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  1. Frederick Jagiellon (Polish: Fryderyk Jagiellończyk; 27 April 1468 – 14 March 1503) was a Polish prince, Archbishop of Gniezno, Bishop of Kraków, and Primate of Poland.

  2. Her distant relative Frederick of Austria became Holy Roman Emperor and reigned as Frederick III until after Casimir's own death. The marriage strengthened the ties between the house of Jagiellon and the sovereigns of Hungary-Bohemia and put Casimir at odds with the Holy Roman Emperor through internal Habsburg rivalry.

  3. Czechoslovak history - Jagiellonian Kings, Bohemia, Moravia: After the death of King George, the Holy Roman emperor Frederick III and the Polish king Casimir IV of the Jagiellon dynasty observed benevolent neutrality toward Bohemia.

  4. Jagiellon dynasty, family of monarchs of Poland-Lithuania, Bohemia, and Hungary that became one of the most powerful in east central Europe in the 15th and 16th centuries. The dynasty was founded by Jogaila, the grand duke of Lithuania, who married Queen Jadwiga of Poland in 1386, converted to.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The Jagiellons were a royal dynasty originating from Lithuanian House of Gediminas dynasty that reigned in Central European countries (present day Lithuania, Belarus, Poland, Ukraine, Latvia, Estonia, Kaliningrad, parts of Russia, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia) between the fourteenth and sixteenth century.

  6. Apr 27, 2022 · Genealogy for Frederick of Jagiellon (Jagiellon), Prince, Archbishop of Gniezno, Bishop of Kraków and Primate of (1468 - 1502) family tree on Geni, with over 250 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

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  8. The Jagiellonians: A List. Drawing firm boundaries around a dynasty, deciding who is ‘in’ and who is ‘out’, is a slippery business. The project will examine where the Jagiellonians themselves understood these boundaries to lie, from the 14 th to the 16 th centuries.

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