In 1622, the Aulic Council decided to award the margraviate of Baden-Baden to Edward Fortunatus. Disappointed, Margrave George Frederick abdicated on 22 April 1622, in favour of his son, Frederick V. Frederick ruled Baden Durlach until his death in 1659.
After Baden-Durlach lost the Battle of Wimpfen, the country was devastated by the troops of Tilly. Durlach and other unprotected towns were burned down or looted and pillaged repeatedly. Frederick V did not receive his imperial investiture until 1627, and then only under severe conditions. The people suffered unspeakably during this period. In 1648, the plague broke out in Durlach and further decimated the population. The Protestant Frederick V was deposed by Emperor Ferdinand II during the Thirty Years' War. Ferdinand II enfeoffed Baden-Durlach to the Catholic Margrave of Baden-Baden instead. Frederick then retired from politics until the end of the war.
Frederick V married Duchess Barbara of Württemberg on 21 December 1616. His wife died on 8 May 1627 after nine years of marriage at the age of 33 years. Without observing the obligatory year of mourning, Frederick married Eleonore of Solms-Laubach on 8 October 1627. His second wife died on 6 July 1633. After a very brief period of mourning, he married his third wife, Mary Elizabeth on 21 January 1634; she died on 19 February 1643. On 13 February 1644, Frederick V married Anna Maria of Geroldseck, the widow of Count Frederick of Solms-Laubach. Anna Maria died on 25 May 1649 and the following year, on 20 May 1650, Frederick married his fifth and final wife, Elizabeth Eusebia of Fürstenberg.
In 1632 Prince Louis I of Anhalt-Köthen made Frederick V a member of his Fruitbearing Society. The Society gave Frederick the nickname der Verwandte ("the Kinsman") and the motto the grape and as his emblem the common grape hyacinth (Hyacinthus botryoidesL.). In the Society Book in Köthen, Frederick can be found as entry number 207.
To evade the Edict of Restitution, Frederick V joined King Gustav II Adolf of Sweden and he renewed his alliance with Sweden and France in 1635 after the Battle of Nördlingen. Consequently, Frederick V was excluded from the amnesty granted by the Diet in 1640.
At the peace negotiations in Münster that led to the Peace of Westphalia, Frederick was represented by his councillor, AmtmannJohn George of Merckelbach from Badenweiler. Baden-Durlach was returned to Frederick V, but not Upper Baden. He returned to Durlach in 1650 and devoted himself to his studies. In 1654, he promulgated a new civil code, which his father had created in 1622.
Frederick V died on 8 September 1659 at the age of 65 years at the Karlsburg Castle in Durlach.
secondly, in 1648 to Count Heinrich von Thurn und Valsássina (died: 19 August 1656)
Friederike (April 6, 1625; † June 16, 1645)
Christine (born: 25 December 1626, died: 11 July 1627)
On 8 October 1627, Frederick V married his second wife, Countess Eleonore of Solms-Laubach (born: 9 September 1605; died: 6 July 1633), the daughter of Count Albert Otto Albrecht I of Solms-Laubach (1576-1610) and his wife, Landgravine Anna von Hesse-Darmstadt (1583-1631). They had following children:
Anna Philippine (born: 9 September 1629; died: 27 December 1629)
On 13 February 1644, Frederick V married his fourth wife, Baroness Anna Maria von Geroldseck und Sultz (born: 28 October 1593; died: 25 May 1649), the widow of the Count Frederick of Solms-Rödelheim and daughter of Baron Jacob Geroldseck und Sultz auf Hohengeroldseck (1565-1634) and his first wife, Baroness Barbara von Rappoltstein (1566-1621).
On 20 May 1650 Frederick V married his fifth and final wife, Countess Eusebia Elisabeth of Fürstenberg (died: 8 June 1676), the daughter of Count Christopher II of Fürstenberg (1580-1614) his wife, Countess Dorothea von Sternberg (1570-1633).
Ancestors
Ancestors of Frederick V, Margrave of Baden-Durlach