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Fancy Dutch, Pennsylvania Dutch, German Americans, Hessians. Palatines ( Palatine German: Pälzer) are the people of the Rhenish Palatinate, known simply as "the Palatinate". [1] Prior to the fall of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, "Palatine" referred to the citizens and princes of the Palatinates, Holy Roman States that served as capitals for ...
Counts palatine of the Rhine, 1085–1214. From c.1085, after the death of the last Ezzonian count palatine, Herman II of Lotharingia, the Palatinate lost its military importance in Lotharingia. The territorial authority of the count palatine was reduced to his counties along the Rhine, henceforth called the County Palatine of the Rhine.
RulerRulerBornReign23 December 11731214–123115 September 12317 April 12061231–125329 November 125313 April 12291253–12942 February 12944 October 12741296–131712 August 1319People also ask
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Aug 2, 2023 · The German Palatines were early 18th-century emigrants from the Middle Rhine region of the Holy Roman Empire, including a minority from the Palatinate which gave its name to the entire group. They were both Protestant and Catholic.
Rhineland-Palatinate - German, Roman, Medieval: Rhineland-Palatinate has had a long history of division and possession by foreign powers; the modern state was created only after World War II. The oldest archaeological remains in the region are tools from the Stone Age that are at least 100,000 and may be as much as 300,000 years old. Between 3000 and 1800 bce, during the Neolithic Period (New ...
May 23, 2018 · The Palatinate in European History 1559 – 1618. Rev. ed. Oxford, 1966. Competent but dated survey of the origins of the Thirty Years' War. Cohn, Henry J. The Government of the Rhine Palatinate in the Fifteenth Century. London, 1965. Premier English-language study of the Palatinate with broader relevance than its title suggests. Press, Volker.
An understanding of who the Palatines were must begin with where they came from and why they left. The Rhineland Palatinate is located along the middle Rhine River in Germany. In the 13th century, when the German monarchy declined and the governing rights reverted to local dukes or bishops, the local count palatinate kept his title to pass on ...
offered the Palatines sanctuary in England and literally offered to give the Palatines bread until they could produce their own. The Palatines began to cross from Holland to England in droves. By October, 1709, 13,500 penniless, ragged Palatines were in London. Most were camped in tents on the Surrey side of the Thames River at Blackheath.