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  1. Inner Austria (German: Innerösterreich; Slovene: Notranja Avstrija; Italian: Austria Interiore) was a term used from the late 14th to the early 17th century for the Habsburg hereditary lands south of the Semmering Pass, referring to the Imperial duchies of Styria, Carinthia and Carniola and the lands of the Austrian Littoral.

  2. Inner Austria (1453-1490) Archduchy of Austria (Inner Austrian line) (1490-1564) Archduchy of Lower and Upper Austria (1564-1619) Archduchy of Further Austria (with County of Tyrol) (1564-1619) Archduchy of Inner Austria (1564-1619) Archduchy of Austria (Inner Austrian line) (1619-1623) Archduchy of Lower and Inner Austria (1623-1665) Archduchy ...

    Name
    Portrait
    Born
    Reign
    c. 940 Son of Berthold of Nordgau or ...
    21 July 976 – 10 July 994
    c. 965 (?) First son of Leopold I and ...
    10 July 994 – 23 June 1018
    c. 985 Third son of Leopold I and ...
    23 June 1018 – 26 May 1055
    1027 Son of Adalbert I and Frozza ...
    26 May 1055 – 10 June 1075
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  4. The former would maintain Austria proper (then called Niederösterreich but comprising modern Lower Austria and most of Upper Austria), while the latter would rule over lands then labeled Oberösterreich, namely Inner Austria (Innerösterreich) comprising Styria, Carinthia and Carniola, and Further Austria (Vorderösterreich) consisting of ...

    • 11th century
  5. Charles II as ruler of Inner Austria | Die Welt der Habsburger. As ruler over a dominion within the Habsburg Monarchy, Charles was confronted with the problems that were to determine the dynasty’s policies in the Early Modern age: the threat of Ottoman expansion and sectarian tensions.

  6. The individual parts came to be known by the names of Niederösterreich (“Lower Austria,” comprising what is now Lower and Upper Austria), Innerösterreich (“Inner Austria,” comprising Steiermark, Kärnten, Carniola, and the Adriatic possessions), and Oberösterreich (“Upper Austria,” comprising the Tirol and the western domains ...

    • Who ruled Inner Austria?1
    • Who ruled Inner Austria?2
    • Who ruled Inner Austria?3
    • Who ruled Inner Austria?4
  7. When the future emperor Ferdinand II (the son of Charles, the ruler of Inner Austria) took over in Steiermark, he proved to be the most resolute advocate of the Counter-Reformation. It was he who eventually succeeded in uprooting Protestantism, first in Inner Austria and then in the other Habsburg countries, with the exception of Hungary and ...

  8. Archduke of Austria; from 1590 nominal ruler of the Inner Austrian dominions, actual ruler from 1596; King of Bohemia (from 1617 – with an interruption from 1619 to 1620), King of Hungary (from 1618); from 1619 Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and ruler of the Habsburg Monarchy to his death in 1637. Born in Graz on 9 July 1578.

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