Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Ulrich von Württemberg (* 8. Februar 1487 in Reichenweier (Riquewihr), Elsass; † 6. November 1550 in Tübingen) war 1498–1519 und 1534–1550 der dritte regierende Herzog von Württemberg. Er war der erste protestantische Fürst seines Territoriums. Ihn besang in lateinischer Sprache Johann Pedius Tethinger .

  2. Ulrich was born in 1413, the youngest child of Count Eberhard IV and his wife Henriette, Countess of Mömpelgard. [5] Eberhard died unexpectedly of illness on 2 July 1419, while Ulrich and his older brother Ludwig were both minors. [6] Consequently, Henriette became their guardian, together with a regency council of 32 Württembergers.

  3. WÜRTTEMBERG. Ulrich von Württemberg (1487–1550) is undoubtedly one of the most prominent, but also most controversial figures in Württemberg's history. His fate is closely tied to that of his duchy, which he temporarily lost. He brought the Reformation to Württemberg and dissolved the Hirsau Monastery.

  4. Early life Statue of Peter Gaiss, leader of the "Poor Conrad" rebellion in the Rems Valley. Duke Ulrich was born 8 February 1487 and his mother died in his birth. His father, Henry, Count of Württemberg, was mentally deranged, likely as a result of his three-year imprisonment by Duke Charles the Bold of Burgundy, [citation needed] was banished to Hohenurach Castle in the County of Urach, and ...

  5. Ulrich von Württemberg (1487–1550) zählt zweifellos zu den herausragenden, aber auch umstrittensten Personen der württembergischen Landesgeschichte. Sein Schicksal war untrennbar mit dem seines Herzogtums verknüpft, das er zeitweise verlor. Er führte die Reformation ein, was die Auflösung der Hirsauer Klosterlebens zur Folge hatte.

    • ulrich von württemberg hindenburg tour reviews1
    • ulrich von württemberg hindenburg tour reviews2
    • ulrich von württemberg hindenburg tour reviews3
    • ulrich von württemberg hindenburg tour reviews4
  6. nal owner, Count Ulrich V of Württemberg (1413–1480), as well as the year in which it was made, 1460—information rarely known for any !fteenth-century object. The crossbow !rst received scholarly attention when its owner at the time, the noted British arms and armor scholar and collector Charles Alexander, baron de Cosson (1846–

  7. People also ask

  8. Ulrich von Württemberg. Entwurf zum Denkmal Graf Ulrichs, Sohn des Greiners (Federzeichnung aquareliert von Hans Steiner, um 1578) Ulrichstein bei Döffingen. Ulrich von Württemberg (* nach 1340; † 23. August 1388 in der Schlacht bei Döffingen) war der Sohn von Graf Eberhard II. von Württemberg und Elisabeth von Henneberg-Schleusingen .

  1. People also search for