Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • The Habsburgs

      • Their lands were inherited by the Habsburgs. The Albertine line maintained the rule in the comital lands around Gorizia, in the Puster Valley and in western Carinthia (which comprised the territory of contemporary East Tyrol) until the year 1500, when the family's last count (Leonhard of Gorizia) died without an heir.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › House_of_Gorizia
  1. People also ask

  2. In 1253 the Counts of Gorizia inherited the County of Tyrol, from 1271 onwards ruled by the Gorizia-Tyrol branch which became extinct in the male line in 1335. The younger line ruled the comital lands of Gorizia and Lienz until its extinction in 1500, whereafter the estates were finally acquired by the Austrian House of Habsburg .

    • Gorizian Denar
    • Latin
  3. Princely Count of Görz and Tyrol. Dissolution. 1500. The Counts of Gorizia ( German: Grafen von Görz; Italian: Conti di Gorizia; Slovene: Goriški grofje ), also known as the Meinhardiner, House of Meinhardin, were a comital, princely and ducal dynasty in the Holy Roman Empire. Named after Gorizia Castle in Gorizia (now in Italy, on the ...

  4. Gorizia, town, Friuli–Venezia Giulia regione, northeastern Italy, on the Isonzo River north of Trieste. From the 11th century Gorizia was the seat of the independent county of Gorizia until it passed to Austria in 1500. A noted cultural centre under Austrian rule, it was the capital of the Habsburg.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. In 1253 the Counts of Gorizia inherited the County of Tyrol, from 1271 onwards ruled by the Gorizia-Tyrol branch which became extinct in the male line in 1335. The younger line ruled the comital lands of Gorizia and Lienz until its extinction in 1500, whereafter the estates were finally acquired by the Austrian House of Habsburg.

  6. Sandwiched between the burgeoning Habsburg Empire to the north and west, and the expansionist Venetian Republic to the south, the counts of Gorizia ruled a patchwork of territories that stretched...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GoriziaGorizia - Wikipedia

    Gorizia was at first part of the County of Gorizia and since 1754, the capital of the Princely County of Gorizia and Gradisca. In ecclesiastical matters, after the suppression of the Patriarchate of Aquileia in 1751, the Archdiocese of Gorizia was established as its legal successor on the territory of the Habsburg monarchy .

  8. GORIZIA , city in Friuli, N.E. Italy. Gorizia was part of the Austrian empire until 1918 though for centuries its culture had been Italian. Jews were first mentioned in the county in the years 1299–1363. Only in 1548, however, did Jews sign the first charter with the local authorities.

  1. People also search for