Dirk II, Count of Holland

Dirk II or Theoderic II (920/930 – 6 May 988) was a count in West Frisia, and a predecessor of the counts of Holland. He was the son of Dirk I, count in West Frisia, and Geva (or Gerberge).

Dirk II
Count of West Frisia
Reign928/944 – 988
PredecessorDirk I, Count of West Frisia
SuccessorArnulf, Count of West Frisia
Born920/930
Died(988-05-06)6 May 988
Egmond, West Friesland,
Duchy of Lower Lorraine
Burial
SpouseHildegard of Flanders
IssueArnulf, Count of West Frisia
Egbert, Archbishop of Trier
Erlinde, Abbess of Egmond
HouseHouse of Gerufings
FatherDirk I, Count of West Frisia
MotherGeva

Career

In 983 Emperor Otto III confirmed Dirk's rights within the Duchy of Lower Lorraine to properties and territories in the counties of Maasland, Kinhem (Kennemerland) and Texla (Texel), thus stretching along the entire Hollandic coast (as well as inland). Count Dirk II built a fortress near Vlaardingen, which later was the site of a battle between his grandson Dirk III and an Imperial army under Godfrey II, Duke of Lower Lorraine.

Dirk and his wife implore Saint Adalbert, illustration from the Egmond Gospels

Dirk II rebuilt Egmond Abbey and its wooden church in stone to house the relics of Saint Adalbert, the project starting in 950. Adalbert was not well known at that time, but he was said to have preached Christianity in the immediate surroundings two centuries earlier. The abbey was given to a community of Benedictine monks from Ghent, who replaced the nuns originally at Egmond Abbey, probably in the 970s. His daughter Erlint, Erlinde or Herlinde, who was abbess at the time, was made abbess of the newly founded Bennebroek Abbey instead.

Family

Dirk married Hildegarde (thought to be a daughter of Count Arnulf of Flanders, based on the names of her children), and had three known children. His son Arnulf became Count of Holland and Frisia after Dirk's death. The younger son Egbert became Archbishop of Trier in 977. His daughter Erlinde (Herlinde) was abbess of Egmond Abbey, until that institution was changed by her father from a nunnery into a monastery, after which she became abbess of Bennebroek.

Dirk died in 988 and was buried in the stone church at Egmond Abbey, which he had built there. Hildegard died two years later and was also buried there.

References

  • Geerts.com: History of Holland
  • Frisia Coast Trail: The Abbey of Egmond and the Rise of the Gerulfings
  • Cawley, Charles, Medieval Lands Project: Holland and Frisia, Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy,

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