Adalbert II, Count of Ballenstedt
Adalbert II of Ballenstedt, an early member of the House of Ascania, was Graf in Saxony and Vogt of Nienburg Abbey.
Life
Adelbert, first mentioned in a 1033 deed, was born at Ballenstedt Castle in the Saxon Schwabengau, the son of Count Esico of Ballenstedt and his wife Matilda, probably a daughter of Duke Herman II of Swabia. About 1068 he married Adelaide of Weimar-Orlamünde, a daughter of Margrave Otto I of Meissen and his wife, Adela of Louvain. Their two sons were:- Otto the Rich, Count of Ballenstedt
- Siegfried, Count of Weimar-Orlamünde, Count Palatine of the Rhine from 1095/97.
From 1072 on he participated in the Saxon Rebellion led by Count Otto of Nordheim and Bishop Burchard II of Halberstadt, for which he was arrested after King Henry's victory in the 1075 Battle of Langensalza. Even after his release about two years later, he backed the German anti-king Rudolf of Rheinfelden until he was finally killed, possibly in a feud, at Westdorf near Aschersleben by the Saxon noble Egeno II of Konradsburg.
Adalbert's widow Adelaide married Count Palatine Hermann II of Lotharingia from the Ezzonid dynasty and—in her third marriage—Count Palatine Henry of Laach from the House of Luxembourg, father of her son Siegfried.