| County of Wied | ||||||||||||||
| Grafschaft Wied | ||||||||||||||
| State of the Holy Roman Empire | ||||||||||||||
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| Capital | Wied | |||||||||||||
| Government | Principality | |||||||||||||
| Historical era | Middle Ages | |||||||||||||
| • | Established / Reichsfreiheit | 1093 | ||||||||||||
| • | Comital line extinct; passed to Isenburg-Wied |
1243 |
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| • | Inherited by Lords of Runkel and restored |
1462 |
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| • | Partitioned to create Wied-Dierdorf |
1631 |
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| • | Partitioned into W-Neuwied, W-Runkel |
1698 1698 |
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| • | Both parts mediatised to Nassau-Weilburg |
1806 |
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Wied was a County of Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, located on the river Wied where it meets the Rhine. Wied emerged as a County earlier than many other German states. From 1243–1462, Wied was united with an Isenburgian County as Isenburg-Wied. Wied was partitioned twice: between itself and Wied-Dierdorf in 1631, and between Wied-Neuwied and Wied-Runkel in 1698. Via William of Albania, the House of Wied ruled the Principality of Albania in 1914.
To Isenburg-Wied (1243–1462)
Partitioned between Wied-Neuwied and Wied-Runkel
Altwied Castle
Runkel Castle, residence of the Upper County
Neuwied Castle, residence of the Lower County