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  1. Aug 15, 2023 · Let justice be done, though the world perish.” ~ Ferdinand I, King of Bohemia, Hungary, and Croatia, and Holy Roman Emperor (1521-1564)

  2. Henry of Gorizia (German: Heinrich, Czech: Jindřich; c. 1265 – 2 April 1335), a member of the House of Gorizia, was Duke of Carinthia and Landgrave of Carniola (as Henry VI) and Count of Tyrol from 1295 until his death, as well as King of Bohemia, Margrave of Moravia and titular King of Poland in 1306 and again from 1307 until 1310.

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  4. Henry VI (German: Heinrich VI.; November 1165 – 28 September 1197), a member of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, was King of Germany (King of the Romans) from 1169 and Holy Roman Emperor from 1191 until his death. From 1194 he was also King of Sicily. Henry was the second son of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa and Beatrice I, Countess of Burgundy.

  5. List of Bohemian monarchs. The Duchy of Bohemia was established in 870 and raised to the Kingdom of Bohemia in 1198. Several Bohemian monarchs ruled as non-hereditary kings beforehand, first gaining the title in 1085. From 1004 to 1806, Bohemia was part of the Holy Roman Empire, and its ruler was an elector.

  6. Jun 21, 2021 · In June 1621, forty-seven leaders of the Bohemian insurrection were put on trial, and twenty-seven of them were executed in Prague’s Old Town Square. Twelve of their heads were impaled on iron hooks and hung from the Old Town Bridge Tower while their headless bodies were handed over to the families to be burried.

  7. Henry VI (Heinrich VI) (November 1165 – 28 September 1197), a member of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, was King of Germany (King of the Romans) from 1190 and Holy Roman Emperor from 1191 until his death.

  8. The year 1617 saw a further increase in tension with the Protestant Estates of Bohemia expressing adamant disapproval of the proposed coronation as king of Bohemia of Matthias’s cousin Ferdinand, who was a radical exponent of the Counter-Reformation.

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