Albert
I
(c.
1100-1170),
Margrave
of
Brandenburg,
also
called,
The
Bear
(Ger:
Albrecht
der
Bär),
was
the
only
son
of
Otto
the
Rich,
count
of
Ballenstedt,
and
Eilika,
daughter
of
Magnus
Billung,
duke
of
Saxony.
He
inherited
the
valuable
Saxon
estates
of
his
father
in
1123,
and
on
his
mother's
death,
in
1142,
succeeded
to
one-half
of
the
lands
of
the
Billungs.
In
about
1123
he
received
from
Lothar
I,
duke
of
Saxony,
the
margravate
of
Lusatia
and,
after
Lothar
became
the
German
king,
accompanied
him
on
the
disastrous
expedition
to
Bohemia
in
1126,
when
he
suffered
a
short
imprisonment.
In
1128
his
brother-in-law,
Henry
II,
margrave
of
the
Saxon
northern
march,
died,
and
Albert,
disappointed
at
not
receiving
this
fief,
attacked
Udo,
the
succeeding
margrave,
and
was
consequently
deprived
of
Lusatia
by
Lothar.
In
spite
of
this,
he
went
to
Italy
in
1132
in
the
train
of
the
king,
and
his
services
there
were
rewarded,
in
1134,
by
the
investiture
of
the
North
Mark,
which
was
again
without
a
ruler.
For
three
years
he
was
occupied
in
campaigns
against
the
Wends,
and
by
an
arrangement
made
with
Pribislav,
duke
of
Brandenburg,
Albert
secured
this
district
when
the
duke
died
in
1150.
Taking
the
title
margrave
of
Brandenburg,
he
pressed
the
warfare
against
the
Wends,
extended
the
area
of
his
mark,
did
much
for
the
spread
of
Christianity
and
civilization
therein,
and
so
became
the
founder
of
the
margraviate
of
Brandenburg.
In
1137
his
cousin,
Henry
the
Proud
was
deprived
by
King
Conrad
III
of
his
Saxon
duchy,
which
was
given
to
Albert.
After
meeting
with
some
success
in
his
efforts
to
take
possession,
he
was
driven
from
Saxony,
and
also
from
his
mark
by
Henry,
and
compelled
to
take
refuge
in
South
Germany,
and
when
peace
was
made
in
1142
he
renounced
the
Saxon
dukedom
and
received
the
counties
of
Weimar
and
Orlamünde.
It
was
possibly
at
this
time
that
Albert
was
made
arch-chamberlain
of
the
Empire,
an
office
which
afterwards
gave
the
margraves
of
Brandenburg
the
rights
of
an
elector.
A
feud
with
Henry
the
Lion,
duke
of
Saxony,
was
followed,
in
1158,
by
a
pilgrimage
to
the
Holy
Land,
and
in
1162
Albert
accompanied
the
emperor
Frederick
I
to
Italy,
and
distinguished
himself
at
the
storming
of
Milan.
In
1164
he
joined
a
league
of
princes
formed
against
Henry
the
Lion,
and
peace
being
made
in
1169,
Albert
divided
his
territories
among
his
six
sons,
and
died
on
November
131170,
and
was
buried
at
Ballenstedt.
His
personal
qualities
won
for
him
the
surname
of
"the
Bear,"
and
he
is
also
called
by
later
writers
"the
Handsome."