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  2. aged 41. Younger brothers of Rudolf III, and co-rulers in Austria and Styria. Leopold, despite being younger than Frederick, was the one who primarily inherited the County of Habsburg, the oldest land of the family, and it was only after his death (1326) that Frederick came to rule there.

  3. Albert III (Albrecht III), duke of Austria until 1395, from 1386 (after the death of Leopold) until 1395 also ruled over the latter's possessions. Albert IV (Albrecht IV) , duke of Austria 1395 - 1404, in conflict with Leopold IV.

  4. Leopold V (1157 – 31 December 1194), known as the Virtuous ( German: der Tugendhafte) was a member of the House of Babenberg who reigned as Duke of Austria from 1177 and Duke of Styria within the Holy Roman Empire from 1192 until his death.

  5. Leopold was to rule Austria and Ernst over Styria. Leopold and Ernest soon clashed over questions of authority that started from the issue of whether the Pitten Mark (that is, the regions around Wiener Neustadt and Neunkirchen which today form the south-eastern part of Lower Austria) belonged to Austria or to Styria.

  6. In Austria, Duke Albrecht V became regent in 1411, after the quarrel between his uncles, Ernest ‘the Iron’ and Leopold IV, about his wardship had been resolved by the sudden death of Leopold.

  7. Contents. Leopold IV. duke of Austria. Learn about this topic in these articles: role in Austria. In Austria: Early Babenberg period. …Welfs, on his half brother, Leopold IV. After the latter’s untimely death, Henry II Jasomirgott succeeded to the rule of Austria and Bavaria. Read More.

  8. After the latter’s untimely death, Henry II Jasomirgott succeeded to the rule of Austria and Bavaria. The Holy Roman emperor Frederick I (Barbarossa) tried to put an end to the quarrel between the Welfs and the Hohenstaufen, and, in the autumn of 1156 at Regensburg, he arranged a compromise.

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