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  1. Ludwig of Bavaria or Louis of Bavaria may refer to: Dukes. Louis I, Duke of Bavaria (1173–1231), Duke of Bavaria in 1183 and the Count of Palatinate of the Rhine in 1214. He was a son of Otto I; Louis II, Duke of Bavaria (1229–1294), Duke of Bavaria from 1253 and Count Palatine of the Rhine.

  2. Father. Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor. Mother. Margaret II, Countess of Hainaut. Otto V ( c. 1340 – 15 November 1379), was a Duke of Bavaria and Elector of Brandenburg as Otto VII. Otto was the fourth son of Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV by his second wife Margaret II of Avesnes, Countess of Hainaut and Holland .

  3. House of Wittelsbach: Otto III Count of Scheyern in Dachau-Valley † 1268: Otto II Duke of Bavaria r. 1231-1253 (1206-1253) m.Agnes of the Palatinate, grdd of Duke Henry the Lion and Conrad of Hohenstaufen by which the Wittelsbach inherited the Palatinate: Louis II Duke of Bavaria & Count Palatine of the Rhine r. 1253-1294 (1229–1294) Henry XIII

  4. Louis IX, Duke of Bavaria. Mother. Amalia of Saxony. George of Bavaria referred to as the Rich (15 August 1455 in Burghausen, Bavaria – 1 December 1503 in Ingolstadt ), [1] (German: Georg, Herzog von Bayern-Landshut) was the last duke of Bavaria-Landshut. [2] He was a son of Louis IX the Rich and Amalia of Saxony .

  5. House of Wittelsbach. Father. William IV, Duke of Bavaria. Mother. Marie of Baden-Sponheim. Religion. Roman Catholicism. Albert V (German: Albrecht V.) (29 February 1528 – 24 October 1579) was Duke of Bavaria from 1550 until his death. He was born in Munich to William IV and Maria Jacobäa of Baden .

  6. Maria of Brabant, Duchess of Bavaria. Maria (centre), with her husband Louis (left) and his second wife, Anna of Glogau (right). Maria of Brabant (1226–1256) was a daughter of Henry II, Duke of Brabant, and Maria of Swabia. She married Louis II, Duke of Bavaria, being the first of three wives.

  7. Duke in Bavaria ( German: Herzog in Bayern) was a title used among others since 1506, when primogeniture was established [citation needed], by all members of the House of Wittelsbach, with the exception of the Duke of Bavaria which began to be a unique position. So reads for instance the full title of the late 16th century's Charles I, Count ...

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