Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Pa·lat·i·nate
    /pəˈlatənət/

    noun

    • 1. a territory under the jurisdiction of a count palatine. historical
  2. People also ask

  3. Palatinate , German Pfalz, Historical region, now part of Germany. The region was once under the jurisdiction of the counts palatine (secular princes), who in the 14th century became electors of the Holy Roman Empire. In the 16th and 17th centuries the Palatinate was a stronghold of Protestantism. It was divided into two parts: the Lower, or ...

  4. Definition of palatinate noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  5. Oct 8, 2022 · The Palatine Germans. The Germans that would eventually settle the Mohawk Valley came from the Rhine Valley River region known as the "Palatinate." The name arose from the Roman word "Palatine," the title given to the ruling family of the area when it was part of the Holy Roman Empire. With the outbreak of the Thirty Years War in 1618, came 96 ...

  6. May 2, 2024 · 3 senses: a territory ruled by a palatine prince or noble or count palatine 1. → See the Palatinate 2. a native or inhabitant.... Click for more definitions.

    • Medieval Origins
    • Reformation
    • The Thirty Years' War
    • Absolutism and Territorial Dissolution
    • Bibliography

    The origins of the Palatinate lay in the medieval period, when the Lotharingian count palatine (Latin,comes palatinus ; German,Pfalzgraf ) secured a territorial base in the Upper Rhine region. The Wittelsbach dynasty acquired the Palatinate with the sanction of Emperor Frederick II in 1214. The Treaty of Pavia (1329) assigned control of the Lower a...

    The military setbacks of the early 1500s determined the tentative role that Elector Louis V (ruled 1508–1544) would play in the early years of the Reformation. Although the Heidelberg Disputation (1518) won Luther many followers in the region, Louis remained loyal to the Catholic Church. Palatine forces played a significant role in putting down the...

    The incompatibility of pairing an ambitious foreign policy with limited domestic resources reached its denouement during the reign of Elector Frederick V (ruled 1610–1623). In the years preceding the war, the Palatinate emerged as a militant Protestant power under the influence of Christian von Anhalt and organized the Protestant Union (1608), whic...

    Frederick's heir Charles Louis (ruled 1649–1680) regained the Lower Palatinate and a compensatory eighth electoral vote in the Peace of Westphalia (1648), allowing the territory to begin to recover some of its lost prestige. Unfortunately, the marriage of the Palatine princess "Liselotte" (Elisabeth Charlotte, princess palatine and the duchess of O...

    Clasen, Claus-Peter.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...

  7. The term palatine recurs in the 14th century, when the emperor Charles IV instituted a court body of household counts palatine, but they had only voluntary jurisdiction and some honorific functions. In England the term palatinate, or county palatine, was applied in the Middle Ages to counties the lords of which, whether lay or ecclesiastical ...

  8. Nov 21, 2023 · the Palatinate. ( historical) Any of various historical counties palatinate, particularly : The County Palatinate of the Rhine or Electoral Palatinate of the Holy Roman Empire . 1759, George Sale et al., “The Modern Part of an Universal History”, in History of the German Empire, volume XXIX, page 2: Since the reign of Charlemagne, this ...

  1. People also search for