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  1. President Hindenburg died at the age of 87 on 2 August 1934. Shortly after Hindenburg’s death, Hitler announced that offices of the chancellor and the president were to be combined to create one position, the Führer and chancellor.

  2. After the abolition of all German monarchies in 1918 and the death of Friedrich August III, the last king of Saxony, in 1932, further heads of the house and pretenders to the throne have used the title Margrave of Meissen.

  3. Friedrich Christian died on 9 August 1968 at Samedan. He was buried outside the Royal Chapel in Königskapelle in Karrösten in North Tyrol. Marriage and children [ edit ]

  4. Friedrich II “der Ernsthafte” von Meissen. Birth. 30 Nov 1310. Gotha, Landkreis Gotha, Thüringen, Germany. Death. 18 Nov 1349 (aged 38) Eisenach, Stadtkreis Eisenach, Thüringen, Germany. Burial.

  5. The Ghibellines carried him the Crown of the southern Italian Hohenstaufen Empire. But the death of his mother in 1270, and the resistance of the Pope failed all plans to make Friedrich, King of Germany.

  6. German President Paul von Hindenburg dies. With the support of the German armed forces, Hitler becomes President of Germany. Later that month Hitler abolishes the office of President and declares himself Führer of the German Reich and People, in addition to his position as Chancellor.

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  8. Frederick I, called the Brave or the Bitten (German Friedrich der Freidige or Friedrich der Gebissene; 1257 – 16 November 1323) was en:margrave of Meissen and en:landgrave of Thuringia.

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