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    • Bavarian nun

      • Agnes of Bavaria (1335 – 11 November 1352) was a Bavarian nun from Munich and a member of the House of Wittelsbach.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Agnes_of_Bavaria_(nun)
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  2. Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Bernauer, Agnes (d. 1435)Bavarian who was condemned for witchcraft. Birth date unknown; drowned in 1435; daughter of an Augsburg baker; secretly married Albert (1401–1460, son of Ernest, duke of Bavaria-Munich), about 1432.

  3. Agnes Bernauer (c. 1410 – 12 October 1435) was the mistress and perhaps also the first wife of Albert, later Albert III, Duke of Bavaria.

  4. Bavaria: Agnes of Loon 1169 eleven children: In 1180 Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor gave Bavaria to Otto I Wittelsbach, Duke of Bavaria of the House of Wittelsbach. Regency of Agnes of Loon (1183-1189) Son of Otto III. Louis obtained the Palatinate of the Rhine in 1214. So Louis I served also as Count Palatine of the Rhine. He was assassinated ...

  5. Oct 12, 2017 · On October 12, 1435, Agnes Bernauer, the mistress and perhaps also the first wife of Albert, later Albert III, Duke of Bavaria, was condemned for witchcraft and drowned in the Danube. Her life and death have been depicted in numerous literary works , the most well known being Friedrich Hebbel ‘s tragedy of the same name.

  6. The history of Bavaria for the ensuing century intertwines with that of the Carolingian empire. Bavaria, given during the partition of 817 AD to the king of the East Franks, Louis the German, formed a part of the larger territories confirmed to him in 843 AD by the Treaty of Verdun. Louis made Regensburg the center of his government and ...

  7. Bavaria became a part of the Holy Roman Empire in the 10th century. During that period Bavaria was constantly ravaged and all but depopulated by the Hungarians. At the Battle of Pressburg (now Bratislava, Slovakia), on July 4, 907, the Hungarians inflicted a disastrous defeat on the Bavarians, but Hungarian ambitions in Bavaria were checked permanently in 955 by Otto I at the Battle of ...

  8. German princess. Born in 1074; died on September 24, 1143; daughter of Holy Roman emperor Henry IV (r. 1056–1106) and Bertha of Savoy (1051–1087); sister of Henry V and Conrad, both Holy Roman emperors; granddaughter of Agnes of Poitou (1024–1077); married Frederick I, duke of Swabia, in 1089; married Leopold III, margrave of Austria of ...

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