The Aribonids were a noble family of probably Bavarian origin who rose to preeminence in the Carolingian March of Pannonia and the later Margraviate of Austria (marcha orientalis) in the late ninth and early tenth centuries. The dynasty is named after its ancestor Margrave Aribo of Austria (d. 909). The Aribonids maintained influence in the Duchy of Bavaria, the Austrian march, and other parts of Germany (the Saxon eastern marches and the Rhineland) until the early twelfth century, when they disappear.
The Aribonids were a noble family of probably Bavarian origin who rose to preeminence in the Carolingian March of Pannonia and the later Margraviate of...
enfeebled by the Wilhelminer War of Margrave Engelschalk II against the Aribonids, whereafter Prince Svatopluk I of Moravia took the occasion to invade...
Carinthia from 976, the Kleinkirchheim estates were held by the Bavarian Aribonid dynasty. In a document dated 5 July 1166, in which Archbishop Conrad II...
Scholasticus, Benedictine monk and music theorist of the 11th century Aribonids, noble family named after Aribo of Austria This disambiguation page lists...
to legend, one Carinthian noble Cacellino (Kazelin), a member of the Aribonids dynasty, about 1084/85 ceded his Friulian estates around Moggio to his...
Archbishops of Salzburg. In 1004, the Bavarian count palatines of the Aribonid dynasty founded the Benedictine nunnery of Göss, which was elevated to...
the 4th of May. An affiliation with Margrave Aribo, progenitor of the Aribonids is possible but has not been established. Arbeonis episcopi Frisingensis...
count named Pilgrim who held Salaberg and Haag and was related to the Aribonids. Gunther's mother's name was Gerbirg. She died between 1050 and 1060....
Feistritz-Traisen, which subsequently, under Adalram von Waldeck, a descendant of the Aribonids, founded the Augustinian Abbey of Seckau in 1140, which explains the family's...
possession of it was the cause of a dispute, the Wilhelminer War, with the Aribonids. In the dispute the Wilhelminers had the support of Arnulf of Carinthia...
administered by a brother of bishop Albuin of Brixen and member of the Aribonids, and who held large amounts of lucrative property in Bavaria, Salzburg...
Frankish influence in the late 8th century. When about 1070 the Bavarian Aribonids established Millstatt Abbey, they vested it with extensive landed property...
younger brother of Count Palatine Aribo II of the edelfrei family of the Aribonids. In 1070 h referred to himself as comes de Potensteine , i.e. the Count...
Pannonia from 871 until his death. He is recognised as a progenitor of the Aribonid dynasty. In his day, the Pannonian march, also called marcha orientalis...
separated from the Windic March. It has also been established that the Aribonids in the Drau and Savinja valleys were wealthy at this time. Alongside these...
was founded in 994 by the Bavarian Pfalzgraf Aribo I, a member of the Aribonid dynasty, and settled by Benedictine monks from St. Emmeram's Abbey in Regensburg...
Wilhelminer War was a minor war fought in the March of Pannonia (later Austria) from 882 to 884. It was initially a rebellion of the sons of the margraves...
the son of Count Chadalhoch of Leoben and the Isengau, a member of the Aribonid dynasty, and of his wife Irmingard. In a 1072 record concerning the foundation...
noble House of Gorizia (Görz), who derived the jurisdiction from their Aribonid ancestors as founders of the monastery. While through several decades many...
proprietary monastery by the Chiemgau count Aribo II (1024–1102), a scion of the Aribonid dynasty and former count palatine of Bavaria, and his brother Poto, on...
the population were Carinthian Slovenes. In the late 11th century the Aribonid count Kazelin (Chazelinus) founded Eberndorf Abbey within the Duchy of...