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  1. Biography. Gertrude was born in Deilingen, Swabia [citation needed] to Count Burkhard V of Hohenberg (died 1253) and his wife Matilda (Mechtild), daughter of Count Palatine Rudolf II of Tübingen. The comital Hohenberg dynasty, a cadet branch of the Swabian House of Hohenzollern, then ruled over extended estates in southwestern Germany.

  2. Summarize this article for a 10 year old. Gertrude Anne of Hohenberg ( c. 1225 – 16 February 1281) was German queen from 1273 until her death, by her marriage with King Rudolf I of Germany. As queen consort, she became progenitor of the Austrian House of Habsburg.

  3. When Gertrude Anne von Hohenberg was born in 1225, in Deilingen, Tuttlingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, her father, Burkhard V. von Hohenberg Graf, was 25 and her mother, Mechthild von Tübingen, was 30. She married Rudolf I von Habsburg in January 1244, in Schwaben, Kelheim, Kelheim, Bavaria, Germany.

    • Female
    • Rudolf I Von Habsburg
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  5. Brief Life History of Gertrud. When Countess Gertrud von Hohenberg was born in 1225, in Schwaben, Dürrenuhlsdorf, Kreis Chemnitzer-Land, Saxony, Germany, her father, Burkhard V. Graf von Hohenberg, was 25 and her mother, Mechthild von Tübingen, was 30. She married Emperor Rudolf von Habsburg IV in 1251. They were the parents of at least 6 ...

  6. Biography. Gertrude was born in Deilingen, Swabia to Count Burkhard V of Hohenberg (died 1253) and his wife Matilda (Mechtild), daughter of Count Palatine Rudolf II of Tübingen. The comital Hohenberg dynasty, a cadet branch of the Swabian House of Hohenzollern, then ruled over extended estates in southwestern Germany.

  7. Anna's son Albert's harsh rule gave rise to the legend of William Tell. Anna of Hohenberg (c. 1230–1281)Holy Roman empress. Name variations: Gertrud of Hohenberg became Anna of Hohenberg at her crowning at Aachen in 1273. Born Gertrud of Hohenberg between 1230 and 1235; died on January 16, 1281, in Vienna; married Rudolph or Rudolf I of ...

  8. Rudolf’s marriage to Gertrude of Hohenberg resulted in three sons and six daughters who survived into adulthood. Their eldest son Albrecht (1255-1308) was married to Elizabeth of Gorizia-Tyrol, whose family was among the allies of the Habsburgs in the Alpine region. Albrecht further consolidated the position of the emerging dynasty. Hartmann (1263–1281), whom his father had

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