align=center|23 January 1698<br>Herrenhausen Palace<br><small>aged 68</small> || In 1692, he was appointed Prince-elector by Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor, thus raising the House of Welf to electoral dignity. The old Principality of Calenberg thus adopted the new name of Electorate of Hanover. |-style="background:#ffdaed ||George I Louis||100px |align=center|28 May 1660<br>Hanover<br><small>Son of Ernest Augustus I and Sophia of the Palatinate</small> |align=center|23 January 1698 – 11 June 1727|| Electorate of Hanover ||Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Lüneburg<br />22 November 1682<br />Celle<br />''(annulled 1694)''<br />two children |align=center|11 June 1727<br>Osnabrück<br><small>aged 67</small>|| The electorship became effective under his rule. In 1705 reunited his father-in-law's princedom of Lüneburg to the Electorate. In 1714 was chosen for King of Great Britain, starting a personal union between Hanover and this new country. Lüneburg was definitely annexed to the Electorate. Thus the Wolfenbüttel was the remaining old land of Brunswick-Lüneburg that remained separate. |-style="background:#ceb |Augustus William||100px |align=center|8 March 1662<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>Son of Anton Ulrich and Elisabeth Juliana of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Norburg</small> |align=center|27 March 1714 – 23 March 1731|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||{{ill|Christine Sophie of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel|bg|Кристина София фон Брауншвайг-Волфенбютел}}<br />1681<br />no children<br /><br />{{ill|Sophie Amalie of Holstein-Gottorp|da|Sophie Amalie af Slesvig-Holsten-Gottorp}}<br>1695<br>no children<br><br>{{ill|Elisabeth Sophie Marie of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderborg-Norburg|de|Elisabeth Sophie Marie von Schleswig-Holstein-Norburg}}<br />1710<br />no children |align=center|23 March 1731<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>aged 69</small>|| Ruler of the only land that was still not in Hanoverian lands, to which it would never belong. |-style="background:#ffdaed |George II Augustus||100px |align=center|30 October/9 November 1683{{ref|dates|O.S./N.S.}}<br>Herrenhausen Palace<br><small>Son of George I Louis and Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Lüneburg</small> |align=center|11 June 1727 – 25 October 1760|| Electorate of Hanover ||Wilhelmina Charlotte Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach<br>22 August / 2 September 1705{{ref|dates|O.S./N.S.}}<br>Hanover<br />ten children |align=center|25 October 1760<br>Kensington Palace, London<br><small>aged 76</small>|| In personal union with Great Britain. |-style="background:#ceb |Louis Rudolph||100px |align=center|22 July 1671<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>Son of </small> |align=center|23 March 1731 – 1 March 1735|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Christine Louise of Oettingen-Oettingen<br>22 April 1690<br>Aurich<br>three children |align=center|1 March 1735<br>Braunschweig<br><small>aged 63</small>|| Left no male heirs, and his land passed to a collateral line. |-style="background:#ceb |Ferdinand Albert II||100px |align=center|29 May 1680<br>Bevern<br><small>Son of Ferdinand Albert I and Christina Wilhelmina of Hesse-Eschwege</small> |align=center|23 April 1687 – 2 September 1735<br><br>1 March – 2 September 1735|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel<br><small>(at Bevern until March 1735)</small><br><br>Principality of Wolfenbüttel<br><small>(at Wolfenbüttel proper from March 1735)</small>||Antoinette Amalie of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel<br>15 October 1712<br>Braunschweig<br>thirteen children |align=center|2 September 1735<br>Salzdahlum<br><small>aged 55</small>||Grandson of Augustus II, and from a collateral line of Brunswick-Bevern the family), succeeded in 1735. He was married to the daughter of the previous ruler. |-style="background:#ceb |Charles I||100px |align=center|1 August 1713<br>Braunschweig<br><small>Son of Ferdinand Albert II and Antoinette Amalie of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel</small> |align=center|2 September 1735 – 26 March 1780|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Philippine Charlotte of Prussia<br />2 June 1733<br />Berlin<br />thirteen children |align=center|26 March 1780<br>Braunschweig<br><small>aged 66</small>|| Founder of the Collegium Carolinum in Brunswick, the porcelain makers of Fürstenberg, the fire office; in 1753 the Residence was moved to Brunswick. |-style="background:#ffdaed |George III William Frederick||100px |align=center|4 June 1738<br>Norfolk House, London<br><small>Son of Frederick, Prince of Wales and Augusta of Saxe-Gotha</small> |align=center|25 October 1760 – 29 January 1820|| Electorate of Hanover<br /><small>(until 1814)</small><br />Kingdom of Hanover<br /><small>(from 1814)</small>||Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz<br />8 September 1761<br />London<br />fifteen children |align=center|29 January 1820<br>Windsor Castle, Berkshire<br><small>aged 81</small> |rowspan="2"| In personal union with Great Britain. |-style="background:#ffdaed |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Prince George of the United Kingdom (1811–1820)''</small> |-style="background:#ceb |Charles II William Ferdinand||100px |align=center|9 October 1735<br>Wolfenbüttel<br><small>Son of Charles I and Philippine Charlotte of Prussia</small> |align=center|26 March 1780 – 10 November 1806|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel||Augusta of Great Britain<br />16 January 1764<br />London<br />seven children |align=center|10 November 1806<br>Ottensen<br><small>aged 71</small>||Due to financial problems, was obliged to replace his father. He was the head of the Prussian Army; died in the Battle of Jena; because his son and heir died young, and two other sons were not eligible, rule passed to his youngest son. |-bgcolor= |colspan=8 align="center"|With the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, the title of ''Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg'' ceased to exist. However, its successor states continued. |-style="background:#ceb |Frederick William ''the Black Duke''||100px |align=center|9 October 1771<br>Braunschweig<br><small>Son of Charles II William Ferdinand and Augusta of Great Britain</small> |align=center|16 October 1806 – 8 July 1807<br><br>1813 – 16 June 1815|| Principality of Wolfenbüttel<br /><small>(until 1807)</small><br /><br />Duchy of Brunswick<br /><small>(from 1813)</small>||Marie Elisabeth Wilhelmine of Baden<br />1 November 1802<br />Karlsruhe<br />three children |align=center|16 June 1815<br>Quatre Bras<br><small>aged 43</small>||Duke of Oels/Silesia, the "Black Duke"; recruited a ''Freikorps'' (volunteer corps), the Black Brunswickers, at the outbreak of the War of the Fifth Coalition in Bohemia in 1809, and made his way via Brunswick to the North Sea and then on to Great Britain. |-bgcolor=#D8F8D8 |colspan=8 align="center"|On the Eve of Napoleonic era, in 1807 the Duchy was briefly annexed to the Kingdom of France, to appear again in 1813 as Duchy of Brunswick. |-style="background:#ceb |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Prince George of the United Kingdom (1815–1823)''</small> |rowspan="2"|On the eve of the July Revolution of 1830, Charles was in Paris, and did not manage to keep the duchy for himself; his brother William took over with the agreement of the people and his international neighbours. |-style="background:#ceb |Charles II||100px |align=center|30 October 1804<br>Braunschweig<br><small>First son of Frederick William and Marie of Baden</small> |align=center|16 June 1815 – 9 September 1830|| Duchy of Brunswick||''Unmarried'' |align=center|18 August 1873<br>Geneva<br><small>aged 68</small> |-style="background:#ffdaed |George IV Augustus Frederick||100px |align=center|12 August 1762<br>St James's Palace, London<br><small>First son of George III William Frederick and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz</small> |align=center|29 January 1820 – 26 June 1830|| Kingdom of Hanover||Caroline Amelia Elizabeth of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel<br />8 April 1795<br />London<br />one child |align=center|26 June 1830<br>Windsor Castle, Berkshire<br><small>aged 67</small>|| In personal union with the United Kingdom. Named regent of his father due to his illness, succeeding him after his death in 1820. Left no male descendants. The Kingdom passed to his brother. |-style="background:#ffdaed |William IV Henry||100px |align=center|21 August 1765<br>Buckingham House, London<br><small>Third son of George III William Frederick and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz</small> |align=center|9 September 1830 – 20 June 1837|| Kingdom of Hanover||Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen<br />13 July 1818<br />London<br />four children |align=center|20 June 1837<br>Windsor Castle, Berkshire<br><small>aged 71</small>|| In personal union with the United Kingdom. Usually numbered '''IV''' as King of Hanover and the United Kingdom. As he left only illegitimate descendants, the land passed to his brother. |-style="background:#ceb |William||100px |align=center|25 April 1806<br>Braunschweig<br><small>Second son of Frederick William and Marie of Baden</small> |align=center|9 September 1830 – 18 October 1884|| Duchy of Brunswick||''Unmarried'' |align=center|18 October 1884<br>Sybillenort<br><small>aged 78</small>|| |-style="background:#ffdaed |Victoria||100px |align=center|24 May 1819<br>Kensington Palace, London<br><small>Daughter of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn and Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld</small> |align=center|20 June 1837 – 22 January 1901|| United Kingdom||Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha<br/>10 February 1840<br>St James's Palace<br/>nine children |align=center|22 January 1901<br>Osborne House, Isle of Wight<br><small>aged 81</small> |rowspan="2"| End of personal union with the United Kingdom, as in this country the successor in 1837 was Queen Victoria, niece of William Henry. In Hanover the Salic Law was still active. |-style="background:#ffdaed |Ernest Augustus||100px |align=center|5 June 1771<br>Buckingham House, London<br><small>Fifth son of George III William Frederick and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz</small> |align=center|20 June 1837 – 18 November 1851|| Kingdom of Hanover||Frederica of Mecklenburg-Strelitz<br />29 May 1815<br />Neustrelitz<br />three children |align=center|18 November 1851<br>Hanover<br><small>aged 80</small> |-style="background:#ffdaed |George V Frederick||100px |align=center|27 May 1819<br>Berlin<br><small>Son of Ernest Augustus and Frederica of Mecklenburg-Strelitz</small> |align=center|18 November 1851 – 20 September 1866|| Kingdom of Hanover||Marie of Saxe-Altenburg<br>18 February 1843<br>Hanover<br>three children |align=center|12 June 1878<br>Paris<br><small>aged 59</small> ||His reign was ended by the Austro-Prussian War, which led to the annexation of his kingdom to Prussia. |-style="background:#ffdaed |colspan="8" align="center"| ''Hanover annexed to the Kingdom of Prussia'' |-style="background:#ceb |align="center"colspan="7"| <small>''Regency of Prince Albert of Prussia (1885–1906)<br>Regency of Duke John Albert of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1906–1913)''</small> |rowspan="2"|His regency came to an end on 1 November 1913 when Ernest Augustus, Crown Prince of Hanover's son, was permitted to ascend to Duchy following his marriage to Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia. In 1918, with the abolition of the monarchy, all nobles titles were equally abolished. |-style="background:#ceb |Ernest Augustus||100px |align="center"|17 November 1887<br>Penzing<br><small>Son of Ernest Augustus, Crown Prince of Hanover and Thyra of Denmark</small> |align="center"|1 November 1913 – 8 November 1918|| Brunswick||Victoria Louise of Prussia<br />24 May 1913<br />Berlin<br />five children |align="center"|30 January 1953<br>Marienburg Castle (Hanover)<br><small>aged 65</small> |}

{{collapse bottom}}

== Territorial Growth == {{gallery |title=Growth of Brunswick-Luneburg into covering the Stem Duchy of (Lower) Saxony |width=300 |height=300 |noborder=yes |File:Saxony locator map (1000).svg|Stammesherzogtuemer of Saxony c. 1000 |File:The Saxon duchies circa 1235.jpg|Saxon Duchies c. 1235 |Grafschaften Holstein Ratzeburg Schwerin Dannenberg Luechow 1250.svg|Lower Saxony, 1250 |1400 HRR Braunschweig-Lüneburg.png|Brunswick-Luneburg, 1400 |Niedersachsen um 1400.png|Lower Saxony, 1400 |File:HRR 1400, Ausschnitt Grafschaft Hohnstein.jpg|Principality of Göttingen |File:Kft B-L 1789.png|Map of the Electorate of Brunswick-Lüneburg 1789, Ausschnitt |File:Territorial Expansion of the Electorate.png|Territorial Expansion of Brunswick-Luneburg into the Electorate covering most of the Stem duchy of Saxony |File:KrkHannover.png|Kingdom of Hanover, 1815–1866 comprising most of old Stem duchy of Saxony |File:Herzogtum Braunschweig 1914.png|Duchy of Brunswick, 1914 |File:Lower-Saxony-map.png|Map of the State of Lower Saxony of which the K. of Hannover comprises almost 85%. }}

==Family trees==

===Welf family tree 12th century=== 450px

===Family Tree of the House of Welf to Otto the Child=== {{Genealogy of the Younger House of Welf to Otto the Child}}

===Family Tree of the House of Welf from Otto the Child to the 17th Century=== {{Genealogy Stammbaum of the Younger House of Welf from Otto the Child to the Electors of Hanover}}

===Welf family tree 16th century to present===

====Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel==== {{Genealogy Stammbaum of the Younger House of Welf Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel 16th to 19th Century}}

====House of Hanover==== Some direct ancestors (fathers and sons) of the present generation are:

*Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover (1771–1851), Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale from 1799, king from 1837 *George V of Hanover (1819–1878) *Ernest Augustus, Crown Prince of Hanover (1845–1923) *Ernest Augustus, Duke of Brunswick (1887–1953) *Ernest Augustus, Prince of Hanover (1914–1987) *Ernest Augustus, Prince of Hanover (born 1954)

{{House of Hanover family tree}}

===Complete male-line family tree=== {{hidden begin|toggle=right|title=List of male-line members of the House of Welf|titlestyle=background:lightgrey;}} Male, male-line, legitimate, non-morganatic members of the house who either lived to adulthood, or who held a title as a child, are included. Heads of the house are in bold. {{Tree list}} *'''Adalberto the Margrave, d. c. 951''' **'''Oberto I, c. 910–975''' ***'''Adalbert II of Milan''' ***'''Oberto II, Margrave of Milan, c. 940–1014''' ****'''Hugh, Margrave of Milan''' ****'''Albert Azzo I, Margrave of Milan, 970–1029''' *****'''Albert Azzo II, Margrave of Milan, 997–1097''' ******'''Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, c. 1035–1101''' *******'''Welf II, Duke of Bavaria, 1072–1120''' *******'''Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria, 1075–1126''' ********Conrad of Bavaria, 1105–1126 ********'''Henry the Proud, 1108–1139''' *********'''Henry the Lion, 1130–1195''' **********'''Henry V, Count Palatine of the Rhine, 1173–1227''' ***********Henry VI, Count Palatine of the Rhine, 1196–1214 **********Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor, 1175–1218 **********William of Winchester, Lord of Lunenburg, 1184–1213 ***********'''Otto I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1204–1252''' ************'''Albert I, Duke of Brunswick, 1236–1279''' *************'''Henry I, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1267–1322''' **************Otto, 1283–1309 **************Albert, Teutonic Knight, 1284–1341 **************'''Henry II, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1296–1351''' ***************'''Otto, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1320–1398''' ***************John, canon of Halberstadt, 1321–1346 ***************Louis, canon of Cammin, 1323–1373 ***************Philip of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, Constable of Jerusalem, 1332–1370 ****************John of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, Admiral of Cyprus, d. 1414 ***************Riddag, 1334–1367 ***************Balthazar, Despot of Romania, 1336–1384 ***************Thomas, 1338–1384 ***************Melchior, Bishop of Osnabrück and Schwerin, 1341–1381 **************Frederick, c. 1291–1323 **************Conrad, c. 1294–1320 **************Ernest I, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1297–1361 ***************Albert I, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1339–1383 ****************'''Eric I, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1383–1427''' *****************'''Henry III, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1416–1464''' ******************'''Henry IV, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1460–1526''' *****************Ernest II, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1418–1466 *****************Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1419–1485 ******************'''Philip I, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1476–1551''' *******************'''Ernest III, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1518–1567''' *******************Albert, 1521–1546 *******************John, 1526–1557 *******************'''Wolfgang, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1531–1595''' *******************'''Philip II, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1533–1596''' ******************Eric of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, Bishop of Paderborn and Osnabrück, 1478–1532 ******************Ernest, d. 1486 ***************Ernest II, abbot of Corvey, c. 1346–1401 ***************Frederick I, Duke of Brunswick-Osterode, 1350–1421 ****************Otto II, Duke of Brunswick-Osterode, 1396–1452 **************William, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, 1298–1360 **************John I, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, c. 1300–1367 *************Albert II "the Fat", Duke of Brunswick, 1268–1318 **************Otto "the Mild", Duke of Brunswick, 1292–1344 **************Lothar, Teutonic Knight **************Albert II of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Bishop of Halberstadt, 1294–1358 **************Henry III of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Bishop of Hildesheim, 1296–1363 **************Magnus I "the Pious", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1304–1369 ***************Magnus II "with the Necklace", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1324–1373 ****************Frederick I, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1357–1400 ****************Bernard I, Duke of Brunswick, 1361–1434 *****************Otto IV "the Lame", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, d. 1446 *****************Frederick II "the Pious", Duke of Brunswick, 1418–1478 ******************Bernard II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1437–1464 ******************Otto V "the Victorious", Duke of Brunswick, 1439–1471 *******************Henry I "the Middle", Duke of Brunswick, 1468–1532 ********************Otto I, Duke of Brunswick-Harburg, 1495–1549 *********************'''Otto II, Duke of Brunswick-Harburg, 1528–1603''' **********************Duke Otto Henry of Brunswick-Harburg, 1555–1591 **********************John Frederick, 1557-1619 **********************'''William Augustus, Duke of Brunswick-Harburg, 1564–1642''' **********************Enno, 1565–1600 **********************Christopher, Duke of Brunswick-Harburg, 1570–1606 **********************Otto III, Duke of Brunswick-Harburg, 1572–1641 **********************John, 1573–1625 **********************Frederick, 1578–1605 ********************Ernest I "the Confessor", Duke of Brunswick, 1497–1546 *********************Francis Otto, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1530–1559 *********************Frederick, 1532–1553 *********************Henry, Duke of Brunswick-Dannenberg, 1533–1598 **********************Julius Ernest, Duke of Brunswick-Dannenberg, 1571–1636 **********************Francis, Provost of Strasbourg, 1572–1601 **********************'''Augustus II "the Younger", Duke of Brunswick, 1579–1666''' ***********************'''Rudolph Augustus, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1627–1704''' ***********************'''Anthony Ulrich, Duke of Brunswick, 1633–1714''' ************************Augustus Frederick, 1657–1676 ************************'''Augustus William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1662–1731''' ************************'''Louis Rudolph, Duke of Brunswick, 1671–1735''' ***********************Ferdinand Albert I, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, 1636–1687 ************************Augustus Ferdinand, 1677–1704 ************************Ferdinand Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1680–1735 *************************'''Charles I, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1713–1780''' **************************'''Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick, 1735–1806''' ***************************Charles George Augustus, Hereditary Prince of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1766–1806 ***************************George William Christian, 1769–1811 ***************************Augustus, 1770–1822 ***************************'''Frederick William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1771–1815''' ****************************'''Charles II, Duke of Brunswick, 1804–1873''' ****************************'''William, Duke of Brunswick, 1806–1884''' **************************Frederick Augustus, Prince of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Oels, 1740–1805 **************************Albert Henry, 1742–1761 **************************William Adolf, 1745–1770 **************************Leopold of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1752–1785 *************************Duke Anthony Ulrich of Brunswick, 1714–1774 **************************Ivan VI of Russia, 1740–1764 **************************Peter Antonovich of Brunswick, 1745–1798 **************************Alexei Antonovich of Brunswick, 1746–1787 *************************Duke Louis Ernest of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1718–1788 *************************Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1721–1792 *************************Albert of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1725–1745 *************************Frederick Francis of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1732–1758 ************************Ferdinand Christian, 1682–1706 ************************Ernest Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, 1682–1746 *************************Augustus William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, 1715–1781 *************************George Louis, 1721–1747 *************************George Frederick, 1723–1766 *************************Frederick Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, 1729–1809 ************************Henry Ferdinand, 1684–1706 *********************William the Younger, Duke of Brunswick, 1535–1592 **********************Ernest II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1564–1611 **********************Christian, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1566–1633 **********************Augustus the Elder, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1568–1636 **********************Frederick IV, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1574–1648 **********************Magnus of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1577–1632 **********************George, Duke of Brunswick, 1582–1641 ***********************Christian Louis, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1622–1665 ***********************George William, Duke of Brunswick, 1624–1705 ***********************John Frederick, Duke of Brunswick, 1625–1679 ***********************Ernest Augustus, Elector of Hanover, 1629–1698 ************************George I of Great Britain, 1660–1727 *************************George II of Great Britain, 1683–1760 **************************Frederick, Prince of Wales, 1707–1751 ***************************George III, 1738–1820 ****************************George IV, 1762–1830 ****************************Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany, 1763–1827 ****************************William IV, 1765–1837 ****************************Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, 1767–1820 ****************************Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover, 1771–1851 *****************************George V of Hanover, 1819–1878 ******************************'''Ernest Augustus, Crown Prince of Hanover, 1845–1923''' *******************************George William, Hereditary Prince of Hanover, 1880–1912 *******************************'''Ernest Augustus, Duke of Brunswick, 1887–1953''' ********************************'''Prince Ernest Augustus of Hanover, 1914–1987''' *********************************'''Ernest Augustus of Hanover, b. 1954''' **********************************Ernest Augustus of Hanover, b. 1983 ***********************************Welf Augustus von Hannover, b. 2019 **********************************Prince Christian of Hanover, b. 1985 ***********************************3 children *********************************Prince Louis Rudolph of Hanover, 1955–1988 **********************************Prince Otto Henry of Hanover, b. 1988 *********************************Prince Henry of Hanover, b. 1961 **********************************Oscar Nick, b. 1996 **********************************Albert, b. 1999 **********************************Julius, b. 2006 ********************************Prince George William of Hanover, 1915–2006 *********************************Prince Welf, 1947–1981, issue? *********************************Prince George, b. 1949, issue? ********************************Prince Christian, 1919–1981 ********************************Prince Guelph, 1923–1997 ****************************Prince Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex, 1773–1843 ****************************Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, 1774–1850 *****************************Prince George, Duke of Cambridge, 1819–1904 ***************************Prince Edward, Duke of York and Albany, 1739–1767 ***************************Prince William Henry, Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh, 1743–1805 ****************************Prince William Frederick, Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh, 1776–1834 ***************************Prince Henry, Duke of Cumberland and Strathearn, 1745–1790 **************************Prince William, Duke of Cumberland, 1721–1765 ************************Frederick Augustus, 1661–1691 ************************Maximilian William of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1666–1726 ************************Charles Philip, 1669–1690 ************************Christian Henry, 1671–1703 ************************Ernest Augustus, Duke of York and Albany, 1674–1728 **********************John of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1583–1628 ********************Francis, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1508–1549 ******************Godfrey, 1441–1465 ****************Otto, Archbishop of Bremen, 1364–1406 ****************Henry the Mild, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, d. 1416 *****************William the Victorious, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1392–1482 ******************Frederick III "the Turbulent", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1424–1495 ******************William IV "the Younger", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1425–1503 *******************Henry IV "the Elder", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1463–1514 ********************Christopher of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Archbishop of Bremen, 1487–1558 ********************Henry V "the Younger", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1489–1568 *********************Charles Victor, 1525–1553 *********************Philip, 1527–1553 *********************Julius, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1528–1589 **********************Henry Julius, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1564–1613 ***********************Frederick Ulrich, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1591–1634 ***********************Christian the Younger of Brunswick, 1599–1626 **********************Philip Sigismund of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, 1568–1623 **********************Joachim Charles, Provost of Strasbourg, 1573–1615 **********************Julius Augustus, Abbot of Michaelstein, 1578–1617 ********************Francis of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Bishop of Minden, 1492–1529 ********************George of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Archbishop of Bremen, 1494–1566 ********************Eric of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Teutonic Knight, 1500–1553 ********************William of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Teutonic Knight, d. 1557 *******************Eric I "the Elder", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1470–1540 ********************Eric II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1528–1584 *****************Henry the Peaceful, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1411–1473 ***************Louis, d. 1367 ***************Albert II, Prince-Archbishop of Bremen, d. 1395 ***************Henry, provost of Halberstadt ***************Ernest **************Ernest I, Duke of Brunswick-Göttingen, 1305–1367 ***************Otto I "the Evil", Duke of Brunswick-Göttingen, 1340–1394 ****************Otto II "the One-Eyed", Duke of Brunswick-Göttingen, 1380–1463 ***************other son, clergyman *************William I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1270–1292 *************Otto, d. c. 1346 *************Lothar of Brunswick, 1275–1335 *************Conrad, d. c. 1303 ************John, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1242–1277 *************Otto II "the Strict", Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1266–1330 **************John, d. 1324 **************Otto III, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1296–1352 **************Louis, Bishop of Minden, d. 1346 **************William II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1300–1369 ************Otto, Bishop of Hildesheim, d. 1279 ************Conrad of Brunswick and Lunenburg, Prince-Bishop of Verden, d. 1300 ********Welf VI, 1115–1191 *********Welf VII, 1135–1167 ********Adalbert, Abbot of Corvey ******Fulco I, Margrave of Milan, c. 1070–1134 *******Azzo IV d'Este (d. before 1145) *******Bonifacio I d'Este (d. 1163) *******Fulco II d'Este (d. before 1172) *******Alberto (d. after 1184) *******Obizzo I d'Este (d. 1193) ********Azzo V of Este, d. 1190 *********Azzo VI d'Este, 1170–1212 **********Aldobrandino I d'Este, 1190–1215 ***********Contardo of Este, 1216–1249 **********Azzo VII d'Este, 1205–1264 ***********Rinaldo d'Este, 1221–1251 ************Obizzo II d'Este, 1247–1293, legitimised 1252 *************Azzo VIII d'Este, d. 1308 *************Hildebrand II of Este, Marquis of Ferrara, d. 1326 **************Obert III of Este, Marquis of Ferrara, 1294–1352 ***************Hildebrand III of Este, Marquis of Ferrara, 1335–1361 ***************Nicholas II of Este, Marquis of Ferrara, 1338–1388 ***************Albert V of Este, Marquis of Ferrara, 1347–1393 ****************Nicholas III of Este, Marquis of Ferrara, 1383–1441, legitimised *****************Hercules I of Este, Duke of Ferrara, 1431–1505 ******************Alphonse I of Este, Duke of Ferrara, 1476–1534 *******************Hercules II of Este, Duke of Ferrara, 1508–1559 ********************Alphonse II of Este, Duke of Ferrara, 1533–1597 ********************Louis of Este, Bishop of Ferrara, 1538–1586 *******************Hippolyte II of Este, Archbishop of Milan, 1509–1572 *******************Francis of Este, Marquis of Massalombarda, 1516–1578 *******************Alphonse of Este, Marquis of Montecchio, 1527–1597, legitimised 1532 ********************Alphonse of Este, 1560–1578 ********************Caesar of Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, 1562–1628 *********************Alphonse III of Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, 1591–1644 **********************Francis I of Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, 1610–1658 ***********************Alphonse IV of Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, 1634–1662 ************************Francis II of Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, 1660–1694 ***********************Almeric d'Este, 1641–1660 ***********************Reynold of Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, 1655–1737 ************************Francis III of Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, 1698–1780 *************************Hercules III of Este, Duke of Modena and Reggio, 1727–1803 ************************John Frederick of Este, 1700–1727 **********************Obizzo d'Este, Bishop of Modena, 1611–1644 **********************Caesar d'Este, 1614–1677 **********************Charles Alexander d'Este, 1616–1679 **********************Reynold d'Este, cardinal, 1618–1672 **********************Philibert d'Este, 1623–1645 *********************Louis of Este, Lord of Montecchio and Scandiano, 1594–1664 *********************Hippolyte d'Este, 1599–1647 *********************Nicholas d'Este, 1601–1640 *********************Borso d'Este, 1605–1657 **********************Louis d'Este, Lord of Scandiano, 1648–1698 **********************Foresto Francis d'Este, Lord of Montecchio, 1652–1725 **********************Caesar Ignatius d'Este, Lord of Montecchio, 1653–1713 *********************Foresto d'Este, 1606–1639 ********************Alexander of Este, 1568–1624, cardinal ******************Ferdinand of Este, 1477–1540 ******************Hippolyte of Este, Archbishop of Esztergom, 1479–1520 ******************Sigismund of Este, 1480–1524 *****************Sigismund of Este, 1433–1507 **************Rinaldo **************Niccolò *************Francesco ******Hugh V, Count of Maine, c. 1060–1131 ****Guido ****Otbert III, Margrave of East Liguria *Ambrose (d. 988), bishop of Aléria in Corsica {{Tree list/end}} {{hidden end}}

== Summary Armorial == {{gallery |title=Previous versions |width=160 |height=170 |noborder=yes |File:First coat of arms of Old Saxony from Widukind.png|Black Saxon Steed, according to legend Duke Widukind's ensign for Old Saxony (700–785) |File:Coat of arms of Lower Saxony.svg|Widukind's White Steed as ensign of the Duchy of Saxony, claimed by the House of Welf from 1361, adopted by the Electorate of Hanover |File:Arms of Welf ancient.png|Arms of Henry the Lion (attributed?) |File:Wappen der Welfen aus Steingaden.jpg|Coat of Arms of the Guelphs; Bavaria c. 1200 (margins probably late 13th century); sandstone; from Steingaden Abbey |File:Coat of arms of the House of Welf-Brunswick (Braunschweig).svg|Coat of arms of the House of Welf-Brunswick (Braunschweig), probably based on their English cousin's arms. |File:COA family de Fürsten von Lüneburg.svg|COA of the principality of Lüneburg, possibly based on their in-laws the Danish Royal House and Henry the Lion. |File:Coat of Arms of Brunswick-Lüneburg.svg|Coat of Arms of Brunswick-Lüneburg |File:Braunschweig-1367.PNG|Brunswick-Luneburg 1250, 1367 |File:Braunschweig-1482.PNG|Brunswick-Luneburg 1482, coats of arms of the duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1482–1582);<ref> 1: duchy of Brunswick; 2: duchy of Lüneburg; 3: county of Eberstein; 4: lordship of Homburg</ref> |File:Braunschweig-1582.PNG|coats of arms of the duchy of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1582–1596); Brunswick-Lüneburg (1582–1624); Brunswick-Harburg (1582–1624); <ref>1: duchy of Brunswick; 2: duchy of Lüneburg; 3: lordship of Homburg; 4: county of Eberstein; 5: county of Hoya; 6a/d: lordship of Neu-Bruchhausen; 6b/c: lordship of Alt-Bruchhausen</ref> |Braunschweig-1585.PNG|coats of arms of the duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1585); <ref>1: duchy of Brunswick; 2: duchy of Lüneburg; 3: lordship of Homburg; 4: county of Eberstein; 5: county of Hoya (1); 6: county of Diepholz (1); 7: county of Hoya (2)[a,d: lordship of Alt-Bruchhausen; b,c: lordship of Neu-Bruchhausen]; 8: county of Diepholz(2)</ref> |Braunschweig-1596.PNG|coats of arms of the duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1596–1599); <ref>1: duchy of Brunswick; 2: duchy of Lüneburg; 3: lordship of Homburg; 4: county of Eberstein; 5: county of Hoya; 6: county of Lauterberg(1); 7: lordship of Neu-Bruchhausen; 8: county of Hohenstein; 9: lordship of Alt-Bruchhausen; 10: county of Lauterberg(2); 11: lordship of Klettenberg</ref> |Braunschweig-1599.PNG|coats of arms of the duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1599–1613); <ref>1: duchy of Lüneburg; 2: duchy of Brunswick; 3: lordship of Homburg; 4: county of Eberstein; 5: reservation? ; 6: county of Lauterburg(1); 7: lordship of Neu-Bruchhausen; 8: county of Hoya; 9: county of Hohenstein; 10: lordship of Alt-Bruchhausen; 12: count of Lauterberg(2); 13: county of Regenstein; 14: county of Klettenberg; 15: county of Blankenburg. |Braunschweig-1613.PNG| coats of arms of the duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1613–1634); 1: duchy of Lüneburg; 2: duchy of Brunswick; 3: lordship of Homburg; 4: county of Everstein; 5: county of Hoya; 6: county of Lauterberg (1); 7: lordship of Neu-Bruchhausen; 8: county of Klettenberg; 9: county of Hohenstein; 10: lordship of Alt-Bruchhausen; 12: county of Lauterberg(2); 13: county of Regenstein; 14: county of Blankenburg.</ref> |Braunschweig-1634.PNG|coats of arms of the duchy of Brunswick (-Wolfenbüttel) (1634–1918); coats of arms of the electorate of Brunswick-Lüneburg;<ref> 1: duchy of Lüneburg; 2: duchy of Brunswick; 3: county of Eberstein; 4: lordship of Homburg; 5: county of Diepholz (1); 6: county of Lauterberg(1); 7a/d: county of Hoya; 7bc1: lordship of Alt-Bruchhausen; 7b/c2: lordship of Neu-Bruchhausen; 8: county of Diepholz(2); 9a: county of Hohenstein; 9b: county of Lauterberg(2); 10: county of Regenstein; 11; county of Klettenberg; 12: county of Blankenburg.</ref> |File:Braunschweig-Lüneburg.PNG| coats of arms of the electorate of Brunswick-Lüneburg; <ref>1: duchy of Lüneburg; 2: duchy of Brunswick; 3: county of Eberstein; 4: lordship of Homburg; 6: county of Lauterberg(1); 7a: county of Hoya; 7b: lordship of Alt-Bruchhausen; 7b2: lordship of Neu-Bruchhausen; 8: county of Diepholz(1); 9a: county of Hohenstein; 9b: county of Lauterberg(2); 10: county of Klettenberg; 11: county of Diepholz(2); 12a: county of Regenstein; 12b: county of Bankenburg; heart: duchy of Saxonia (Westphalia)</ref> |File:Coat of Arms of George I Louis, Elector of Hanover (1698-1708).svg|Coat of Arms of Ernest Augustus (1692–1698) & George I Louis, Electors-designate of Hanover (1698–1708) until approved by the Imperial Diet in 1708, hence the blank red electorial shield.<ref>Ecartelé, I: de gueules, à deux léopards d'or (Welf) ; II: de gueules, au cheval cabré d'argent, harnaché d'or (Saxe ancien our Westphalie) III: d'or, semé de cœurs de gueules, au lion d'azur (Lunebourg), IV: d'azure au lion couronné d'argent (Comté d'Eberstein), V: le cinquiéme vuide pour fair place à l'écu sur le tout, VI: de gueules au lion d'or, à la borure componnée d'argent et d'azure (Comté de Hombourg), VII: d'azure au lion d'argent; et au dessours pour VIII'eme quartier, d'argent à l'aigle éployé d'azure (Comté de Deipholt), IX: vuide pour fair place à l'écu sur le tout, X:de gueules au lion d'or; et au dessous, XI: d'or à trois fasces de gueules (Comté de Latuerberg), XII: en revenant au flanc dextre, d'argent au cerf de sable (Comté de Clettemberg), XIII: sous l'écu sur le tout, d'argent, à deux pattes d'ours adoffées, mises en pal; coupé, fascé de gueules et d'argent; recoupé, gironné d'argent et d'azur (Comtés de Hoga et de Bruchussen), XIV: échiqueté d'argent et de gules (Comté de Honstein), la pointe de l'écu, d'argent à une perche de boid de cerf de gueules, chevillée de quatre cors, posée en fasce, parti d'argent à la perche de boid de cerf de sable, chevillée de quatre cors, posée en fasce (Comtés de Reinstein et de Blanenbourg).</ref> |File:Coat of Arms of George I Louis, Elector of Hanover (1708-1714).svg|Coat of Arms of George I Louis, Elector of Hanover (1708–1714) (same as his father's but with the electorial shield now filled) |File:Coat of arms of the HRE Arch-Treasurer.svg|Coat of arms of the HRE Arch-Treasurer |File:Royal Hanover Inescutcheon.svg|Royal Hanover Inescutcheon in Great Britain and the United Kingdom |File:Royal Arms of the Kingdom of Hanover.svg|Royal Arms of the Kingdom of Hanover |File:Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Hanover (1814-1866).svg|Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Hanover (1814–1866) |File:Shield of the Duchy of Brunswick.svg|Duchy of Brunswick<ref>1=Shield of the Duchy of Brunswick. Quarterly of 12: *1: 20px Duchy of Lüneburg (''Or semée of hearts gules, a lion rampant azure armed and langued of the second''. The coat of arms of Lüneburg consisted of a blue lion on a gold field, which was sprinkled with red hearts. It was derived from the coat of arms of Denmark: the mother of Otto I, 1st Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg was Princess Helena of Denmark. (Source: https://www.wikipe.wiki/wiki/nl/Wapens_van_Brunswijk_en_Lueneburg) *2: 20px Duchy of Brunswick/Braunschweig (''Gules, two lions passant guardant in pale or''); In 1235 Otto I was elevated to Duke of Brunswick and Lüneburg by the Emperor. He was the only son of w:William of Winchester, Lord of Lunenburg, born in Winchester, England, the fifth and youngest son of the deposed Duke Henry the Lion of Saxony and Bavaria by his wife Matilda, the eldest daughter of King Henry II of England. Otto's royal lineage was accentuated by the arms designed for Brunswick and Lüneburg. The coat of arms of Brunswick consisted of two golden leopards in a red field and was derived from the coat of arms of England because of the marriage of Henry the Lion to Mathilde of England. (Source: https://www.wikipe.wiki/wiki/nl/Wapens_van_Brunswijk_en_Lueneburg) *3: 20px County of Eberstein/Everstein (''Azure, a lion rampant argent armed and langued gules crowned or''); w:de:Everstein (Adelsgeschlecht); In 1425 w:Otto IV, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (d.1446) (son of w:Bernard I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg) married the heiress Countess Elizabeth of Eberstein (c.1415-1468), which gave him the possession of the County of Eberstein in 1408. The dukes included the arms of Eberstein and Homburg in their coat of arms in 1482. Their descendants, the later Electors of Hanover and the Dukes of Brunswick, continued to do so. (Source: https://www.wikipe.wiki/wiki/nl/Wapens_van_Brunswijk_en_Lueneburg) *4: 20px lordship of Homburg; in 1409 w:Bernard I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1358/64-1434) ("Middle House of Lüneburg") bought the lordship of Homburg, whose lords had died out in 1408. (Source: https://www.wikipe.wiki/wiki/nl/Wapens_van_Brunswijk_en_Lueneburg) *5: 20px county of Diepholz. In 1585 the lords of Diepholz died out with Frederick II. The area later named a county fell to Duke William of Brunswick-Celle, (w:William the Younger, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (d.1592)) the founder of the newer branch of Lüneburg. His brother Hendrik van Brunswijk-Dannenberg (w:Henry, Duke of Brunswick-Dannenberg (1533-1598))) was the founder of the newer branch Brunswijk. They both included Diepholz's coat of arms in their coat of arms. *6: 20px w:de:Grafschaft Lohra; county of Lohra; county of Lauterberg; *7:20px **7a: 20px w:County of Hoya; w:de:Grafschaft Hoya; In 1582 the house of Hoya died out with Count Otto VIII. Half of the county of Hoya belonged to Duke Wilhelm of Brunswick-Celle (?w:William the Younger, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1535-1592)) from the middle branch of Lüneburg, the other half to Duke Julius of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel from the middle branch of Brunswick. The coats of arms of the County of Hoya and the associated lordships of Alt-Bruchhausen and Neu-Bruchhauden were added to the arms of both branches. Brunswijk-Wolfenbüttel carried this coat of arms until 1596 and Brunswijk-Harburg until 1624. (Source: https://www.wikipe.wiki/wiki/nl/Wapens_van_Brunswijk_en_Lueneburg) **7b1: 20px lordship of Neu-Bruchhausen; Wappen der Grafschaft Neubruchhausen **7b2: 20px; lordship of Alt-Bruchhausen; *8: 20px county of Diepholz *9: 20px w:de:Hohnstein (Adelsgeschlecht); county of Hohnstein; In 1593, the Klettenberg branch of the Counts of Hohnstein died out. The Counts of Stolberg inherited the county, but Brunswijk also claimed the county as liege lord. In 1596, the Dukes of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel took up the arms in their coat of arms. Eventually the county was divided between Brunswijk and Stolberg. (Source: https://www.wikipe.wiki/wiki/nl/Wapens_van_Brunswijk_en_Lueneburg) *10: 20px w:County of Regenstein; In 1162 the Comes de Regenstein (Count of Regenstein), Conrad, was mentioned for the first time. He was the son of Count Poppo I of Blankenburg, a vassal of the Duke of Saxony. After Poppo's death around 1161, his sons divided their heritage: Conrad took his residence at Regenstein Castle, 4 km (2.5 mi) north of Blankenburg, and became the ancestor of the noble House of Regenstein, while his brother Siegfried I retained Blankenburg Castle. In the 15th century, the Regenstein counts moved to nearby Blankenburg Castle. Regenstein fell into disrepair and became a ruin. The last male descendant of the noble family, Count John Ernest of Regenstein, died in 1599. *11: 20px w:de:Grafschaft Klettenberg; county of Klettenberg; in 1593, the Klettenberg branch of the Counts of Hohnstein died out. *12: 20px w:County of Blankenburg. In 1599 the counts of Blankenburg died out with Count Johan Ernst. The county came to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel as a vacant fief. The arms of the counts of Blankenburg were also added. After the death of Duke Hendrik Julius in 1613, the ranking was changed by his successor Frederik Ulrich. With this duke the middle house Brunswijk (in Wolfenbüttel) died out in 1634.(Source: https://www.wikipe.wiki/wiki/nl/Wapens_van_Brunswijk_en_Lueneburg)

More information see w:nl:Wapens van Brunswijk en Lüneburg[https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wapens_van_Brunswijk_en_L%C3%BCneburg]</ref> }}

==See also== *Guelph Treasure *Family tree of German monarchs

==References== {{Reflist}}

==External links== {{Commons category-inline}} {{EB1911 poster|Welf}} * [http://www.welfen.de/ Die Welfen. Official site] {{in lang|de}} *[http://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/HGBraunschweig.htm Succession laws in the House of Welf]

{{Royal houses of Germany}}

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