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  1. other name:Louis the Strict. other name:Ludwig der Strenge. Details. individual; ruler; German; Male. Life dates. 1229-1294. Biography. Son of Otto II, of the Wittelsbach family. Earned the cognomen 'the strict' for ordering the execution of his first wife Mary of Brabant (q.v.) after wrongly accusing her of infidelity; second wife, Anna of ...

  2. Heinz Lieberich. Louis IV was the duke of Upper Bavaria (from 1294) and of united Bavaria (1340–47), German king (from 1314), and Holy Roman emperor (1328–47), first of the Wittelsbach line of German emperors. His reign was marked by incessant diplomatic and military struggles to defend the right of the empire to.

  3. Description. Also known as. English. William I, Duke of Bavaria. second son of Emperor Louis IV and Margaret II of Hainaut. Wilhelm III Herzog von Bayern-Straubing Comte de Hainaut et Graaf van Holland en Zeeland. Wilhelm V Herzog von Bayern. William I.

  4. Dec 1, 2014 · Louis II Duke of Bavaria in The Boston Traveler - June 9 1857. Catalogue of Photographs of Old Portraits Owned by the Free Public Library, Worcester Art Museum, 1892 in Compilation of Published Sources. A Biographical and Critical Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, Michael Bryan, Vol. 1, 1816 in Compilation of Published Sources.

  5. Jul 25, 2022 · Perched high atop a mountain amidst stunning natural scenery, the castle seems every inch a fairy-tale palace. But for Prince Ludwig II, the castle was the furthest thing from the idyllic setting it seemed to grow up in as a royal prince. He was educated to adhere to a rigid regimen from his birth in 1845. On the advice of their advisors, his ...

  6. Margaret of Austria. Louis IX ( German: Ludwig IX, Herzog von Bayern-Landshut, also known as Louis the Rich; 23 February 1417 – 18 January 1479) was Duke of Bavaria-Landshut from 1450. He was a son of Henry XVI the Rich and Margaret of Austria. [1] Louis was the founder of the University of Ingolstadt (now the University of Munich ).

  7. From that date until 1918, Bavaria was ruled by the Wittelsbachs. The first step toward extending their authority outside Bavaria was made in 1214, when Otto II, through marriage, obtained the Palatinate of the Rhine. A descendant, Louis, became duke of Bavaria in 1294 and Holy Roman emperor, as Louis IV, in 1328.

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