Search results
People also ask
Who was the Archduke of Austria and what did he do?
Who was Archduke Charles?
What happened to Archduke Charles in the Battle of Caldiero?
What was Charles the great's role in the Habsburg dynasty?
Charles II Francis of Austria ( German: Karl II. Franz von Innerösterreich) (3 June 1540 – 10 July 1590) was an Archduke of Austria and a ruler of Inner Austria ( Styria, Carniola, Carinthia and Gorizia) from 1564. He was a member of the House of Habsburg .
- Archduke Leopold
Engraving of Leopold V, Archduke of Austria Lepold V as a...
- Charles I of Austria
17 August 1887 – 28 June 1914: His Imperial and Royal...
- Archduke Leopold
Archduke Charles Louis John Joseph Laurentius of Austria, Duke of Teschen (German: Erzherzog Karl Ludwig Johann Josef Lorenz von Österreich, Herzog von Teschen; 5 September 1771 – 30 April 1847) was an Austrian field-marshal, the third son of Emperor Leopold II and his wife, Maria Luisa of Spain.
Charles II as ruler of Inner Austria | Die Welt der Habsburger. As ruler over a dominion within the Habsburg Monarchy, Charles was confronted with the problems that were to determine the dynasty’s policies in the Early Modern age: the threat of Ottoman expansion and sectarian tensions.
Exhibitions. Habsburg. Charles II. Archduke of Austria, from 1564 to his death in 1590 ruler of Inner Austria. Born in Vienna on 3 June 1540. Died in Graz on 10 July 1590. At the partition of the Habsburg domains under the sons of Emperor Ferdinand I the youngest son Charles was assigned the group of lands making up Inner Austria.
Charles II of Inner Austria: marriage and offspring | Die Welt der Habsburger. As the ruler of Inner Austria he founded his own branch of the House of Habsburg, which was to become the main line of the dynasty in the following generation. Charles’s powerful Spanish relatives played a considerable role in his search for a suitable wife.
Archduke Charles II of Inner Austria (1540–1590) Charles was the third son and twelfth of a total of fifteen children of Emperor Ferdinand I. In contrast to his eldest brother Maximilian II, he was regarded as a faithful follower of Catholicism, a circumstance which, among other things, influenced his father’s decision to once again divide ...