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  1. Wife of Frederick V, Burgrave of Nuremberg. This page was last edited on 15 March 2024, at 19:39. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  2. Jun 25, 2020 · St. Jakob or St James the Greater is a medieval church of the former free imperial city of Nuremberg. The church dedicated to Saint James the Greater. St. Jakob’s is at Jakobsplatz in the South West of the city, in a pleasant square. The Square has an area to exercise dogs with benches to watch on as the dog burns some energy.

  3. When Elisabeth von Hohenzollern-Nürnberg was born on 15 November 1358, in Nuremberg, Bavaria, her father, Friedrich V von Nuremberg, was 25 and her mother, Elisabeth von Sachsen, was 28. She married Ruprecht III von der Pfalz on 27 June 1374, in Amberg, Goldap, East Prussia, Prussia, Germany. They were the parents of at least 6 sons and 3 ...

  4. Beatrix of Nuremberg ( c. 1362, Nuremberg – 10 June 1414, Perchtoldsdorf) was a daughter of Frederick V, Burgrave of Nuremberg and his wife Elisabeth of Meissen. [1] In 1375 in Vienna, she married Duke Albert III of Austria. They had one son: Albert IV. [2]

  5. John III of Nuremberg (c. 1369 – 11 June 1420 in Plassenburg), Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach from the House of Hohenzollern. He was elder son of Frederick V of Nuremberg and Elisabeth of Meissen .

  6. Elisabeth of Nuremberg was the daughter of Frederick V, Burgrave of Nuremberg and Elisabeth of Meissen.

  7. Apr 30, 2022 · circa 1264. Birthplace: Nuremberg, Germany. Death: circa 1288 (15-32) Immediate Family: Daughter of Friedrich III, Burggraf von Nürnberg and Elisabeth Gräfin von Andechs-Meranien, Burggräfin von Nürnberg. Wife of Gottfried II von Hohenlohe, graf and Eberhard von Schlüsselberg. Mother of Albrecht II, Graf von Hohenlohe-Uffenheim-Entsee and ...