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  1. Frederick was officially recognized as Margrave and Prince-elector Frederick I of Brandenburg at the Council of Constance in 1415. Frederick's formal investiture with the Kurmark, or electoral march, and his appointment as Archchamberlain of the Holy Roman Empire occurred on 18 April 1417, also during the Council of Constance.

  2. Frederick VI of Nuremberg was officially recognized as Margrave and Prince-elector Frederick I of Brandenburg at the Council of Constance in 1415.

  3. Around 1700 a nobleman named Solomon Brandenburg began to acquire land and power, offending, however, Frederick the Great, Margrave of Prussia. Solomon was then banished and all land holdings confiscated.

  4. descendants of Mathias Brandenburg were the only rightful descendants of the Brandenburg royalty in the United States. It stated Mathias became an Elector (one of the rulers) of Prussia on 12 June 1758, although just below that, was given the birth of Mathias’ daughter, Elizabeth, in Frederick County, Maryland in 1744. If those two

  5. Married in 1790 to Maria Sophia Frederica, daughter of the landgrave Charles of Hesse, Frederick acceded to the throne upon his father’s death on March 13, 1808. After his accession he inclined more to personal rule, and the cabinet’s influence decreased.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. The sixteen-year-old Frederick became the Hereditary Margrave of Bayreuth. In 1735, on his father's death, Frederick became the new Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth. Frederick has the reputation of being an enlightened monarch.

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  8. The House of Hohenzollern came to the throne of Brandenburg in 1415. Frederick VI of Nuremberg was officially recognized as Margrave and Prince-elector Frederick I of Brandenburg at the Council of Constance in 1415.

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