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  1. Eberhard was the son of Count Ulrich I of Württemberg, who died a few weeks before his birth. His mother was Agnes of Silesia-Legnica, a daughter of Bolesław II Rogatka. [1] She probably died at his birth; some sources speak of a caesarean section . Eberhard was married three times.

  2. Born at Urach, he was the son of count Ludwig I and his wife Mechthild of the Palatinate, born as countess palatine by the Rhine. Count Eberhard V officially took charge of the government of Württemberg-Urach when he was still underage; Württemberg had been divided since 1442.

  3. Eberhard I (born Dec. 11, 1445, Urach, Ger.—died Feb. 24, 1496, Tübingen) was a count, later the 1st duke of Württemberg (from 1495), an administrative and ecclesiastic reformer who laid the foundations for Württembergs role in German history.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Apr 2, 2024 · Eberhard I, count of Württemberg's Timeline. Genealogy for Eberhard I "der Erlachte" von Württemberg, Graf von Württemberg (1265 - 1325) family tree on Geni, with over 255 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

    • Stuttgart, Württemberg
    • March 13, 1265
    • "Eberhard "the Illustrious" von Württemberg"
    • Stuttgart, Württemberg, Deutschland (HRR)
  5. Dec 23, 2022 · Eberhard I (13 March 1265, Stuttgart 5 June 1325, Stuttgart) was Count of Wrttemberg from 1279 until his death. He was nicknamed 'der Erlauchte' or the Illustrious Highness. Eberhard's halfbrother and predecessor Ulrich II took office at the age of about eleven years.

  6. Eberhard IV ( c. 1388 – 2 July 1419), called the Younger ( German: der Jüngere ), was Count of Württemberg from 1417 until his death in 1419. Life. Eberhard was born around 1388, the only surviving child of Count Eberhard III and his first wife Antonia Visconti, daughter of Bernabò Visconti.

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  8. Under Eberhard III, Württemberg assimilated the County of Montbéliard (German: Mömpelgard) through the betrothal of his son, Eberhard IV, to Henriette, Countess of Montbéliard in 1397. In 1442, the Treaty of Nürtingen was signed between Ulrich V and his brother Ludwig I .

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