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  1. Matilda was the eldest daughter of Rudolf I of Germany and Gertrude of Hohenberg. She became the third wife of Louis II, Duke of Bavaria, on 24 October 1273 in Aachen. Matilda and Louis had the following children: Rudolf I (4 October 1274, Basel – 12 August 1319). Mechthild (1275 – 28 March 1319, Lüneburg ), married 1288 to Duke Otto II of ...

  2. Matilda of Habsburg (1251–1304)Duchess of Bavaria and countess Palatine . Name variations: Mathilda or Mathilde of Hapsburg. Born in 1251; died on December 22, 1304, in Munich; daughter of Rudolf I (1218–1291), king of Germany (r.1273), Holy Roman emperor (r. 1273–1291), and Anna of Hohenberg (c. Source for information on Matilda of Habsburg (1251–1304): Women in World History: A ...

  3. Matilda was the eldest daughter of Rudolf I of Germany and Gertrude of Hohenberg. She became the third wife of Louis II, Duke of Bavaria, on 24 October 1273 in Aachen. Matilda and Louis had the following children: Rudolf I (4 October 1274, Basel – 12 August 1319). Mechthild (1275 – 28 March 1319, Lüneburg ), married 1288 to Duke Otto II of ...

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  5. 47th 61Annual Report, ©2020 British Historical Society of Portugal On 21st October, 1911, Zita married the Austrian Archduke Karl von Habsburg. Karl joined the Austro-Hungarian Army and was a cavalry officer until the assassination of his uncle, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, in Sarajevo in 1914, left him heir to the

  6. The first of these was Maximilian’s own nuptial union: the Burgundian Marriage to the richest heiress in Europe at the time, Mary of Burgundy, enabled the dynasty to gain a foothold in western Europe, in particular in territories such as Flanders and Brabant, whose flourishing urban centres had made them among the most highly developed cultural and economic regions in Europe.

  7. Among people born in 1253, Matilda of Habsburg ranks 6 . Before her are Amir Khusrow, Stefan Milutin, Ivo of Kermartin, Stefan Dragutin, and Theodora of Trebizond. After her is Bolko I the Strict. Among people deceased in 1304, Matilda of Habsburg ranks 5. Before her are Pope Benedict XI, Ghazan, Emperor Go-Fukakusa, and John II, Count of Holland.

  8. Luxembourg. The Habsburg monarchy, [i] also known as Habsburg Empire, or Habsburg Realm, [j] was the collection of empires, kingdoms, duchies, counties and other polities that were ruled by the House of Habsburg. From the 18th century it is also referred to as the Danubian monarchy [k] or the Austrian monarchy ( Latin: Monarchia Austriaca ).