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  1. Baptism of Duke Theodo by Bishop Rupert of Salzburg, St Peter's Abbey, Salzburg. Theodo (about 625 – 11 December c. 716), also known as Theodo V and Theodo II, was the Duke of Bavaria from 670 or, more probably, 680 to his death. It is with Theodo that the well-sourced history of Bavaria begins.

  2. Biography. He was born in Vienna, the son of Albert III of Austria and Beatrix of Nuremberg. [1] He was the Duke of Austria from 1395 until 1404, which then included roughly today's Lower Austria and most of Upper Austria, as the other Habsburg dominions were at that time ruled by his relatives of the Leopoldinian Line of the family.

  3. Frederick IV (1382 – 24 June 1439), also known as Frederick of the Empty Pockets ( German: Friedrich mit der leeren Tasche ), a member of the House of Habsburg, was Duke of Austria from 1402 until his death. As a scion of the Habsburg Leopoldian line, he ruled over Further Austria and the County of Tyrol from 1406 onwards.

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  5. Rudolf IV, ‘the Founder’. Duke of Austria and Styria, Carinthia and Carniola (reigned 1358–1365); from 1365 also Count of Tyrol. Born in Vienna on 1 November 1339. Died in Milan on 27 July 1365. Duke Rudolf IV was the most influential Habsburg of the fourteenth century.

  6. If I were King ... – Duke Rudolf IV ‘the Founder’. The most dazzling Habsburg of the fourteenth century was not a king but ‘merely’ a duke. Although he died at the age of only twenty-six, the cultural and political heritage he left behind him was to be of formative importance for the future of Austria.

  7. sites.rootsmagic.com › erinjobates › individualTheodo Of Bavaria

    A member of the Agilolfing dynasty, his father possibly was Duke Theodo IV of Bavaria (d. 680) and his mother was probably Fara of Bavaria (b: 600), daughter of one of the Kings of the Lombards and (her mother) Daughter of Gisulf I of Friuli (b: 577). Theodo established his capital at Ratisbona (modern Regensburg). He married Folchaid, of the ...

  8. Duke Frederick IV ‘Empty-Pockets’ of Tyrol, 16th century At the beginning of the fifteenth century the Habsburgs wielded only a moderate degree of power in the Empire, ruling over Austria, Styria and Carniola as well as their ancestral lands in Switzerland and Swabia (the so-called Forelands).

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