Individual Details

Albert II "the Fat," Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg

(1268 - 22 Sep 1318)

According to Wikipedia:

Albert (Latin Albertus; c. 1268 – 22 September 1318), called the Fat (pinguis), was duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg.
The second son of Albert the Tall, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Albert was a boy when his father died in 1279. He was first under guardianship of his uncle, Conrad, Prince-Bishop of Verden, and then of his elder brother, Henry I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg. In 1286 the three brothers divided their father's Principality of Wolfenbüttel; Albert received the areas around Göttingen, Minden, Northeim, Calenberg, and Hanover. He made Göttingen his residence, thus Principality of Göttingen. In 1292, the third brother, William, died childless, and Albert and Henry, who had received the Principality of Grubenhagen, quarrelled about William's share, the remaining belittled areas around Brunswick and Wolfenbüttel; Albert finally prevailed.
Family[edit]

Albert married Rixa, daughter of Henry I, Prince of Werle and Mecklenburg-Güstrow, and Rikissa Birgersdotter from Sweden, in 1284. They had the following children who reached adulthood:
Adelaide (1290–1311), married John, Landgrave of Lower Hesse
Richenza, Abbess of Gandersheim(1298-26 April 1317)
Mechtild (1293–1 June 1356)
Jutta (1309–1332)
Otto prince of Wolfenbüttel (24 June 1292 – 30 August 1344)
Luder, joined the Teutonic Order
Albert, Bishop of Halberstadt (died 1358)
Henry, Bishop of Hildesheim (died 1362)
Magnus I prince of Wolfenbüttel (died 1369)
Ernest I prince of Gettingen (died 1367)
References[edit]

Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, vol. 1, p. 261-263[permanent dead link]
At the House of Welf site
Braunschweigisches Biographisches Lexikon, Appelhans 2006, ISBN 3-937664-46-7

Events

Birth1268
Marriage10 Jan 1284Rixa of Werle
Death22 Sep 1318

Families