Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg II Magnus

Male 1324 - 1373  (49 years)


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  • Name II Magnus 
    Title Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg 
    Born 1324 
    Gender Male 
    Name Magnus with the Necklace 
    Reference Number 37058 
    Died 1373 
    Person ID I37058  Thompson-Milligan
    Last Modified 12 Apr 2018 

    Father Magnus,   d. 1369 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother Sophia,   d. 1356 
    Relationship natural 
    Family ID F12282  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Catherine 
    Children 
     1. I Frederick,   b. 1357,   d. 1400  (Age 43 years)  [natural]
     2. II Agnes,   b. Bef 1356,   d. Abt 1416  (Age > 60 years)  [natural]
     3. Sophia,   b. 1358,   d. 28 May 1416  (Age 58 years)  [natural]
     4. Maud,   b. 1370  [natural]
     5. Otto,   b. Abt 1364,   d. 1406  (Age ~ 42 years)  [natural]
     6. Catherine Elisabeth of Brunswick,   d. Aft 1423  [natural]
     7. I Bernard,   d. 1434  [natural]
     8. Henry,   d. 1416  [natural]
     9. I Agnes,   d. 1410  [natural]
     10. Helen  [natural]
     11. Elizabeth,   d. 1420  [natural]
    Last Modified 12 Apr 2018 
    Family ID F12281  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Magnus (1324-1373), called Magnus with the Necklace (Latin: Magnus Torquatus) or Magnus II, was Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, ruling the Brunswick-Lüneburg principalities of Wolfenbüttel (colloquially also called Brunswick) and, temporarily, Lüneburg.

      Magnus was the son of Magnus the Pious, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (Wolfenbüttel). In 1362 Magnus and his brother Louis helped their brother Prince-Archbishop Albert II of Bremen to assert himself against the incumbent diocesan administrator Morris of Oldenburg, who claimed the see for himself. Magnus, Louis and the latter's father-in-law William II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (Celle), and their troops beleaguered Morris in the prince-archiepiscopal castle in Vörde and forced him to sign his resignation.

      After the death of his brother Louis in 1367, Magnus became the designated heir of both ducal principalities, Wolfenbüttel and Celle (colloquially also Lüneburg). When both his father and William II, who ruled over Celle, died in 1369, Magnus gained both ducal principalities. But already in 1370, he lost Celle to the Ascanian dukes of Saxe-Wittenberg (Albert and his uncle Wenceslas, Elector of Saxe-Wittemberg), who had been given the principality by Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, who had also banned Magnus. Several cities, including Lüneburg (Lunenburg), Uelzen, and Hanover switched allegiance to the Ascanians; Magnus managed to keep the City of Braunschweig (Brunswick) among his allies only with difficulties. The Lüneburg War of Succession continued for several years after Magnus died in the Battle of Leveste (a part of today's Gehrden), near the Deister, on 25 July 1373.