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and son together shaped the House of
Ascania's policy over several decades, together participating in meetings and decisions, and are both frequently mentioned in documents of the period. The pair were accompanied and supported in many cases by Otto's brothers, in particular the second-eldest, Hermann. Otto outlived his father, who lived to the then very old age of 70, by only 14 years.
422:'s name, whereupon the dream dissolved. When Otto related the strange dream to his companions, they interpreted the deer as a symbol for the pagan Slavs, and advised him to establish a monastery in honor of the Christian God to defend against paganism. Oak and deer as a result are on the Abbey's coat of arms.
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Otto governed from 1144 alongside his father Albert. He did not officially take the title
Margrave of Brandenburg until his father's death in 1170, but as early as 1144 he is mentioned by that title along with Albert in a royal document, although Albert himself did not claim it until 1157. The father
417:
The abbey's founding legend is as follows. Otto fell asleep after an arduous hunt under an oak tree. In his dream, deer appeared which threatened to gore him with their antlers, and which he could not repel with his spear. In desperation Otto called
336:. In the following 150 years under the Ascanians, it would expand to include many more regions, but during Otto's years as Margrave, his main goal was to stabilize and secure the Margraviate by intensifying settlement in the regions he controlled.
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participated besides Otto and the two Polish dukes. According to
Partenheimer (2003), the marriage was contracted in connection with the Ascanian efforts to support the Piast dynasty in opposition to
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The monastery quickly developed into a wealthy abbey and strengthened the position of the
Ascanians both by its great economic means and by the missionary work of its monks to the
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between 1895 and 1901, 27 sculptors created 32 sculptures of the rulers of
Brandenburg and Prussia, each 2.75 m (9 ft) high. Each sculpture was flanked by two smaller
446:, as part of the construction of a "boulevard of splendor" with monuments from the history of Brandenburg and Berlin (with the commissioning by
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The
Margraviate of Brandenburg, which Otto finally took over from his father in 1170, did not at the time correspond to the later territory of
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Hie gut
Brandenburg alleweg! Geschichts- und Kulturbilder aus der Vergangenheit der Mark und aus Alt-Berlin bis zum Tode des GroĂźen KurfĂĽrsten
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of people who played an important role in the life of that ruler. In the case Otto I, the flanking busts were of his godfather
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bordering the
Ascanian possessions as a gift upon the occasion; Partenheimer (2003) dates that event to 1123 or 1125.
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Otto's year of birth is traditionally recorded as 1128, but recent historians have cast some doubts on the date.
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Princely
Brothers and Sisters: The Sibling Bond in German Politics, 1100–1250
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became
Margrave of Brandenburg after the death of his brother Otto II in 1205
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In 1180, Otto founded the Lehnin Abbey in Zauche as the Margraviate's first
561:(in German), vol. 24, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 658–659
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became his successor as Margrave of Brandenburg at Otto I's death in 1184
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of the Lehnin Abbey, Sibold, who according to legend was murdered.
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and burial ground for the House of Ascania, and later also for the
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Monument group, with abbot Sibold (left) and FĂĽrst Pribislaw
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512:(in German). Online edition by Tilo Köhn. Archived from
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510:"Can. Brandenburg., Tractatus de urbe Brandenburg"
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546:(in German). Berlin: Verlag von W. Pauli's Nachf.
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430:A monument to Otto was built by the sculptor
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125:Henry, Count of TangermĂĽnde and Gardelegen
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171:(c. 1128 – July 8, 1184) was the second
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579:(in German). Cologne: Böhlau Verlag.
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191:("Albert the Bear"), who founded the
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553:Otto I. (Markgraf von Brandenburg)
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222:is known to have served as Otto's
129:Albert II, Margrave of Brandenburg
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275:Otto had the following children:
121:Otto II, Margrave of Brandenburg
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558:Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie
508:Antwerpe, Heinrici de (1888).
311:Alongside his father (to 1170)
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348:Lehnin Abbey ruins, 1858, by
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551:Otto von Heinemann (1887), "
426:Monument to Otto I in Berlin
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575:Partenheimer, Lutz (2003).
570:. Cornell University Press.
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566:Lyon, Jonathan R. (2013).
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272:as legal ruler of Poland.
193:Margraviate of Brandenburg
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285:Heinrich became Count of
183:Otto I was born into the
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645:Margraves of Brandenburg
542:George, Richard (1900).
211:, later Duke of Saxony.
607:Margrave of Brandenburg
306:Margrave of Brandenburg
298:Otto was buried in the
226:and given the lands of
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173:Margrave of Brandenburg
28:Margrave of Brandenburg
16:Margrave of Brandenburg
529:Cite journal requires
434:in 1898 on the former
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320:Sole ruler (1170–1184)
233:In 1148, Otto married
195:in 1157, and his wife
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380:House of Hohenzollern
374:monastery became the
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187:as the eldest son of
438:(Victory Avenue) in
197:Sophie of Winzenburg
161:Sophie of Winzenburg
390:began around 1190.
384:Sittichenbach Abbey
262:Friedrich of Wettin
448:Emperor William II
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362:Founding by Otto I
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209:Bernhard of Anhalt
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614:Succeeded by
258:Northern Crusades
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105:Judith of Poland
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243:Dukes of Poland
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151:Albert the Bear
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514:the original
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357:Lehnin Abbey
340:Lehnin Abbey
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300:Lehnin Abbey
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270:Wladyslaw II
256:(one of the
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207:, and Count
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94:Lehnin Abbey
84:July 8, 1184
640:1184 deaths
436:Siegesallee
326:Brandenburg
266:King Conrad
250:Mieszko III
246:Boleslaw IV
42:Predecessor
629:Categories
611:1170–1184
470:References
440:Tiergarten
372:Cistercian
287:Gardelegen
80:1184-07-08
492:Lyon 2013
460:Pribislav
432:Max Unger
388:cloisters
368:monastery
330:Havelland
292:Albert II
224:godfather
220:Havolanes
216:Pribislav
201:Siegfried
52:Successor
37:1170–1184
600:Albert I
332:and the
189:Albert I
617:Otto II
502:Sources
280:Otto II
237:of the
218:of the
69:c. 1128
56:Otto II
583:
444:Berlin
420:Christ
399:Werder
334:Zauche
235:Judith
228:Zauche
205:Bremen
169:Otto I
157:Mother
147:Father
101:Spouse
89:Burial
22:Otto I
464:Abbot
456:busts
395:Slavs
136:House
116:Issue
34:Reign
581:ISBN
535:help
248:and
179:Life
74:Died
66:Born
555:",
442:in
203:of
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520:{{
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